Human Maps for the Digital Age: Classics-based Core Curricula and New Media Technology

$35.00
by Andrew C. Shurtleff Ed.D

Shop Now
"What is university education for? Many answers have been proposed. Somewhere between preparation for citizenship, for adulthood, for employment, for you-name-it, fall the proposals. Dr. Andrew C. Shurtleff accepts that preparation for navigating the Digital Age will require technological maps, while becoming more than a technician requires humanistic guidance using maps influenced/ennobled/enhanced by familiarity with the classics of Western civilization and other advanced cultures. The use of New Media Technologies to bring education in the humanities to students must be combined with person-to-person elements to be compelling and humane and not alienating. Just as the "maps" in our brains help us to make sense of our world, education in the post-Sputnik era in America has increasingly emphasized science-technology-engineering-mathematics (STEM) maps rather than the literary-artistic-humanistic maps once given students by education in the classics. Dr. Shurtleff argues for an amalgamation of the two approaches, "STEAM," where "Arts" are incorporated into enriching the STEM technological coursework now dominating our Digital Age. His proposals are made explicit in his vision for modifying Columbia University’s Core Curriculum. His insightful critique and proposals deserve consideration by all those concerned with improving the quality of university education.” — Douglas Winslow Cooper, Ph.D. , Formerly, Associate Professor, Environmental Health Sciences, Harvard School of Public Health "Andrew Shurtleff worked closely with my late colleague, Frank Moretti, and a small group of technology developers on a visionary project for supporting Columbia's core curriculum with new media. The work of this group was primarily conceptual and Shurtleff's ideas for the project were central to his dissertation on Human Maps for the Digital Age. In this work, he displays a significant capacity to ground humanistic curricular ideas in the general context of new media in education, especially at the undergraduate level. Andrew will excel, given teaching and research opportunities to move his project towards practical implementation, in linking high-quality general education and the pedagogical possibilities of new media. His project concerns a key component of high-quality undergraduate education and if developed well, it would have a powerful influence in advancing the uses of new media in leading universities." — Robert O. McClintock, Ph.D. , Professor Emeritus in the Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Education, Columbia University "What is university education for? Many answers have been proposed. Somewhere between preparation for citizenship, for adulthood, for employment, for you-name-it, fall the proposals. Dr. Andrew C. Shurtleff accepts that preparation for navigating the Digital Age will require technological maps, while becoming more than a technician requires humanistic guidance using maps influenced/ennobled/enhanced by familiarity with the classics of Western civilization and other advanced cultures. The use of New Media Technologies to bring education in the humanities to students must be combined with person-to-person elements to be compelling and humane and not alienating. Just as the "maps" in our brains help us to make sense of our world, education in the post-Sputnik era in America has increasingly emphasized science-technology-engineering-mathematics (STEM) maps rather than the literary-artistic-humanistic maps once given students by education in the classics. Dr. Shurtleff argues for an amalgamation of the two approaches, "STEAM," where "Arts" are incorporated into enriching the STEM technological coursework now dominating our Digital Age. His proposals are made explicit in his vision for modifying Columbia University's Core Curriculum. His insightful critique and proposals deserve consideration by all those concerned with improving the quality of university education." — Douglas Winslow Cooper, Ph.D. , Formerly, Associate Professor, Environmental Health Sciences, Harvard School of Public Health Andrew C. Shurtleff, Ed.D. is a coach, consultant, and writer. He is the author of two books:  Leaning on Cedars  and  Human Maps for the Digital Age . The first is a coming-of-age novella about initiation and adapting to personal crisis. The second is an educational guidebook for adapting to crises in the Digital Age.

Customer Reviews

No ratings. Be the first to rate

 customer ratings


How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Review This Product

Share your thoughts with other customers