Author:
            
                    Gali Naveh
                    
                        
                    
                    
                
        
        
            Affiliation:
            
                    
                        
                    
                    Shamoon College of Engineering, Israel
                
        
        
        
        
        
             Keyword(s):
            Information and Communication Technology, Higher Education, Pedagogy, Stakeholders' Perspective, Garbage Can Model.
        
        
            
                Related
                    Ontology
                    Subjects/Areas/Topics:
                
                        Computer-Supported Education
                    ; 
                        Course Design and e-Learning Curriculae
                    ; 
                        Distance and e-Learning in a Global Context
                    ; 
                        e-Learning
                    ; 
                        Social Context and Learning Environments
                    ; 
                        Theoretical Bases of e-Learning Environments
                    
            
        
        
            
                Abstract: 
                Unlike nearly every aspect of our lives that has changed enormously in the past decades, academic teaching
has changed very little, and a professor walking into a classroom populated with dozens of students who are
trying to grasp the material presented to them, is relevant today as it was a century ago. To discern this
phenomenon, this paper discusses some of the most promising technologies which have emerged during the
last quarter of a century (accessibility to the internet, smartphones and Massive Open Online Courses) while
indicating their failure to facilitate a large-scale pedagogical change in academia, in contradiction to high
expectations and predictions. A perspective is suggested on the perception and motivation of the three major
stakeholders of academic teaching – instructors, students and institutes, signifying the lack of incentives on
their part for large-scale change. Finally the gap between the volume of research in the field of information
technology integration i
                n higher education pedagogy and the little change in academic teaching reality is
discussed, and a course of action that may change this state of affair is offered.
                (More)