Imagining a Video Study Bible (via Vook)
Occasionally, I like to take a moment to imagine what relevance a new technological product might have for biblical studies. Yesterday, a friend of mine told me about a fairly new and hype-gathering tool called Vook (a name that does not exactly roll off the tongue). This is a tool that seems to be aimed at the iPad and whatever other similar devices follow the iPad. It integrates e-reading with watching videos. At first, I didn’t get it. Okay, so, maybe some sort of instruction manual could use video to show you how to do something. But how do you find complementary video for literary works. On their trailer, they include what looks like stock video of a woman running. Really? I’m reading about a woman running and you give me a video of a woman running? Is that how it works? That’s a little hokey.
On the other hand, apparently they also have video bits that are like documentaries. So, you decide to read Sherlock Holmes and you get videos on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and his historical situation, as well as some impromtu “on the street” interviews about his fictional characters. This is more like it. Not something that helps me “get in the mood” of the story, per se, but something that is kind of like a commentary… giving me background information or relevant conversation about the topic, story, or author at hand. I think I could get into that. Naturally, if they team up with quality producers of informed video content (BBC, PBS, etc.), they could get something really amazing going on there.
Can’t you see Zondervan getting behind something like this and putting out hosts of different sorts of study Bibles for different audiences? The more academic publishers could try to create one with top scholars being interviewed on particular passages or themes, archaeological issues. Vook Bibles could include sermons appropriate to the audience or something like Rob Bell’s NOOMA videos. Maps included in study Bibles could go beyond mere stagnant arrows, to show sequential movement. Charts and tables of information could be adapted for video format and placed in appropriate locations in the text.
As we move down the road a few years, I can see quite a few people getting access to these sorts of devices. If institutions follow the trend of schools handing out the latest technologies to students, then I could see something like Vook offering a really interesting service for academic works (e.g., textbooks, etc.). I tell you what, though, if they want to make some money, I bet coming out with Zondervan-style plethora of Bibles would do them lots of good. Of course, I would like a couple Vook Bibles to be the New Oxford Annotateds or New Interpreters or HarperCollins Study Bibles of the Vook Bible lineup (a category that I have just made up). So, what do you think, Vook?
Guest Post: Bridging Tech and “Old School” Respect in the Classroom
Responding to my recent little series on laptops in the classroom (see parts one, two, and three), I got a lengthy comment from Barry Goldenberg, one of my current students in Western Civilization (Circa A.D. 843 to Circa 1715) at UCLA. Barry’s comment was so thoughtful that I figured it deserved its own post. Some interesting things that I have learned about Barry is that he is on the UCLA tennis team (I gather he maintains their Twitter feed) and, in the fall, was an intern for a US Senator. Barry’s comments are a nice first person account of one undergrad trying to live in that in-between space of the technology generation, but also with some “old school” values (his words). So, without further ado, here’s Barry . . .
This is a great topic and one, as I continue to grow and change as a 3rd year undergraduate student, struggle with myself. Coming out of high school, it had rarely ever occurred me to use my laptop in classroom. Even though I came from a public school in St. Louis, Missouri, I had originally felt it was disrespectful to use laptops; I guess I was “old school” and felt that you take notes in your notebook, make eye contact with the Professor, do not wear hats, etc. Obviously, coming to UCLA from a suburb outside of St. Louis is–and continues to be–a culture shock and experience.
Regardless, I do not think I used my laptop my first year in the classroom, especially not in discussion. I effectively developed a “system” that worked to do well in college for me in terms of folders, color coded notebooks, my specific pen to takes with, and the works. And, quite frankly, I saw no reason to change. My old-fashioned notetaking (even amongst the large lecture halls) seemed to work as well as held to my beliefs about respect for my Professor (unfounded or not). This continued throughout my 2nd year at UCLA, until I specifically remember an instance in the Spring where I finally stopped being stubborn and thought about using laptops.
I spent all quarter furiously taking notes during Prof. Gelvin’s Israeli-Palestine conflict, in which his lectures were very dense, provided much information, as well as relevant practical information to debate with in the real world. Regardless, a student next to me sat next to me in the front row one day and with her Mac (I had gotten a Mac for the first time that year), opened up her Word document and typed in a “notebook-esque” way as the computer recorded the Professor speaking in line with her typing . . . I was amazed, I did not know I could do that! I thought to myself, “Why would anyone NOT do this?” The next day of lecture, I brought my computer and recorded my Professor while typing notes and I realized I would be foolish to not do so for a class that the Professor talks fast and provides a lot of information.
After that Spring quarter revolution, I now decide the format of the class use my computer (despite continuous peer pressure to always use one when the majority of the class uses it). In a class without a PowerPoint Presentation, I always take notes by hand because it provides me the best way for me to organize what the Professor is saying by ways of diagrams, arrows, stars, brackets, etc. When there is a PowerPoint, I still try to take notes by hand but if there is “too much” information presented, then I will think about using my laptop or if there is information in lecture that I want to repeat to in the future.
Overall, the laptop in my opinion, is a very powerful tool and sometimes I feel so foolish for insisting to always try to take notes by hand. To me, there is just “something” special and rewarding about having a notebook for of notes over a digital copy. But I know that notes on my computer will provide me easier access to information (as Pat mentioned about searching for specific things) as well as provide an invaluable recording of the lecture. However, if I don’t find it necessary to have either of those things in the context of the class and its structure, I still feel better taking notes by hand.
Above all, always sitting in the front row of every class, it just feels more respectful to do so for the Professor and especially in a discussion section; engaging in the material, making eye contact instead of staring at the computer screen helps me create a more personal experience/connection with the lecturer or class. However, I recognize how beneficial a laptop can be and have reached the point, at least now in my college experience, that I sometimes use them in class when I feel it will help me do better. As I continue my education, maybe I will have to/need to use them all the time inside the classroom, but for now, I usually do without.
Lectures and Laptops: Adapting Teaching Methods
To continue this series on laptops in the classroom (see parts one and two) . . . There is another issue here and that is whether we need to change the way we teach rather than ban laptops. Both Chris and Tim mention it: even the lecture shouldn’t be a straight lecture, but should encourage active student learning. I’m a bit on the fence.
Before UCLA, I had never experienced discussion sections. The big classes at UCLA have large lecture halls (somewhere between 120-300 students or so) with smaller sections that meet once per week for discussion (around 15-25 students, depending on the department). So, I would like to agree with Chris and Tim about the need to change the passive lecture into a more active learning experience, but I would like to qualify it a bit:
In a class like those at UCLA (lecture sessions + discussion sessions), there seems no real point in making the lecture into something reserved for the discussion sessions — where active learning can be much more effective. On the other hand, the lecturer should work hard to be animated and to speak in a conversational style. As an avid podcast listener (and a former high school thespian), I am a firm advocate for the power of the spoken word.
The lecture need not be a dictation-transcription sort of relationship. Make it fun! I think the lecture should tell a story in a way that excites the presenter. Occasionally, students could be called up to volunteer and act out some sort of historical scene or to model the manner of statues in a particular age or the like. But the focus of the lecture should, I think, be on the transferal of information in an engaging way. I do not believe the lecture is dead yet, even if John Cleese is carrying it over his shoulder trying to toss it on the cart for the dead.
For a large course without discussion sections (over 50 or so), it’s difficult to create an environment of active participation. One of my Fuller profs handled it well by assigning small groups that would share electronic responses with each other each week. Another Fuller prof handled it by creating small groups that would consistently meet together as a portion of the long class time each week. I like both approaches.
I may have appreciated the course content in large lecture classes otherwise, but my learning experience suffered if the professors made absolutely no attempt at connecting the students in any sort of meaningful way. Having a few people speak up in response to questions during large lectures usually descends into having a handful of outspoken students “ask questions” that are mini-lectures in themselves to show off their “intellect.”
For a survey course with a smaller amount of students (under 30-40 or so), it still seems to me that some sort of “lecturing” needs to occur. It is a class surveying material and I believe that students should have someone who can ably guide them through that material. Again, the lecture need not be dull. But the smaller classroom, even if it needs to have some sort of basis in information review, also allows for more active classroom activity: small group tasks, debates, and the like.
For a seminar type classroom (maybe 5-15 or so), I believe there should be very minimal “lecturing” (aside from the occasional rant about some perspective or approach of the material) and mostly student discussion.
What happens to the laptop in all this? I believe there is a place for the laptop in all of these environments. In the lecture course, as an educator, I don’t want to babysit students. It’s really impossible to enforce rules about laptop usage unless you want to ban the laptop (and as I’ve noted in the past two posts, I don’t want to ban the laptop). Making your TAs enforce laptop usage is really unfair to the TA’s and makes them into police rather than educators. The policing can even be more distracting than the inappropriate laptop usage.
So, as I’ve noted in this little series, I think for lectures we need to treat students like adults and let them do as they will with their laptops. I think I like the idea of asking students who plan to distract themselves sit in the back, as one Fuller professor did. As the classroom sizes descend smaller into more discussion based sessions, I still believe laptops have a place, even if it needs to be regulated a bit (like taking a point off their final grade for inappropriate laptop use as I do).
Laptops in the Classroom: An Autobiography
Sharing my own experience, I would like to follow-up from my earlier post on what to do about laptops in the classroom. I feel like I’m embedded in the generational transition into this technological problem. I am part of the “in between”. When I was an undergrad, nobody brought laptops to class — even my senior year (2002). After three years had passed and I entered seminary (2005), everybody had a laptop in class (all but a very, very small minority). From what I’ve seen, UCLA students are somewhere in between (though, my wife tells me that her Master of Public Health classes at UCLA had about the same laptop numbers as my Fuller Seminary experience).
From what I can see, there are at least two types of classrooms that need to be addressed: the lecture hall and the discussion classroom. So, here’s a bit about my own time in both:
Taking notes in lecture. I was not the ideal student as an undergrad. Let’s not go into too many of those details, but one of my problems was my entry into the digital age before it really took off in the classroom. For me, taking notes in class by hand felt so useless because I couldn’t search for things later. Relatedly, I was terrible at organizing papers, whereas I’m great at organizing things on my laptop. After the semester ended, both problems escalated: there was no way I was going to be able to control dozens of pieces of paper from each class each semester in any useful manner. Taking notes on paper just seemed (and still seems) futile to me. The notes I have taken on my laptop as a graduate student, however, have been invaluable, even years later. “I remember David Scholer mentioning some interesting Greco-Roman parallel to the Lukan prologue . . . what was that? . . . [searching files] . . . ah, yes, there it is. . . .”
I also tend to agree with the college student from the NPR story I mentioned last time: “‘It’s like high school. I mean we’re college students. I mean we’re paying tuition to come here, a lot of tuition to come here. We shouldn’t be treated like we’re elementary school students.” Yes, laptop computers (particularly when connected to the internet) are a bit risk for distraction. But in the lecture class (I’m talking somewhere over 50 students), I think students need to make the decision for themselves. If they decide to play Farmville instead of listening to the lecture on the agricultural revolution, they will probably get lower points on the exams. They should be free to make that choice, as long as distractions to others can be limited.
Laptops in the discussion-based classroom. Jared believes that laptops should be banned in discussion classrooms, while Chris believes we should be leveraging student attachments to technology. In my discussion sections at UCLA, I have found that there aren’t enough students with laptops to really leverage their presence as Chris suggests. But I am far from coming to Jared’s conclusion. I suppose it is from my own experience as a student. I can’t imagine myself without my Bible software in a doctoral seminar on, say, Deuteronomy. The extreme ease of going from one passage to another to a ancient near eastern inscription to a commentary to a lexicon to a Bible dictionary, etc., makes discussion so much more enriching. Not to mention how helpful it is to take notes on my laptop, as mentioned earlier.
While the undergraduate class on Western Civilization that I teach doesn’t need to be jumping around so much, it may help them to search for a key term in the primary documents we read for that week or to jot down some notes from the discussion. Perhaps even jot down a question before they ask it and then write down any responses to it after they ask the question.
Since attention is so essential in creating an effective discussion environment, I still deter nonessential laptop use by penalizing students’ grades. None of this frivolous “bring donuts in for everyone next time if your phone rings” stuff. If you’re messing around with the laptop, texting on your phone, or even doing the old school newspaper reading, you get one point off on your final grade each time. So, I may not ban laptops, but I have found that my policy (and my demonstration that I mean what I say) allows for a healthier laptop-to-discussion-classroom relationship. And I still (usually) have excellent participation.
Okay, I still have more to say, but I’ll will leave that for a “part three” to come, addressing different teaching methods we might take for different types of classrooms . . .
Another “Laptops in the Classroom” Article
My father-in-law forwarded this article from the Washington Post about laptops in the classroom. NPR covered a similar story yesterday on Weekend Edition. You may remember the article in the Chronicle last year. The two recent stories have a similar tone (NPR even uses this phrase): “be careful what you wish for.” Many universities offered laptops to all incoming students. More and more schools are doing this. But now that the students all have the laptops, they have the problem of laptop distraction in the classroom. Both NPR and the Post include a bit about Kieran Mullen freezing a laptop with liquid nitrogen and destroying a laptop in class to make the point (see the video).
The NPR story includes a point that you can also find made by Chris Heard last year. An undergrad interviewed in the story says: “I went through a history class that was just every single day death by PowerPoint. And it just, it was awful.” A professor interviewed agrees: “I think if no one in your lecture hall or your classroom is paying attention to you and you complain about that, that is like the baker complaining about the bread.” Chris believes that “enforced Ludditism does nothing but flex the professor’s power muscles.”
The Mullen laptop destruction presentation is a great example of professorial power muscles. Bolstering this perspective is the further point that distractions did not begin with electronic devices in the classroom. Chris makes this point, as does the professor interviewed in the NPR story. On the other hand, Jared made a good point last year as well, that doodling does not have the same sort of distraction power as does the connected laptop.
So, on the one hand, students have always found ways to embrace distractions. On the other hand, the distractions truly are more accessible and more difficult to avoid with the internet at one’s fingertips. Not only that, someone checking sports on their laptop screen is much more distracting to other students than someone doodling or even reading the newspaper. I had one professor at Fuller adjust for this by asking any students who plan to distract themselves online to sit in the back row, so as not to distract any students behind them. An interesting approach.
This getting a bit long, so I will stop here with the promise of a “part two” later, on my own experience as both student and educator. . . .
For further reading, you can see older reflections from Tim and Tyler. Tim touches on another point raised in Chris’ post, that of needing to change the way we teach, to encourage more active learning. I’ll come back to this.
A Dream: Amazon Kindle and Logos Bible Software
I was excited to see the progress that Amazon is making on their Kindle line with the reveal of Kindle DX yesterday. They are going beyond a vision for a simple little e-reader. The larger-sized reader offers an interesting angle on entering the academic market. Amazon is partnering with universities (Arizona State, Case Western Reserve, Princeton, University of Virginia, Reed College and Pace) and textbook companies (Pearson, Cengage Learning and Wiley) to get the Kindle DX into the hands of students in the upcoming academic year.
One of the greatest advances, in my mind, of the new Kindle is the ability to view PDFs without some clunky conversion process. At Fuller Seminary, a good percentage of my courses had a course reader on CDs, filled with PDF versions of our reading. At UCLA, my courses have had countless huge reading assingments in PDF scanned from relevant scholarship. The PDF feature makes Kindle particularly juicey for graduate students. While the current pricetag ($489) may make the device a tough sell for strapped college students, this is only their first footstep into the market. This is the third Kindle available since November 2007. I am sure they will continue to work out the kinks of doing this business and the price will come down.
But I have a dream. Oh, my friends, do I have a dream! Kindle’s vision is to have “every book ever printed in any language, all available in less than 60 seconds.” Currently, their offerings for biblical studies are pretty sparse. You can get copies of the TNIV and ESV (both free!), some introductory textbooks, a specialized work here and there, and even one Bible Atlas (which would be a must for me). This is a decent start, but if I’m going to buy a Kindle to meet academic needs, I need more. If Amazon is going to reach its goal, it seems wise that they partner with folks that are already successfully developing electronic libraries.
Enter Pat’s dream: the ability to convert and transfer my resources on Logos Bible Software to the Amazon Kindle, something like this most recent edition. On the Kindle, they already have the ability to highlight a word and jump to it in the built-in dictionary. Apparently, you can purchase other dictionaries to be set as your default. Imagine having the Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary fill that role while reading biblical texts. Imagine something like Logos’ keylinking, where you can click on a reference (canonical or otherwise) and jump right to that text. You would certainly have to give up real powerful search features, but having my Logos library available on the sort of Kindle released yesterday, that would be heavenly.
So, Amazon.com, meet Logos Bible Software. You two go get acquainted and let’s see what happens
Do you know of any biblioblogs that . . . ?
A friend of mine asked this question:
Pat, do you know of any biblioblogs that deal particularly with…
1) teaching biblical studies in general
2) using tech in biblical studies ed (e.g. class wikis, PPT, Blackboard, etc.)?
So, I put the question to you all. What do you think? My friend is especially interesting in Hebrew Bible and ANE stuff, I think. But it sounds like he’s open to broader topics in biblical studies too.
Doing a quick search of biblioblogs (or biblicablogs, if you prefer) on the words “pedagogy,” “education,” “teaching” and the like (especially combined with “tech” or “technology” or one of the specifics he mentioned), as well as leaning on my gut, here are some possibilities coming to mind (in no particular order):
- Tim Bulkeley’s SansBlogue
- Chris Heard’s Higgaion
- John Hobbins’ Ancient Hebrew Poetry
- Mark Goodacre’s NT Gateway
- A. K. M. Adam’s AKMA’s Random Thoughts
- The now-defunct Bible Software Review blog would’ve been an option
- There are some of these topics also dispersed at Awilum, PaleoJudaica, Hypotyposeis, Blue Cord, etc. They are topics that hit close to home for bibliobloggers, so one would expect a lot of talk about them. But I think the ones I listed above probably touch on my friend’s questions the most.
- I would suggest doing a search of biblioblogs for these topics with the customized biblioblog search (also, this one).
Any corrections or additions?




