Title :
Community, context, and distance education
Author_Institution :
Dept. of English, Northern Arizona Univ., Flagstaff, AZ, USA
Abstract :
This paper makes recommendations about teaching online professional courses to students lacking relevant professional experience. The course was on ethics and professional writing. Students substituted personal ethics for professional ethics and relied on the skills they had in textual explication and narrative development to defend personal judgments. Instead of putting greater emphasis on theory and formal analysis, the author recommends simulating the experience of professional writing by relying on case study methods, peer critiques, and Internet resources, such as discussion boards where professional writers gossip, complain, and argue about their professional experience.
Keywords :
computer aided instruction; distance learning; ethical aspects; professional aspects; teaching; Internet resources; case study methods; discussion boards; distance education; ethics writing; formal analysis; narrative development; online professional course; peer critiques; personal ethics; professional ethics; professional writing; teaching; textual explication; Analytical models; Computer industry; Distance learning; Education; Employment; Ethics; Internet; Public relations; Rhetoric; Writing;
Conference_Titel :
Information Technology: Coding and Computing, 2004. Proceedings. ITCC 2004. International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2108-8
DOI :
10.1109/ITCC.2004.1286514