How can digital teaching have an impact on your students’ learning?

We acknowledge that the distinction between ‘digital’ and ‘physical’, between ‘online’ and ‘offline’, once seemingly unambiguous, has begun to blur thanks to the ubiquity of smartphones and personal location data, ad and experience targeting, connected devices, wearable technology, the Internet of Things, and additive capabilities like 3-D printing.

The convergence of physical and digital present us with the opportunities to walk on impactful new pathways of teaching and learning. If the digital and physical are merged intentionally, we can create meaningful and integrated human experiences that prepare our students for the ‘new world’ ahead of them. As we all know, this world is changing and is it changing fast.

If we consider the current students the future, we will need to ask ourselves how exactly we can shape their experiences, so they are in accordance with the acceleration of change and in alignment with our rigorous academic expectations.

This is not an easy problem to tackle. We will need to connect with each other and with educators beyond our campus to adequately address that challenge. If you can, join us to discuss your ideas, strategise our own digital learning and contribute to the development of an institutional guideline that assists all parties in the increasingly digital instruction and interactions with our students.

Feel invited to browse this book at your hearts content to learn about the different pathways peer educators and researchers take.

You can either browse through the chapters listed in the content menu on the upper left or move through the book chronologically by clicking on the NEXT chapter link below.

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Digital Teaching and Learning at the Uof L Copyright © by Joerdis Weilandt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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