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Unfortunately, I have seen and experienced how this new competitive environment, can create disharmony and dissonance within the Academy. In order to maintain supportive professional relationships, we need to nurture our own covenant community where collaborative relationships with professors at all universities might flourish and thus expand our human currency.
As educators we have a major goal: supporting students in their learning to be knowledgeable, creative, problem solvers, and thinkers. A machine can only do what a human has programmed him to do and sometimes this is truly amazing . . . but it begins with a person.
The world is increasingly complex which means we need to provide today’s students with in-depth, complex learning that is an outgrowth of critically reflective thinking. We must support face-to-face, blended, and fully online/virtual learning environments where students are challenged to go beyond mastery of concepts to synthesize information into learning units and then reflect, create, explore, and investigate.
With today’s technological advancements resulting in a diversity of learning modalities our questions must focus on the challenge of maintaining the human touch:
Our legacy as educators begins with teaching, and should culminate in an embrace of learning that encourages lifelong wonder and an appreciation of our humanity. Learning is really not about answers – it is about asking the right questions that lead us to understanding more about the human condition. We need more research to understand the positive and negative effects of technology. We must understand ways to develop covenant communities in our place-bound and virtual classrooms and beyond to encourage rich dialogue that leads to greater understandings of our diverse population. We must recognize the importance of building supportive relationships with our colleagues that transcend today’s competitive environment by participating in our professional organizations.
Our goal as educators should not be to leave a legacy, but to live a legacy . . . This means that while we lead in life-long learning we must live the process of continued interrogation to find ways to respond to technology with balance, establish covenant communities, and nurture professional relationships in ways that nourish the human capacity in a time when the human touch is so needed.
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