stress, technology and teaching

From: Richard Walters (rfwalters@ucdavis.edu)
Date: Tue Aug 14 2001 - 09:35:07 PDT

  • Next message: Gall, Graham A. E.: "RE: stress, technology and teaching"

    Good people:
    Will Davis from TRC sent this along. hope none of you felt stressed
    by SITT!

    dick walters

    >From will.davis@ucdavis.edu Mon Aug 13 10:16 PDT 2001
    From: Will Davis <will.davis@ucdavis.edu>
    Subject: tech and stress article

    Hmmm. Interesting. Keeping up with technology was ranked as second
    only to general time constraints for inducing stress. I suspect
    journalism faculty are no different than most.

                    Will

    Friday, August 10, 2001

    http://chronicle.com/free/2001/08/2001081003t.htm

    Technology Causes Stress for Journalism Professors, Report Says

    By SUSANNAH DAINOW

    Technology -- both learning to use it and trying to keep up with it
    -- causes journalism professors significant amounts of stress,
    according to a new report by
    three researchers at the Indiana University School of Journalism.

    "Most journalism and mass-communication educators harbor basically
    positive feelings about the technology in their professional lives,"
    says the report, which
    was released this week. "But that doesn't mean the technology doesn't
    bring stress as well."

    The report is based on a study, conducted during the past year, for
    which the researchers surveyed more than 450 journalism professors
    and administrators
    about their attitudes toward technology and about its impact on their
    professional lives.

    Among six categories of stress factors, technology ranked second only
    to general time constraints in the amount of stress caused to the
    faculty members
    surveyed, surpassing even worries about tenure and personal issues.
    For 73 percent of the faculty members and 74 percent of the
    administrators, technology
    caused a moderate or great deal of stress every day.
    Technology-induced stress also contributed significantly to job
    dissatisfaction and burnout.

    The study also found that 83.8 percent of the faculty members
    surveyed said that learning new technologies took time away from
    their research, with 71 percent
    learning one or two new programs a year. Journalism professors "are
    an active learning group," the study reported.

    Higher-ranking faculty members were more likely to feel
    technology-induced stress than were their junior counterparts; women
    were also more likely than men
    to feel tech stress.

    Most faculty members agreed that they wanted and needed to learn more
    about using technology, but they felt that "the training just isn't
    sufficient," said
    Christine Ogan, a professor of journalism at Indiana who was one of
    the authors of the report. "They're getting more training than we
    expected, but they still
    say it's not enough for their needs."

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    Will Davis mailto:will.davis@ucdavis.edu Teaching Resources Center (530) 752-6050 17 Wellman Hall FAX: (530) 752-5986 One Shields Avenue University of California,Davis Davis, CA 95616-8717

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