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Contribution to Book
'Divertual' Learning in Education Leadership: Implications of Teaching Cultural Diversity Online vs. Face to Face
National Summit on School Leadership: Crediting the Past, Challenging the Present, and Changing the Future
  • Carolyn Ridenour, University of Dayton
  • A. Llewellyn Simmons, University of Dayton
  • Timothy J. Ilg, University of Dayton
  • A. William Place, University of Dayton
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
1-1-2005
Abstract

What are the consequences of this teaching-learning situation when graduate students in a Department of Educational Leadership are enrolled in a course on cultural diversity? Might the words on the computer screen be completely unrelated to the humanity, personality, style, interpersonal behaviors, and dispositions of the student writing them, as Menand suggests? Or, might the detachment provide a security in which the most honest and unadulterated discourse can be shared between teacher and students, as some proponents hope? In this chapter we explore responses to this dilemma. We attempt to capture this situation in our label: "divertual learning," a neologism coupling "diversity" with the "virtual" reality of the learning situation.

Inclusive pages
157-169
ISBN/ISSN
9781578863044
Document Version
Published Version
Comments

This chapter is provided for download by permission of the publisher. Permission documentation is on file. To read the entire book, visit an academic library or see the publisher's website.

Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Carolyn Ridenour, A. Llewellyn Simmons, Timothy J. Ilg and A. William Place. "'Divertual' Learning in Education Leadership: Implications of Teaching Cultural Diversity Online vs. Face to Face" National Summit on School Leadership: Crediting the Past, Challenging the Present, and Changing the Future (2005)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/carolyn_ridenour/8/