Colloquium Program and Agenda
  • Colloquium agenda (.doc)

  • Suggested session/paper (.doc)

  • Call for chapters for Purdue University Press book (.doc)

 

Colloquium Session Abstracts

Paper Title:  The Golden Rule

Author: Linda Bennett, University of Missouri

 

The golden rule is that there are no golden rules.

George Bernard Shaw

Do unto others as you would have them do unto you is in a metamorphic state when it comes to how citizenship education is practiced while using the Internet. It seems there are no golden rules for the social interactions on the Internet. The rights and responsibilities of the global citizenry for postings, perusing, or retrieving information from the Internet has not evolved into a mature stage of development. By exploring the social interactions of diverse people around the world using the Internet in similar or unique ways, we may discover norms and exceptions to acceptable practices while using the Internet.

As users of the Internet formally and informally interact, they need to practice responsible and respectful behavior. Whether it is the metamessage of a grandparent to a ten year old in an instant message or women in Asia sharing ideas of the emerging rights of woman in their culture, the way we exchange information is linked to the use of the Internet. Communication tools such as instant messaging, blogs, and face books have transformed the forums for connecting to others in the room and around the globe. A high school senior in China, a fortune five hundred CEO in the U.S., and retired couple backpacking in the mountains can have similar access to information using the Internet so what are the rules for the global online community. An exploration of the research on the practice of online global citizenship is in order. Can the golden rule be applied to the rights and responsibilities of individuals while using the Internet?

 

 

Paper Title: “Woulda”, “Shoulda”, “Coulda”, - Technology and Citizenship Education

Author: Richard A. Diem, The University of Texas at San Antonio

Over the past three decades technology has been “sold” as a transformative tool that would change the way we educate our citizenry.  In particular, the promise of access to information and data and the concurrent ability to use and understand it as part of an inquiry process that employs critical thinking skills offered social studies educators the possibility of developing the tools their students needed to be active, caring citizens. After millions of dollars spent on technology purchases, Internet connectivity, and training, these lofty premises on how technology would effect citizenship education are still, for the most part, unmet. This paper will seek to explore the reasons behind this failure focusing on the clash between those who would use technology as an adjunct to instruction that ties into the high stakes assessment culture versus those who see technology as a tool that can broaden academic pursuits and empower its users.  

 

 

Paper Title: GIS Internet Mapping and the Spatially Literate Citizen

Author: Andrew J. Milson; University of North Texas

The rapid advancements in the technologies associated with capturing, storing, analyzing, and displaying geographic information have made Geographic Information Systems (GIS) much more user-friendly and accessible than it was just a few years ago. Recent innovations in serving interactive GIS maps over the Internet have led many government agencies from the municipal to the federal level to develop GIS websites as a means of communicating geographic information to the citizenry. To achieve the full benefit of this form of communication though, a citizen must possess spatial thinking skills and the ability to interpret geographic information. In this paper, I will review examples of GIS Internet mapping websites and the purposes they serve. Additionally, I will explore the implications of this form of communication and the need to address spatial thinking as a component of civic education.

 

Paper Title: Democracy is Not a Monologue

Author: Marsha Alibrandi; Fairfield University

How social studies, citizenship and participation are experienced, conceived, and taught are very different than the experiences of teachers born during the baby boom.  History matters when it comes to the ways citizenship is socially constructed, represented and taught.  Absent from most textbooks are those issues in US history when social action led the nation.  Since Brown-v-Board and the Civil Rights movement, subsequent court decisions have effectively disabled desegregation.  Schools are re-segregating (Harvard Civil Rights Project, 1999,: http://www.civilrightsproject.harvard.edu/research/deseg/Resegrega tion_American_Schools99.pdf). 

In research on pre-service Social Studies teachers integrating technology, the ‘digital divide’ was a factor student teachers found problematic in classrooms in 2002-2003 (Bull, 2003).  White students and educators may believe that the Internet empowers and enables social action, but since its inception, there has been a remarkable lack of effective social action.

 

The demographics of the US have and are changing dramatically.  In this century, the concept of racial and ethnic ‘minorities’ will reverse.  In collaborative projects in currently ‘minority’ schools (Alibrandi, Beal, Wilson & Thompson, 2000; Alibrandi & Sarnoff, 2006), students using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have developed new understandings and constructs of citizenship.  While these may be facilitated by integrating technology, it requires commitment and vigilance. This presentation highlights demographic GIS data and phenomena that reveal spatio-cultural patterns to enhance and pose dilemmas in Civics, History, Government and Economics classes.

 

Paper Title: Preparing Future E-Citizens to Research Public Policy Issues Online: Old Skills in New Electronic Clothing or Truly Something Different?

Author:  Joe O'Brien; University of Kansas

Hunt & Metcalf (1968), Engle and Ochoa (1988), Parker and Zumeta (1999) addressed the importance of developing young people's ability to thoughtfully engage in and, ultimately, take a well-reasoned position on public policy issues. Learning how to research such issues is a critical component of this ability. The advent of and advances in online technology not only is raising the prospect of an electronic citizen, but also is transforming how individuals research public policy matters. In Youth as E-Citizens: Engaging the Digital Generation, Montgomery, Gottlieb-Robles, and Larson (2004) documented ten examples of how young adults use online technology to engage in civic activity. In turn, the National Science Foundation provided funding for the Virtual Agora Project, a research project designed to study the effects of online and face-to-face democratic deliberation. These are but two indications of a possible transformation to electronic citizenship, an effort well underway in the European Union and member nations.

 

These possible changes to how we conceive of citizenship in general and the growing use of online tools to conduct research in particular causes me to raise two questions. First, what is unique about online technology as a research tool that distinguishes it from other research tools? Second, what are abilities, related to learning about and taking a well reasoned, knowledgeable position on a public policy issue, that either are new or dramatically different when applied to online research? In seeking to answer these questions, I will explore the idea of E-citizenship within the context of becoming informed about public policy matters through the use of online technology and use this exploration as a frame of reference for discussing the implications for preparing middle and secondary students to conduct research online.

 

Paper Title: "Awake and buckle on the armor of heroic citizenship!"* Documenting the American South and Citizenship Education

Author: Meghan McGlinn; Old Dominion University

Effective social studies education combines four elements: content, skills, values, and action. It could be argued that many classrooms emphasize the first element, content, to the detriment of the other

elements. However, if citizenship education is to find its origins in

the social studies classroom, all four elements must be present.

Students must not only be knowledgeable, but they must also be able to make informed decisions, have the desire to participate in the public debate, and be encouraged to take action. In order to explore this model further, my research focuses on whether digital libraries can contribute to citizenship education by offering teachers and students to opportunity to combine content, skills, values, and action in the social studies classroom.

Using one particular digital library, Documenting the American South, as an example, I explore the way this collection could be utilized in citizenship education in the future. I will describe the collection and the historic perspectives on citizenship education it offers. Then, I will provide an overview of a current research study which explores the ways teachers use this collection in their classrooms. Finally, I will provide exemplars from the collection that could be used by teachers to bring together the four elements described above to create effective activities in citizenship education.

        

*Stephen Elliot (1864) Vain is the Help of Man. Retrieved from:

http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/elliotts/elliotts.html

 

Paper Title: Youth Talk for Civic Action: An Examination of Digital Networking Tools

Authors:  Kenneth T. Carano, Natalie Mixon, and Michael J. Berson; University of South Florida

The Internet has provided youth a sense of empowerment. Through innovative websites and blogs, youth are discovering social networks, which are successfully providing many youth a voice in the public arena.

These forms of communication are becoming so powerful, even President Bush acknowledged its impact of providing information and suggested that the United State s will have a freer press if the public embraces these new, innovative ways of communicating. This manuscript will examine the methods in which social networking tools are being integrated in youth civic websites to foster civic dialogue and debate among different student groups. Many civic sites, geared towards youth, have successfully shaped their activities and used language, which makes it attractive for youth to engage in the public forum. Some of those sites, which are encouraging a movement towards social activism, will be explored. In addition, this paper will explore ways these innovations can be applied in classroom settings.

 

Paper Title: Ideology, civics, and web-based discourse

Author: John K. Lee, Georgia State University

Ideologies or belief systems frame much of the discourse on social studies instruction and social studies content. Whether the discussions are focused on how to teach or what we teach, social studies teachers and students carry with them beliefs that shape their thoughts and often guide their arguments. With the advent of the Web, social studies related discourse is increasingly being facilitated in online communities. The open ideological construct of these environments enables a free exchange of ideas. Along with this freedom comes a demand for critical literacy on the part of the user. This exploratory study examines the dynamics of selected online communities where civic oriented discourse and dialogue is common. Discourse and systems analysis will be utilized is this study. Preliminary findings suggest that online civic discourse requires a high degree of self-regulation, skepticism, and monitoring. In addition to reporting findings, I will suggest recommendations for facilitating online civic discourse in public web-based communities.

 

Paper Title: PLAYING FOR KEEPS: COMPUTER GAMES AND THE LEARNING OF CIVICS

Author: Nicholas B. deKanter, Muzzy Lane Software

In 2006, "always on" is not another feature of the broadband Internet experience; it is the mindset of kids who see computers, the Web, iPods and cell phones as standard operating equipment. To them this is not capital-T Technology, much the way that baby boomers don't really consider the telephone, television, or radio to be Technology. This is their world, and all those gadgets are normal parts of that world.Their social environment is defined not just in geographical space, but also in digital space. It is in this environment that students are defining and practicing their civic persona.

 

Among the many facets that make up the digital world that today's students live in are computer and video games. This paper will explore the impact video games can have on civic education by setting a groundwork for how people learn from electronic games and reviewing game examples with strong civic content. Finally, with many games garnering their share of bad press and with the understanding that much of teaching civics is instructing students how to make informed choices, strategies will be explored that engage students in thinking critically about games, their role within the game, and their role in society.

 

Paper Title: What is a Citizen? Changing Definitions

Author: Cynthia Sunal, The University of Alabama

This paper examines how 1,631 citizens who are K-12 students, utilized the Internet in activities that can be construed as citizenship events and whether such utilization may be changing definitions of citizenship among Internet users. The definition of citizenship impacts schools as they translate that meaning into a curriculum and instructional approaches that teach the definition to students. Data were collected about these students from 60 in-service teachers. First, teachers considered how and to what extent their students, K-12, are involved in school activities that would incorporate greater student control, on a continuum from greater student control/lesser teacher control through greater teacher control/lesser student control. Second, they considered the amount of community involvement of students, both school-sponsored and non school-sponsored and the extent of student control. Third, participants considered how their students used technology to operationally demonstrate their citizenship utilizing logs they kept of student usage as a data source for this consideration. The findings indicate a range of citizenship events occurred and find those events associated with Internet usage were high in frequency. Discussion of the effects of the Internet on citizenship events indicate a changing definition of citizenship among these K-12 students.

 

Paper Title: Does technology enhance the teaching of democratic principles to elementary aged students?

Author: Scott Waring, University of Central Florida

This paper takes a critical look at ways in which technology has been purported to enhance the teaching of democratic principles in American elementary school classrooms. Using Dewey's (1897, 1916) approach to education as a social process and Dale's (1946) Cone of Experience as a framework, this paper will examine ways in which technology has assisted in the teaching of democratic principles to grade school children and possibilities for the future. Dewey (1897) states, "the teacher is engaged, not simply in the training of individuals, but in the formation of the proper social life" (p. 80). Do any of the readily available technologies allow elementary school teachers an opportunity to do this? If so, does technology enable teachers an opportunity to prepare students for "proper social life" in a manner unavailable prior to these technologies? This manuscript will attempt to address these questions.

 

Paper Title: The Rise of the Internet, Erosion of Privacy, and Transformation of Democracy

Author: Daniel W. Stuckart, ; Wagner College

The United States Constitution provides the legal foundation for individual liberties, but does not expressly guarantee the right of privacy. Over time, case law, statutes, and regulations evolved to establish privacy principles, often in reaction to new technologies. Recently, the meteoric rise of the internet has fostered democracy and concomitantly eroded the right of privacy. This paper explores ways that the internet has challenged the right of privacy, leading to changing notions of democracy and implications for citizenship education.

 

Paper Title: North Carolina Social Studies Teachers' Internet Use

Author: Adam M. Friedman;University of North Carolina-Charlotte

The Internet has been lauded by scholars as an invaluable tool for teaching social studies, and virtually every public school in the United States has an Internet connection. However, recent social studies and technology literature demonstrates that generally speaking and for a variety of reasons, social studies teachers do not necessarily utilize the Internet to the potential to which it has previously been cited.This study of over 200 social studies teachers across North Carolina sought to examine this disconnect, and discover the large-scale factors that encourage and impede social studies teachers' Internet use. Initial findings reflect previous literature in that a clear majority of teachers desire to use the Internet more often than they currently are, perceived access to equipment is paramount to social studies teachers' Internet use, and other important factors include state standards and their associated tests as well as training.

 

Paper Title: Education for Democracy, the Internet, and Inquiry Pedagogy: Intersections and Issues
 

Author: Scott W. DeWitt; University at Buffalo

A professional development project that sought to help high school social studies teachers incorporate inquiry methodology into their instructional practices through instruction in inquiry and in the use of computer technology provides a means to examine the intersection of the goals of democratic education, inquiry, and instructional uses of computer technology. The teachers involved in the project provide evidence for the areas where Internet use can facilitate democratic educational practice, and also where such use must be supplemented.