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- January 19, 2006
Greenlee School's Michael Bugeja explores impact of technology on education
in new article
- Michael Bugeja, professor and director of the Greenlee School of Journalism
and Communication at Iowa State University, is questioning whether the investment
made in technology is being used for what was intended for.
Bugeja, in an article that will be published in the Jan. 27 issue of the
Chronicle of Higher Education, evaluates the impact of social networks
like Facebook on the nation's college students.
Facebook is an interactive, image-laden directory featuring groups that
share lifestyles or attitudes such as a particular sports team, musical
act, social cause, lifestyles or recreational activity.
Estimates indicate that more than 80 percent of students at some 2,000 institutions
visit www.facebook.com. Iowa State, with a total enrollment of 25,741, has
more than 20,247 registered users on Facebook.
"Many students find Facebook addicting, evidenced by groups with names
such as ‘Addicted to the Facebook,' which boasts 325 members at Iowa State,"
Bugeja reports in his article. "Nationwide, Facebook tallies 250 million
hits every day and ranks ninth in overall traffic on the Internet."
The problem, Bugeja states, is that Facebook and today's high-tech gadgets
are becoming as much a distraction as a tool for learning.
"Information technology was supposed to bridge digital divides, enhance
student research and foster multicultural awareness," he says. "Increasingly,
however, our networks are being used to entertain members of the Facebook
Generation who text during class, cell-phone during lab and listen to iPods
rather than guest speakers in the wireless lecture hall."
Bugeja is also concerned with the ethical issues that Facebook and other
similar sites such as MySpace present. Although Facebook and its competitors
forbid fabrications, there are instances of inappropriate photos or stereotypes
used on sites.
Bugeja has seen fictitious personae that have masqueraded as administrators,
including college presidents.
"In fact," he says, "as I was writing my article, one of
my sources - a professor from the University of Colorado - wrote that a
fake profile was posted about him on MySpace."
"Unless we reassess our high-tech priorities, issues associated with
insensitivity, indiscretion, bias and fabrication will consume us in higher
education," Bugeja says.
"Potential solutions will challenge core beliefs concerning digital
divides, pedagogies, budget allocations and, above all, our duty to instill
critical thinking in multitaskers."
Some institutions have assembled task forces or blocked content of social
networks, Bugeja notes.
"My preference is not to block content but to instill in students what
I call ‘interpersonal intelligence,' or the ability to discern when, where
and for what purpose technology may be appropriate or inappropriate."
Bugeja is the author of the award-winning book Interpersonal Divide:
The Search for Community in a Technological Age (Oxford University
Press, 2005).
Interpersonal Divide documents the void that develops between people
when they spend too much time in virtual rather than in real communities.
Bugeja traces media history to show how other generations have coped with
similar problems during periods of great technological change and makes
a case for face-to-face communication in a technological world, informing
readers how to use media and technology wisely so that they enhance rather
than replace community.
Michael Bugeja
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