What's Wrong with Online Readings? Text, Hypertext, and the History Web

S. Robertson
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

I ACHIEVED SOMETHING that I had been striving to do for several semesters when, in 2002, I revised my survey course on the history of the United States up to Reconstruction by replacing most of the photocopied readings I had assigned in the past with online texts. Readings on the web now provided the basis for ten of the twelve weekly tutorial discussions in the course, as well as for six of the ten essay questions. The tutorial readings included Thomas Harriot's 1590 text, A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia, Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography, documents produced by the antebellum moral reform movement, and photographs of the Civil War.' Not only did using online material allow me to assign sources that I would not otherwise have been able to provide to students, it reduced the size and cost of the course reader, and relieved the strains on the library system created by over a hundred students seeking the same texts. Students had complained about those issues in previous courses that I had taught, but had responded positively to my course web site and the handful of online readings I had used. None had reacted negatively to being required to use the Web. Other teachers had reported similar positive responses when they integrated online sources into their teaching.2 I felt confident that my students would be just as enthusiastic about a larger online component in the course. I was wrong.
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在线阅读有什么问题?文本、超文本和历史网络
2002年,我完成了几个学期以来我一直在努力做的事情,我修改了我的美国历史调查课程,直到重建时期,我把过去布置的大部分影印阅读材料换成了在线文本。网络上的阅读材料现在为课程每周12次的辅导课讨论中的10次提供了基础,同时也为10个习题中的6个提供了基础。辅导课的阅读材料包括托马斯·哈里奥特1590年的文本,《弗吉尼亚新发现土地的简要真实报告》,本杰明·富兰克林的自传,战前道德改革运动产生的文件,以及内战的照片。使用在线材料不仅使我能够分配我无法提供给学生的资源,还减少了课程阅读器的大小和成本,并减轻了由100多名学生寻找相同文本所造成的图书馆系统的压力。在我之前教的课程中,学生们抱怨过这些问题,但对我的课程网站和我使用的一些在线阅读材料反应积极。没有人对被要求使用网络做出负面反应。当其他教师将在线资源整合到他们的教学中时,他们也报告了类似的积极反应我相信我的学生们也会对课程中更大的在线内容充满热情。我错了。
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