RE: Distance Learning and Copyright

From: It's Possible <4us2b1[_at_]cox.net>
Date: Fri, 3 Jan 2003 01:41:52 -0700


Dear Michael:
I could not agree with you more as with regard to your email showing us the great need for grammar, spelling, punctuation, etc. What was the name of that "correspondence school" where you studied? Guess it's possible anyone can miss-out on the Spell-Check session. Now this must be embarrassing as all can be. ouch ! However, through reading your comments, I guess this is a form of Distance Learning for all of us.

CattSCAN Image Publishing
Bob Catt

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-cni-copyright[_at_]cni.org [mailto:owner-cni-copyright[_at_]cni.org]On Behalf Of Michael Landau
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2003 10:46 AM To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: Re: Distance Learning and Copyright

In the age of euphemisms in which the garbageman is a "sanitation engineer" and a sales clerk is a "customer service inventory expert" could distance learning be the new name for "correspondence school?"

Nothing beats face to face contact, especially at a time when people spend very little time actually interacting with people in person and nearly all of their time in front of computer screens, on cell phones, and in their cars.

The technology to allow students to take courses away from school has been around for a long time. Why is it that, in the past, very few institutions gave their students a pile of videotapes to be watched at home in place of a course, with instructions to call or write to the professor with querstions? Why, because part of the learning experience is direct communication IN PERSON. The distance learning movement arose at a time when the Internet was viewed as something that would forever change every aspect of every person's life.

With the collapse of almost everything except for Amazon, eBay, and some informational sites, itr should now be realized that the Internet is not the best thing since sliced bread. It is great for some shopping. It is great for quickly ontaining information, but it is not a substitute for most activities, including university education.

HAPPY NEW YEAR ! Michael Landau
Profesor of Law
Georgia State University
Atlanta, GA 30303 Received on Fri Jan 03 2003 - 08:40:54 GMT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Mon Mar 26 2007 - 00:35:47 GMT