• Home
  • Contribute
  • Issues
  • Archives
  • About the Commons
  • AC Wiki
  • Contact Us
  • Aggregator
  • Register
  • Login /

Projects: making sense of arrival and departure tables

Dr. David Neville, Elon University
Dr. David Neville
Director of Language Learning Technologies; Assistant Professor of German
http://facstaff.elon.edu/dneville/
faculty
PhD (2002), German Language and Literature; MS (2008) Instructional Technology
The American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL)
Cognitive load theory (CLT), computer-assisted language learning (CALL), digital game-based learning (DGBL), digital humanities, human-computer interaction (HCI), interactive digital media design and assessment, learning objects, medieval and early modern German language and literature, medieval Franciscan theology and mysticism, medievalism, medieval paleography and codicology, medieval women's mysticism, online collaborative learning, open education, problem-based learning (PBL), text and image in medieval manuscripts, video game studies, virtual worlds.
David O. Neville is assistant professor of German Language and Literature and Director of Language Learning Technologies at Elon University. He holds a Ph.D. in German Language and Literature, with an emphasis in Medieval Studies, from Washington University in St. Louis, and a M.S. in Instructional Technology from Utah State University.

What is the Commons?

Academic Commons is a community of faculty, academic technologists, librarians, administrators, and other academic professionals interested in two interlocking questions: how do creative uses of new technology and networked information support the current project of liberal education, and, perhaps more interestingly, how do they force us to re-think what it means to be liberally educated? Learn more.

Post to the Commons

RSS Feeds

Full-text feed

Back to top

The Center of Inquiry in the Liberal Arts at Wabash College sponsors the Academic Commons.
NERCOMP is a proud sponsor of Academic Commons

The Longsight Group hosts and supports the collaborative web tools used by the Academic Commons.

Academic Commons is licensed under a Creative Commons License.