The Chronicle of Higher Education
Information Technology
September 28, 2007

Today's News

ALERT SYSTEMS REACH STUDENTS

Two colleges hit by violence within the past two weeks used new emergency-alert plans to keep their communities safe.

Articles

article illustration CONVERSING MARGINALLY

New software for digital books updates a hallowed tradition of scholarship, the margin note, and lets readers comment on the comments.
CommentPress allows readers of electronic texts to write shared margin notes, like these in The Divine Comedy.

Technology Notes

PRIVACY AT ISSUE: Facebook's plan to allow search engines access to many of its pages has upset some users.

'RIVER OF ALLIGATORS': Ohio University's new chief information officer doesn't mind the pressure that came with the job.

The Information Technology Supplement

 Current supplement  Dec. 2005  June 2005  2004
Article illustration MILLENNIALS' PERENNIALS

Students from Nevada State College and the University of Nevada at Las Vegas chat about their academic and technological habits at The Chronicle's Technology Forum.
Sarah Mihelic (holding microphone): "My dad is still into the whole book thing. He has not realized that the Internet kind of took the place of that. So we go to the library almost every Sunday." Photograph by Todd Bigelow.

WIRED FOR KNOWLEDGE

Arden L. Bement, director of the National Science Foundation, says cyberinfrastructure will be at the heart of the next IT revolution.

CURRENT CONCERNS

Keeping up with information technology is a crucial aspect of university presidents' jobs, say James Martin and James E. Samels, of the Education Alliance.

VIEW FROM THE TOP

Highlights of a panel on presidents' and IT officials' best practices and biggest concerns.

HERE AND THERE

Gene I. Maeroff, of the Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media at Columbia University's Teachers College, and Robert Zemsky, chairman of the Learning Alliance for Higher Education, discuss whether e-learning has lived up to its potential.

WORD SCRAMBLE

What's the role of online archives in academe? Discussing the possibilities are Daniel Greenstein, of the California Digital Library of the University of California; Adam Smith, group business-product manager for the Google Book Search and Google Scholar programs; and Danielle Tiedt, general manager of Windows Live Premium Search.

PEDAGOGY AND TECHNOLOGY

Edward J. Maloney, of Georgetown University's Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship, urges academe to draw educational advances from technological ones.

TALKING TEXT

Textual and oral cultures are interacting in interesting and sometimes counterintuitive ways, writes Luke Fernandez, of Weber State University.

WARNING PROMPTS AND PROMPT WARNINGS

Students should understand cybersecurity risks before they arrive at college, says Samuel C. McQuade III, of the Rochester Institute of Technology's Center for Multidisciplinary Studies.

Fighting Phishing With Fun
-- 9/28/2007 11:11 a.m.
Google's Own Second Life?
-- 9/27/2007 2:58 p.m.
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