Marion's CCTE Blog

Thursday, September 15, 2005

MY TECHNO-BIOGRAPHY

Hello to you all. As far as introductions go, I’m the one who looked somewhere between confused and panicked whenever RSS feeds, del.icio.us and wikis were mentioned on Tuesday. Yeah, that was me. Pleased to report that something may have clicked the 27th time I read the syllabus. If one becomes a magician when he learns his first card trick, I guess you can say I’m now a blogger.

I’ll begin my “Techno-Biography” with some background on how I made my way to the Communication and Education program at TC. After suffering through quite a few torturously boring jobs after college (as many English majors do), I worked for a research company called Inflexxion to develop Web-based risk assessments and health interventions. While I worked daily with designers and programmers, my responsibilities were to write educational content and supervise clinical field trials. This experience led me to NYU, where I got my Masters in the Communication, Education, and Technology program. My goal there was to begin to think about how the types of interactive programs developed at Inflexxion could be adapted to address issues relating to student achievement and motivation. I intend to explore this further as a doctoral student. While I never expect (and have no chance in hell) to become a serious designer or programmer, I do want to develop basic competencies while I’m at TC so that I can be a more effective member of a team that develops research-based instructional programs.

Now I guess it’s time for a flashback to my earliest experiences with computers…it would have to have been around second grade (1985?) that I started going to computer class in school. The focus of these classes was strictly to learn how to type (I thought I was being punished for having bad handwriting). As far as I can remember, no attempt was made in those early years to connect computer use with any other instructional content. At home, I began using a word processor. This was the extent of my computer use until about 7th grade, when I was introduced to Oregon Trail and discovered ways to make all my friends get scurvy.

I didn’t start using the Internet until my first year in college (1995). Though I wrote a zillion research papers as an English/Spanish major, I still had to resort primarily to library visits and card catalogues to find articles and reliable information. My main use of the Internet was for emailing. In the 6 years since college, I’ve become completely dependent on the internet for keeping in touch with friends/family, doing academic research, reading the news, getting directions, and answering random questions that pop into my head (e.g., how does Duck Hunt work?).

Computers excite me and freak me out. I still find it amazing that I can email someone in China as easily as I can email the person next door. I want to contribute to the inevitable changes that will take place in classrooms as a result of computers' potential to make the world more connected and instruction more adaptive to the unique needs of a learner. And, with my interest in research, I want to help responsibly tap computers’ data-gathering ability and play a role in evaluating computer-based instructional programs that are (and will be) used in the school system.

Really looking foward to this class. As Ulises says, "See you all online..."

2 Comments:

  • Hi, Marion,
    It's Dan from CCTE. I really enjoyed reading your techno-bio. I'd like to hear more about the NYU program sometime. Oh yeah, the "Duck Hunt Question" has popped into my head, too! How do they do that?!?

    Cheers,
    Dan (aka HoffaH)

    By Blogger HoffaH, at 12:24 PM  

  • So, habla Español?

    Yours was the second reference to Oregon Trail I found in the space of an hour (Michael has something about it in his blog, too), so I had to go look it up. I never played, but sounds cool (found a good review here).

    I also find it amazing that, as you say, I can email someone in China or next door with equal ease. In fact, the concepts of distance, relevance and technology are central to my dissertation work. I am interested in what I call the 'irrelevancy of the near:' how through the use of technology things that are far seem to acquire more relevancy than things that are near... I think this is changing fundamentally how we understand the world.

    Also, I don't think you need to be a serious coder or designer to contribute to the design of learning technologies. People like us can bring an important perspective to the process. I think we will learn a lot in this class precisely because there is a broad spectrum of skills and interests.

    By Blogger Ulises, at 7:55 AM  

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