A second life for students

October 24, 2008

Online education has been increasingly used as a tool to help people learn on flexible schedules, and without regard to the distance between teacher and instructor. That much was clear as I researched our package on higher education and the Web that appears Friday. But an interesting undercurrent in many of the discussions that I had was the idea that online learning often has little to do with convenience and more to do with the strength of the Internet as a medium.

Kathleen Harmeyer, who directs the School of Information Arts and Technology at the University of Baltimore, said she thinks computer and web-based applications are going to become a more central part of many types of classes as schools focus on younger students who have grown up online.

Her ideas are interesting, especially since a lot of online learning programs are targeted toward non-traditional students who may not have the time or ability to get to campus.

She cites an interesting economics class that she took through the University of North Carolina at Greensboro that was based around a video game. Students are aliens marooned on an unfriendly, post-apocalyptic earth after a space crash, and have to determine the best way to allocate their resources.

The point, she said, is that the web is giving schools a way to adapt to new ways of learning. That’s one of the reasons students in her program meet for class, among other places, within the computer world of Second Life.

“Our college age students today are not readers. Not that they can’t, they won’t,” she said. “It’s a way of engaging students in the subject matter that the book doesn’t do for the young folks anymore.”

I’ve learned a few things by playing resource allocation games such as Civilization (made by Sid Meier and Firaxis Games in Hunt Valley), but it’s interesting to think of earning credit for it.

ANDY ROSEN, Business Writer

Sphere: Related Content

  • Law

  • Business

  • Archives

  • Visit Eye on Annapolis

    Check out our blog on the legislative session, Eye on Annapolis.
  • Categories

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

  • Lou Fritz: Robbie Whelan’s, There Stands Brody Like A Stonewall, is typical of journalists who are long on...
  • Donald S. Smith: I find it interesting that those who claim to love freedom the most are sometimes the quickest to...
  • Steve: Robbie, Your ignorance is deafening.
  • Rich Barnett: Are you really able to write this story and end it with “one of the state’s most...
  • Winger: Well, let’s look at a list: 1.) Baltimore is situated below the Mason / Dixon line. 2.) The battery on...

On Commenting

We ask that our readers follow a few guidelines, noted below.

Please do not post any personal attacks, profanity, spam or other advertisements — they will be removed. Also, please post using only one name or pseudonym, as this consistency helps establish a sense of community. We will delete posts if they are signed with different names but originate from the same IP or email address. And if you’re going to comment using a proper name, please make it your own. Deliberate misrepresentations will be removed.