L’observatoire du neuromancien 10/10/2010

  • « Attention is also important in the classroom. This came home to me five years ago when I started teaching and saw what most teachers in the world, at least at the college level, see these days: students who are staring down, looking at their computers, not making eye contact with the teacher. In the Japanese language, one pays attention with ki, which means « life energy. » Any public speech is an exchange of ki. For me, I felt this exchange was broken when students were not looking at me while I was talking to them. Yet for their part, students feel a strong sense of entitlement to the freedom to direct their attention wherever they want. For students, the classroom is a marketplace, with multiple seductive attractions from the online world competing with physical presence. If I can’t compete with the Internet for their attention, that’s my problem. Because I teach social media, I can neither ignore nor flatly forbid their use of laptops during class. « 

    tags: attention littératies

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

L’observatoire du neuromancien 10/07/2010

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Monet : Une cathédrale de Rouen – le 23/9/10

Décryptage du tableau de Monet : « Une Cathédrale de Rouen » (Le Figaro du 21/9/10)

http://www.lefigaro.fr/culture/2010/09/21/03004-20100921ARTFIG00725-une-cathedrale-de-rouen-decryptee.php

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un lien remarqué par Christine Griset le 23/9/10