Dim the lights, please. Today we’re going to have a film strip.

Professor Kristin Cherry teaches a beginning Radio course at Central Methodist University in Fayette, MO, and was kind enough to invite me come talk about… radio. I didn’t know what to say about “radio” so I made a list (“10 Survival Tools for the Digital Age”) of things I was pretty sure they already knew about. They didn’t. [Just click a slide to see the next one] The photo below was taken just as my presentation peaked.

I don’t have the opportunity to spend a lot of time around young people but I’ve come to believe they are no more web savvy than the population at large. They’re great at texting and know the ends and outs of Facebook… but very few are creating media or exploring.

In my group of about 25 students, only one had uploaded a video to YouTube and that was for a class assignment. Twitter, UStream, flickr? Never heard of them.

I tried to convey the idea that these –and similar tools– will be useful no matter what they do after college. What I forgot (it was a very long time ago) was that they had very little interest in next semester, let alone The Rest of Their Lives.

The instructors (and the administration!) were incredibly gracious hosts and the campus is really pretty. As always, I got much more out of this experience than the students. More on that in a future post. [Wikipedia entry for “film strip”]

4 thoughts on “Dim the lights, please. Today we’re going to have a film strip.

  1. The guy on the left is clearly texting his girlfriend to break up with her, inspired as he is to drop out of school and travel the country on his Moped, recording his quirky and humorous exploits on flickr, uStream, Facebook, and his new WordPress blog, “www.thankyouoldguywithacasio.com.”

  2. In addition to not having experience of uploading to the likes of Flickr or “twatter”, they probably aren’t up to good spellink or any of the other basics we long in the tooths mastered before all these twinky web toys were conceived.

  3. In addition to not having experience of uploading to the likes of Flickr or “twatter”, they probably aren’t up to good spellink or any of the other basics we long in the tooths mastered before all these twinky web toys were conceived.

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