Welcome to "Going Online to Develop and Communicate
Student Perspectives on World and Multicultural Writers"  
by Kathleen Walsh and Cora Agatucci
 A web-presentation prepared for 
"Making It Public: Putting Multicultural Research Online" 
Special Panel 198 of the American Studies Association
Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 8-11 November 2001
*

Abstract The purpose of this website is to explore the impact of internet technology on research, learning, and teaching in multicultural studies.  Our web presentation centers on review and discussion of student websites produced for Humanities 299: Student Perspectives on World and Multicultural Writers - Writing for the World Wide Web, an experimental course offered in Spring 2000 and Spring 2001 at Central Oregon Community College.  Hum 299 was developed in Spring 2000 through our participation in "Advancing the Humanities Through Technology," a project of the Community College Humanities Association, funded by the National Endowment of  the Humanities.  The course arose from our sense of the need to break beyond the borders of our relatively isolated and homogeneous Central Oregon region.  Rich resources for students of multicultural writers and issues are available on-line, as well as in print; and we theorized that our students would make the strongest connection to this material if they participated as creators, rather than as passive recipients, of internet knowledge.

Through structured "web-practices," Hum 299 students were guided in choosing topics and conducting research on cross-cultural writers, themes, and/or related interdisciplinary issues.  They were also instructed in "cyber-rhetoric" of writing for the World Wide Web, and in developing academic standards for evaluating and creating web-sites.  In creating and publishing their final website projects, students were encouraged to work in teams, and given significant freedom in adapting web genre, design, and media to present their content and express their perspectives. Hum 299 students were required to present a cyber-rhetorical analysis of their web sites, identifying and discussing relationships among their topic interests, research findings, web purposes, intended audiences, and genres.

Other instructional features built into the course included formal and informal teamwork, peer and self-assessment, interdisciplinary faculty reviews, requirements of copyright to obtain permissions and observance of "netiquette" courtesies that engaged students in dialogue with their web sources.  These interactions stimulated the formation of an interdisciplinary learning community that extended well beyond boundaries circumscribing traditional classroom learning and teaching.

In "Going Online to Develop and Communicate Student Perspectives on World and Multicultural Writers," Kathleen Walsh and Cora Agatucci respond to four discussion questions that we deem central to assessing the outcomes of our Humanities 299 project:

1.  What are the goals of multicultural education?
 

  2.  Did our project meet key goals
  of multicultural education?

3. What is the relationship between
the invitingly open form of web writing
and our project outcomes?

  4. How can project outcomes be duplicated
  or expanded within the limits and
  interstices of our curriculum?

We invite our web site visitors to consider our reflections and dialogue on these questions, to review Hum 299 student websites for themselves, and to speculate on the broader implications for multicultural research, learning and teaching in the brave new world of cyber-space.
Begin Our Online Presentation . . .

Join the Discussion at any time!


ASA 2001 Panel Participants
Making It Public: Web board Discussion
http://epsilon3.georgetown.edu/~coventrm/asa2001/panel6/index.html
is no longer available ~ CA, June 2003

We welcome comments
from all our web-visitors:
Kathy Walsh  kwalsh@cocc.edu  
Cora Agatucci  cagatucci@cocc.edu

~ Acknowledgements ~
Our sincere thanks for the support and contributions of
Bart Queary (Emeritus), Vice President of Instruction
and a member of our original CCHA Project Team; and

Barbara Klett, Instructional Technology Coordinator;
Central Oregon Community College

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Going Online to Develop and Communicate
Student Perspectives on World and Multicultural Writers

URL of this webpage: http://web.cocc.edu/cagatucci/ASA/index.htm

Last updated:  31 August 2008
© Kathleen Walsh and Cora Agatucci, 2001
Central Oregon Community College

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