Using Digital Images in Teaching and Learning

The following study, "Using Digital Images in Teaching and Learning," was commissioned by Wesleyan University in collaboration with the National Institute for Technology and Liberal Education (NITLE).

The study focuses on the pedagogical implications of the widespread use of the digital format. However, while changes in the teaching-learning dynamic and the teacher-student relationship were at the core of the study, related issues concerning supply, support and infrastructure rapidly became part of its fabric. These topics include the quality of image resources, image functionality, management, deployment and the skills required for optimum use (digital and image "literacies").

This report is rooted in faculty experience in "going digital," as shown in four hundred survey responses and three hundred individual interviews with faculty and some staff at 33 colleges and universities: 31 liberal arts colleges together with Harvard and Yale Universities. Two-thirds of the survey respondents worked in the arts and humanities, 27% in the sciences and 12% in the social sciences. These faculty were self-selected and mostly convinced of the digital promise of abundant, fluid resources. They wanted to communicate both their enthusiasm for their endeavor and their frustration at the pace and quality of their transition to teaching with this new format.  

Full Report (1.1 mb .pdf)

Executive Summary (.4 mb .pdf)

In addition to the report and the executive summary, we have established two spaces for readers to interact with the author David Green, and with one another.

Image Project Forum (requires membership in Academic Commons)

Image Project  Wiki

 

 

How to cite this work

Michael Roy. "Using Digital Images in Teaching and Learning." Academic Commons Issue Name (Spring 2008): 11 February 2012. <http://www.academiccommons.org/>.