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Goals of This Presentation. Net Gen DemographicsBackground of who they areToday's LearnersWho's coming next?What can we do?. Net Gen Demographics. The Net Generation. Born in or after 1982Gravitate toward group activity8 out of 10 say ?it's cool to be smart"Focused on grades and performance
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1. Educating the Net GenA.K.A. the Digital Natives or the Millennials Preparing Students for the 21st Century
David Fusco - Director of Technology Operations;
Assistant Professor of IT
Juniata College
2. Goals of This Presentation Net Gen Demographics
Background of who they are
Today’s Learners
Who’s coming next?
What can we do?
3.
Net Gen Demographics
4. The Net Generation Born in or after 1982
Gravitate toward group activity
8 out of 10 say “it’s cool to be smart”
Focused on grades and performance
Busy with extracurricular activities
Identify with parents’ values; feel close to parents
Respectful of social conventions and institutions
Fascination for new technologies
Racially and ethnically diverse
5. Net Gen Experience Base Ctrl + Alt + Del is as basic as ABC
They have never been able to find the ‘return’ key
Computers have always fit in their backpacks
They have always had a personal identification number
Photographs have always been processed in an hour or less
Gas has always been unleaded
Bert and Ernie are old enough to be their parents
6. What other Technologies can/do they access? Cable or satellite TV
Videos, DVDs, CDs, Video games
Graphing calculators
Cell phones
Text messaging, Internet access
Digital and/or video camera
Calculator, alarm clock, stop watch
Distinct ring tones, ‘skins’
Ipods, MP3 players, phones w/ players
7. How technology has shaped their view of the world They want it NOW
They want it IN COLOR
They want INTERACTIONS
They are used to MULTITASKING
They expect YOU (the instructor) to understand the technology
They may not know how it works
8. They want it NOW They expect technology to be UBIQUITOUS
Instant access to course materials
Fast-loading graphics
Instant feedback
Email response
Assignment/quiz grading
Instant answers
Google, Wikipedia, other online resources
Instant access to student services
Online registration
Online grades
9. They want it in color PowerPoint presentations
With all the ‘bells and whistles’
Graphics (i.e. Flash animations)
Videos, DVDs, Video games
Interactive learning materials
10. They want INTERACTIONS They communicate with peers frequently using email, text messaging, instant messaging, cell phones, chat rooms
Friends and associates
Online friends
Complete strangers
Classmates
11. They are used to MULTITASKING They don’t sit quietly to do homework
Can do homework, surf the net, IM friends, chat on the phone, and watch TV all at the same time
They respond well to the use of more than one mode of delivery at a time
Neuroplasticity- their brains are flexible because they’ve been flexed
Use more than one method of delivery to enhance retention
12. They expect YOU to understand the technology They never experienced life before computers
They used it in high school, if not sooner
They are fast learners when it comes to figuring out how to use technology
but…
They may not understand how it works
Rely on others for troubleshooting
If something doesn’t work, they will hit the PANIC button (SEND) and email you for help
13.
Background of who they are
14. Products of Their Environments Baby
Boomers
TV generation
Typewriters
Memos
15. Who has access?
16. Access and income
17. Profile of a Juniata Student (Rhodes, IA Survey, Fall 2005) Computer usage 3-5 = 13%; 6-10 = 60%; >10 = 26%
Use of Internet 3-5 = 30%; 6-10 = 63%; >10 = 5%
Word processing 3-5 = 25%; 6-10 = 64%; >10 = 9%
E-mail 3-5 = 51%; 6-10 = 38%
Have you created a PowerPoint presentation? 89% yes
Have you created a web page? 71% no
18. Profile of a Juniata Student (Rhodes, IA Survey, Fall 2005) CMS experience? 72% no
Computer at home? 98% yes
Access to Internet at home? 97% yes
Used library resources before? 68% yes
What type of computer are you bringing? (96% total)
notebook or laptop = 71%; tablet = 1.4%
tower = 16%; none = 4%; unsure about style = 7%
19.
Today’s Learners
20. Today’s Learners Digitally literate
Mobile
Always on
Experiential
Social
21. Net Gen Student’s Computer Use
22. Multitasking while online
23. Student in-class preferences
24. Age vs. online preferences
25.
Who’s coming next?
26. In high schools Cradle-to-grave use of e-portfolios
Not expert users; laptop as a tool
Sense of entitlement to Internet access; any interruption is a violation of their rights
Prefer Internet research to library research
Are exposed to problem-based learning, collaboration and computers in the classroom
27. Teen’s web use 100% use the Internet to seek information on colleges, careers and jobs
74% of teens use IM as a major communication vehicle vs. 44% of online adults
54% of students (grades 7-12) know more IM screen names than home phone numbers
The Internet is a primary communication tool
81% email friends and relatives
70% use instant messaging to keep in touch
56% prefer the Internet to the telephone
28. What kids want from the net
29.
What can we do?
30. Challenges presented by the Net Generation We are not of the Net Generation
Our college experiences were very different
Classrooms and workspaces may not meet the needs of the Net Generation
Technology-enhanced, informal classrooms and workspaces
Technology changes rapidly
Lifelong learning a must
31. Are you a Net Gen type? How do you write most documents? long-hand or at a keyboard?
Are you constantly connected? Laptop? PDA? Cell phone?
How many windows are typically open on your computer?
Are you a multitasker?
Do you play video or computer games?
Do you download music?
Does your cell phone have a camera?
Do you prefer immediate responses or are you content to wait?
32. Balance between the old and new
33. Balance between the old and new Be engaging: challenge us; ask questions; show that you are excited about the subject
Be responsive: voice/email; office hours still matter
Be seen: we’d like to see you and get to know you outside of class
Set boundaries: tell us when you’re available
Use real world, relevant examples
Not everything needs to be on the Web
34. Adding not replacing
35. Face-to-face classroom tips PowerPoint-enhanced lectures
With sound and animation
Rearrange classroom to facilitate collaborative learning and the use of technology
Active learning
Supplement online
Post gradebook, PowerPoints, other materials from class
36. Teaching online tips Net generation prefer web-enhanced or hybrid courses to totally online
Learn the technology
Take a few courses
Learn the student perspective
Take a few online courses
Stay connected through frequent communication with students
Respond to emails
Timely feedback and grading
Provide online tutorials to show how to use the technology used in the course
37. What’s Changed at Juniata? Wireless – Residence halls, Academic buildings, most administrative buildings
The # of servers (>70) and workstations (>1100)
Increased use of cell phone / decreased use of in-room phones (students)
Storage increase – SAN and DAM
Facebook / Myspace use
Internet Capacity
‘Smart’ Classrooms
Digital Video growth
38. What’s Changed at Juniata? Video Conferencing at RFS – FA06
Students are more mobile
Gaming (students)
Students want it ‘like home’
Internet
Cell coverage
CATV
Heightened security awareness
Course Management System - Moodle
39. What’s Changed at Juniata? Network registration (students)
MyJuniata application
The Arch / WebAdvisor
Dual Advisor signoff
Increasing # of iPods / MP3 players
Single signon / authentication
Off-campus connectivity / VoIP
IT as a marketing tool
40. Questions???
David Fusco
fusco@juniata.edu
http://faculty.juniata.edu/fusco