Gadgets such as the Apple iPhone and the iPod Touch are mainstays on college campuses — largely for the devices’ ability to help students escape the pressures of the classroom.
Now the oldest US journalism school is asking students to buy those or similar devices to download classroom lectures or confirm facts on the Web while reporting from the scene of a plane crash or town council meeting.
The new rule for incoming freshmen at the University of Missouri School of Journalism appears to mark the first time a US university is requiring specific portable electronic devices. The policy has spurred a debate about the limits and possibilities of technology, as well as corporate influence in academia.
Skeptics say the school is getting too cozy with Apple Inc, though administrators point out that they earn no financial benefit from the new policy. The university gets a 10 percent discount on Apple computers it buys, but other vendors such as Dell Inc and Hewlett-Packard Co offer the same deal.
“It’s like asking an engineer to buy a calculator,” said Brian Brooks, associate dean for undergraduate studies. “We are doing this requirement solely to benefit our students’ learning.”
A description about the program on the school’s Web site notes that “at least 50 colleges and universities nationwide make use of iPods in their programs.”
But it’s not clear that any of those schools make it mandatory — and at student expense. Private colleges such as Duke and Abilene Christian have given the devices out for free.
Brooks points out that an estimated 85 percent to 90 percent of the university’s 30,200 undergraduates already own portable music players, with 85 percent of those devices being iPods.
Even so, graduating senior Maureen Scarpelli — an admitted Apple disciple — questions the school’s endorsement of a particular product.
After similar complaints, the school clarified that it is requiring any Web-enabled, audio-video player like the iPhone or the iPod Touch, which is like an iPhone without the phone. So portable devices such as a Microsoft Zune or smart phones such as BlackBerrys can be acceptable. Just not preferred.
“There are alternatives to the iPod Touch, but none that we consider equally capable,” the online program description concludes.
Among the uses envisioned by Brooks and other professors are students listening to lectures while at the gym or walking to class, using wireless Internet access to verify information while reporting stories and watching instructional videos that otherwise would take up valuable classroom time.
Clyde Bentley was one of nine journalism professors who voted against the new policy (with 40 in support) at a recent faculty meeting. His primary concern was saddling students with an additional expense. He also questioned whether students who rely on portable devices to listen to music or watch TV shows will embrace the journalism school’s intended uses.
Brooks pointed out that by requiring portable electronic devices, the university can include those costs in financial aid packages.
And the US$229 student price of an iPod Touch is comparable to two or three textbooks, he said.
Jeffrey Cole, director of the Center for the Digital Future at the University of Southern California, calls the new Missouri requirement “not only reasonable, but admirable.”
He likened the debate to discussions several years ago over whether colleges should ask incoming students to buy PCs or laptop computers — by now a largely moot point.
“Schools are usually far behind their students in embracing new technology and faculty are usually behind the schools,” Cole said. “It really shows how both journalism and education are changing in transformational ways. The biggest effect the Internet will have is not how we play or communicate, but how we learn.”
PLA MANEUVERS: Although Beijing has yet to formally announce military drills, its coast guard vessels have been spotted near and around Taiwan since Friday The Taiwanese military is on high alert and is closely monitoring the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) air and naval deployments after Beijing yesterday reserved seven airspace areas east of its Zhejiang and Fujian provinces through Wednesday. Beijing’s action was perceived as a precursor to a potential third “Joint Sword” military exercise, which national security experts said the PLA could launch following President William Lai’s (賴清德) state visits to the nation’s three Pacific allies and stopovers in Hawaii and Guam last week. Unlike the Joint Sword military exercises in May and October, when Beijing provided detailed information about the affected areas, it
CHINA: The activities come amid speculation that Beijing might launch military exercises in response to Lai’s recent visit to Pacific allies The Ministry of National Defense (MND) yesterday said China had nearly doubled the number of its warships operating around the nation in the previous 24 hours, ahead of what security sources expect would be a new round of war games. China’s military activities come amid speculation Beijing might organize military drills around the nation in response to President William Lai’s (賴清德) recent visit to Pacific allies, including stops in Hawaii and Guam, a US territory. Lai returned from the week-long trip on Friday night. Beijing has held two rounds of war games around Taiwan this year, and sends ships and military planes
Five flights have been arranged to help nearly 2,000 Taiwanese tourists return home from Okinawa after being stranded due to cruise ship maintenance issues, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications announced yesterday. China Airlines Ltd (中華航空), and EVA Airways Corp (長榮航空) have arranged five flights with a total of 748 additional seats to transport 1,857 passengers from the MSC Bellissima back to Taiwan, the ministry said. The flights have been scheduled for yesterday and today by the Civil Aviation Administration, with the cruise operator covering all associated costs. The MSC Bellissima, carrying 4,341 passengers, departed from Keelung on Wednesday last week for Okinawa,
US president-elect Donald Trump said he would “never say” if Washington is committed to defending Taiwan from China, but “I would prefer that they do not do it [ an attack],” adding that he has a “good relationship” with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平). “I never say because I have to negotiate things, right?” Trump said in an interview with NBC’s Meet the Press host Kristen Welker after saying he would not reveal his incoming administration’s stance on Taiwan’s defense in the event of an attack. Asked the question again, Trump, in a reference to China, said: “I would prefer that they