Customize your website

  • The Register/Advertiser
  • The Vanguard
  • The Sou'Wester
  • The Digby Courier
  • The Coastguard
  • The Advance
  • The Hants Journal
  • The Spectator

Acadia still offers tech-rich education



Published on Febuary 7th, 2008
Published on January 30th, 2010
 

Latest News

See All Articles

Regional News

See All Articles

Letter to The Advertiser

Topics :
Acadia University , Acadia , Canada , Wolfville

To the Editor:

Wendy Elliott’s Jan. 29 opinion piece based on an editorial that appeared recently in Acadia’s student newspaper, The Athenaeum, cannot stand unchallenged. Most importantly, there is a fundamental error that must be corrected.

In September 2008, Acadia students will all be required to have a laptop computer, and the same, if not more, technology-rich education will be delivered by Acadia’s outstanding faculty. If Ms. Elliott is invited into a post-September 2008 classroom, it will still look pretty much the same as the one she described in her column.

The main exception will be that the laptops the students will have on their desks will be ones they own rather than lease from Acadia, and they will have chosen them on the basis of their own individual preferences rather than be handed the same make and model as every one of their classmates.

This is the new world. Students want more choice and more control and because of Acadia’s groundbreaking use of classroom technology, they can find laptop-based programs in many of Canada’s leading post-secondary institutions. Rather than conclude the award-winning, highly acclaimed Acadia Advantage program, as Ms. Elliott asserts, Acadia will be enhancing it to improve its response to those students who are the main reasons why technology is as pervasive as it is.

Today’s university students, including Ms Elliott’s MSNing youngest, are what social commentators call “digital natives.” They do not know a world without the Internet, text-messaging and on-demand entertainment.

Indeed, even The Athenaeum, with its blogs and podcasts and The Advertiser with its novanewsnow.com affiliation, acknowledge things are different. Neither of these exciting and engaging platforms were available 30 years ago when student apathy was apparently overcome by an abundance of clubs and activities.

Today’s clubs often exist in virtual spaces and their members include not just others on our own campus, but student peers at other campuses quite literally around the world. This is something that simply was not possible before innovators such as Acadia and its faculty challenged students to take what they learned while at university and apply it in whatever career they chose to pursue.

Linking quality education with a career beyond university has nothing to do with business unless this is the field students choose to pursue. It has everything to do with ensuring students understand that although they are reminded at every turn – most often by members of the media – that Acadia’s tuition ranks among the highest in the country, there is significant value in the unique environment they experience in Wolfville.

As for school spirit – a countermeasure for apathy – our surveys tell us that incoming students believe Acadia’s is among the highest in the country. I’ll bet they learned that through MSNing with their friends.

Scott Roberts

Executive Director

Communications and Marketing

Acadia University

Submit a Comment

Submit a Comment

This form is NOT used for emailing the article to a friend. Please use the "Send to a friend" link at the top of the page for that purpose.

Nova News Now is not responsible for posted comments. Please be polite and confine your comments to the subject of the posted story. If you have an account, please sign on to it..

(we keep all emails private)
Agreement

We ask that users remain courteous. You may not post insulting, discriminatory or inappropriate content, which may be removed at our discretion. We are not responsible for user content and opinions. Use of this site as well as content submission & ownership are governed by our Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.

Member organizations should be non-profit in nature, and promote legal activities. Any organization found promoting illegal activities or commercial products or services will be deleted from the site.

I agree with these conditions.

Advertising

Services

  • No available services

Newsletter

Please enter your email to receive our free newsletter

Subscribe to news alerts

Advertising