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Go to a slightly longer version of this article by Leon James

March 1995

COURSE-INTEGRATED USE OF
THE WORLD WIDE WEB
Introduction
This is the second semester that I making full integrated use of the university's online telecommunications facilities with two undergraduate seminars in psychology. Students, all of whom are computer novices, learn to use e-mail on their UNIX account, become familiar with Gopher on the Internet, and create their own Home Page on the World Wide Web. Weekly assignments and reports are submitted online, typed by the student, translated in hypertext format (called HTML), and hotlinked to the reports of other students and the Internet. Anyone browsing the Web world wide, or is searching with WebCrawler or other client, may discover the interlinked student reports.

This course-integrated telecommunications activity has two valuable instructional features, in my view: (1) involving students in reading each other's work and commentaries, and (2) creating a collective, virtual 'super-document' out of the students' individual and independent efforts. These features transform the students' work into an intellectual contribution through their participation in a generational cyberspace learning community for one semester. In the course of the semester, students produce an average of 30 pages of online text or about 100 screens. Each semester a new generation of students add to the super-document and link their writing into its hypertext fabric. This process simulates the growth and evolution of a virtual learning community in cyberspace. At any time in the future former students may re-visit their Home Page architecture through the Internet, and see how it has been weaved or integrated into the evolving and living fabric of the super-document.

The Richness of Hypertext

The links created by students are paragraph specific. Each hypertext link is a permanent physical embodiment of a mental connection seen by a student between one's own idea and someone else's idea. The more links and comments that are created by students to each other, the richer, and more 'virtual' the hypertext super-document becomes. Richness and complexity of the virtual super-document continue to grow and expand as generations of students are interlinked with each new semester's group.

Probably no two people ever read a hypertext super-document in the same sequence of paragraphs or screens, so that students in the same course do not necessarily see the same content, since content depends on the links one explores online. The number of links and their possible permutation sequences produced by just 20 students in one semester's work is astronomical and cannot be exhausted even by the most ardent cybernaut browsers. This great fluidity and amorphousness of hypertext super-documents raises important instructional issues which educators will have to carefully research. I can see some potential problems in terms of defining course content and disciplinary area within a virtual instructional environment. I believe we'll be able to cope with this problem and turn it into an intellectual advantage that fosters diversity, freedom, and unprecedented creativity.

Empowering Students for Creative Expression

A student may write a paper on a self-modification experiment to become a more careful driver. By itself, the paper is limited, even if it has some citations to the literature. In hypertext, the student may add a number of links on every screen, greatly enriching the document. For instance, the student may express the opinion that "it's difficult to be objective about one's own driving style," and then goes on to create five visible links (automatically highlighted on the screen) which, when selected by a browsing reader, takes the person to five new locations, as follows.

Journey through Student Reports
The first hypertext link takes you to a 10-page document located in Seattle, a pre-publication copy of a conference paper on driving behavior. The second link wisks you to an FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) file located in Washington and kept up to date weekly by an automobile news group and archived in automated LISTSERVS to which you can make links or mail yourself a copy on e-mail. Here you have the opportunity of exploring other items such as some driving videos produced by AAA and traffic reports by various national and local services. As you return to the student's document (assuming you don't continue to wander endlessly until you run out of time), you are catapulted through the third link to an electronic magazine article available online in full text and maintained by the commercial HotWired publication. The fourth link lands you in a student's report who took the course last semester, and who described a similar self-modification experiment in which the goal was to become more aware of one's thoughts and feelings while driving from home to the UH campus. That student's report has additional links to other students that semester, which you can explore before deciding to come back to the student's report you started with. The fifth link takes you to a comment on the role of self-verbalization while driving, written by the instructor in a published article, a copy of which I made available on my Home Page. As you browse through my article you encounter hotlinks to other students' comments of some paragraph, as well as links to other articles by the instructor and by other scientists.

New Golden Age of Education

In effect, the student who authored this report has made two parallel intellectual contributions. One is the content of the paragraphs in the document; the other is the information journey we are made to travel as we traverse the five links put there by the student. Extend this example in many different ways for various topics, activities, and media, and you'll soon realize how educationally powerful, how culturally enriching the new telecommunications technology can be. It is evident that hypertext online is initiating a new Golden Age of education. In this new instructional super-medium, the professor is no longer the sole influence that determines what is important or what is related to what. The curriculum is now more open, less fully predictable. In part, the medium has become the message, and the student its messenger. I can live with that. It's good.

Students as a Cyberspace Learning Communitybr> I foster an informal discussion atmosphere in class and I openly rely on the group's solidarity with each other to get an individual unstuck when in trouble. The faster learners help the slower, and within four to five weeks 90% of the class is on board, surfing the Internet and creating World Wide Web documents. Yes, you can hear them complaining a lot, very excitedly but also very happily. In my 25 years of teaching on the Manoa campus, I have never seen more student enthusiasm and pride for learning than in my course-integrated telecommunications classes. The written student comments reveal that many experience a changed self-image that no longer is tainted with depressive technophobia. I feel terrific when I read their expression of heartfelt and genuine appreciation for the course. In this new medium, students are challenged to find their own voices, to express their own thoughts and feelings in a public and scholarly context. Students see their own writing on the World Wide Web, impressed by the fact that their writings are, in a real sense, "published" and available to millions of browsers. Students are in effect modeling the role of author, scholar, and scientist. They are thus awakened and introduced to intellectual citizenship.

Jump Right In!

For me, the great moment arrived a few months ago when the College of Social Sciences, installed a World Wide Web server in Porteus Hall (the CSS server: www.soc.hawaii.edu), under the management of Harry Partika who is responsible to Dean Richard Dubanoski. With the expert and friendly technical advice of Webmaster Eric Hagen and Kevin Bogan, volunteer Internet coach, I was able for the first time, to create an instructional set-up that truly met my vision for a generational cyberspace learning community. With this approach now in place, I feel that the University of Hawaii is soaring ahead into the 'futures of education', and I encourage my colleagues to start experimenting with this new amazing educational technology.

The age of the global virtual university is now upon us. This may all seem intimidating to uninitiated instructors, and hopelessly complicated or foreign. It appears to be all these things, true, but this is only during the accommodation phase. I started from scratch as a typical middle-aged technophobic professor, but I had the strong belief that I must join the information age or become second rate. The library played a big role in helping me overcome my initial technophobic aversions (and fears), with the introduction of the online catalog and CD-ROM databases. Subsequently I worked up enough courage to use the PLATO system on campus for course-integrated student online socializing. (You may see a report of that experience in the UHCC Newsletter, 1991, 28(2), 12-14, or browse a copy with hotlinks to student reports which you can view by pointing your browser to http://www.soc.hawaii.edu/club/leonj/leonpsy/instructor/leonplato1.html. (To the uninitiated: at the UNIX prompt, type lynx, space, then the address above starting with http -- that's all!).

The campus technocrats and administrators are doing their job by installing and placing at our disposal the marvelous capabilities of the Internet and the World Wide Web. Thank you! Now it is up to us faculty to make use of it in effective and creative ways. I invite you to browse through the cyberspace created by my students. Just point your Netscape or Lynx browser to the following URL address and enjoy!
URL: http://www.soc.hawaii.edu/club/leonj/leonpsy/leon.html

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Professor Leon James (formerly "Jakobovits") has been Professor of Psychology at the UH since 1971. His e-mail address is leon@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu.
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