| When
I was a college student writing papers, I used a trusty portable
typewriter. No hard drive, no RAM, no spellcheck. My graduate thesis
was typed—and then completely retyped—due to an error
in one reference throughout. In our contemporary high-tech world,
these memories seem positively quaint.
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David
Hodge |
Now technology has permeated
every department in the College of Arts and Sciences, sometimes
simplifying time-consuming tasks and sometimes completely redefining
what is possible. The latter is particularly exciting to witness.
In my own field of geography,
I have seen the tools of the trade—including maps, graphs,
charts, and geographic information systems (GIS) technology—evolve.
These changes have not only made my work easier but have expanded
research possibilities. It is not overstating it to say that technology
has been transformative to how we think about our research and teaching.
The same is true in disciplines
throughout the College. In the visual arts, students and faculty
have been able to do unbelievable things with new high-tech tools.
Technology has enabled them to create works that formerly lived
only in their imagination. Some examples
are highlighted in this newsletter.
For those at the Center
for Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS), technology
is at the very heart of their enterprise. DXARTS is a new interdisciplinary
program that creates new art that no one has ever imagined, using
new technologies. Established in 2001, the Center will move into
a new state-of-the-art facility in December 2003.
Another new A&S program
has been transformative in a different way. The College offered
its first Discovery Seminars—small
seminar courses designed specifically for entering freshmen—in
September 2003, one month before the start of autumn quarter. Taught
by some of the University’s most engaging faculty, these courses
explore compelling topics, ranging from religious sects to the Apollo
missions, while introducing freshmen to research basics and the
frame of mind of scholarly inquiry.
Discovery Seminars are
really about shaping students’ vision of college — transitioning
them from thinking of themselves as students to thinking of themselves
as learners. The distinction is important. At a major research university
like the University of Washington, opportunities for active inquiry
abound, but first we must challenge our students to think like scholars.
The most exciting part of the Discovery Seminars is what comes next.
The participants, just starting college, will now approach learning
differently as a result. They will have higher expectations for
themselves, their courses, their professors, their college experience.
In the coming years,
we hope to increase participation in Discovery Seminars, reaching
a significant portion of the entering class. These students will
become agents of change, challenging their peers and professors
for the rest of their education. They will make us all the better
for it.
Sincerely,
David Hodge
Dean
206-543-5340
hodge@u.washington.edu
[Autumn 2003 - Table of Contents]
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