Friday, May 11, 2007

Five Myths About Community Colleges - MSN Encarta

Five Myths About Community Colleges - MSN Encarta

I run into the "snob factor" frequently as a Tech Prep coordinator at my school. Our local community college offers free credit for articulated high school classes with matching objectives. I've had parents and even staff look unfavorably upon the community college as kind of a 2nd class school.

I was a teaching assistant at a University, and I've been and instructor at a community college. Yes, there are differences in the instruction of the academic transfer or "gen ed" courses in these two institutions.

While the University employed individuals with doctorates, lower-level classes are taught in over-crowded lecture halls, many times not by those with the pedigrees, but by teaching graduate assistants. In contrast, academic transfer classes at a community college are taught by individuals with a master's degree (at least 18 of their graduate credit hours are in the area of instruction), and the class sizes are small and personal (10-30 students depending on the class). Smaller classes + educated instructors = superior instruction of academic transfer courses at the community college compared to that at the University.

The best difference? The cost! The community college currently charges about $60 per credit; the university charges about $160. Let's say a student attends a community college for two years, carefully selecting 48 credit hours of academic transfer courses. They'd pay $2880 at the community college compared to $7200 at the university.

I do get a nominal stipend for being the Tech Prep coordinator, but I'd applaud community colleges anyway. You can bet my kids will be taking advantage of their offerings!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

What is Web 2.0?

We like buzzwords. We throw around the phrase Web 2.0, but what is it?

David Pogue has a great working definition in his column: Asking the Crowd to Spread the News - New York Times

Time has a touching tribute to those of us who contribute to Web 2.o: 2006 Person of the Year

What is your definition of Web 2.0 and what do you like about it?

ABC, Cox Bar Ad Skipping in Video on Demand - WSJ.com

ABC, Cox Bar Ad Skipping in Video on Demand - WSJ.com

To me, the beauty of VOD is the ability to skip commercials. ABC and ESPN (through COX) have agreed to disable the fast forward button for their fall offerings.

Does anyone else have a problem with this? Now, this doesn't affect viewers who use digitial video recorders at the time of viewing...YET. How long before it does?

But disable my FF button? Isn't that like Websense on a commercial scale - controlling what we view, not for our protection, but for making a buck? Isn't that worse?

I suppose that I can accept the non-skippable commercials since their VOD offerings will be free. Most web users already put up with short advertising before a free news clip, so this isn't really much of a stretch.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Congress Must Make Clear Copyright Laws To Protect Consumers | Personal Technology | Walt Mossberg | AllThingsD

Congress Must Make Clear Copyright Laws To Protect Consumers

What do you think? Should it be legal to upload a few minutes of copyrighted material to YouTube? Should one be able to email a "few songs" to a friend? Fair Use allows using a small portion of a copyrighted material for public comment, critique, & education. Do these things qualify as "fair use?" What would your version of a modern copyright law look like?

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

American Chronicle: Online Searches Change Dating Dynamic

American Chronicle: Online Searches Change Dating Dynamic

When I was a teen, my mother and father would interview a prospective date to find out about his parents, their jobs, his church, kind of car, etc. Fast forward 20 years. To investigate my daughter's prospective date, my husband and I, with the right resources, can gain access to criminal records, property tax records, myspace profiles, facebook blogs, vehicle registration, online newspaper articles, etc. Just how private is your life?