Professor Leo P.K. Yam, the Founding/ Honorary President of the Hong Kong Association for Educational Communications and Technology, obtained his Master of Science in Speech-Education, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin- his Doctor of Education at TC, Columbia University, where he directed the TV Research Studio and taught courses. At the School of Education, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, he supervised the Educational Communication Centre and taught Teacher Education courses; he was invited by the Institute of Communication in Hawaii to participate in a two-month communication seminar. Later, he served as a visiting professor for one year at the University of Pittsburg; then, he joined the University of San Francisco at the Multi-cultural Program at the School of Education, as the Head of the “China Program.” Over 25 years, he developed tertiary teaching staff programs at Lingnan College (then University), Baptist University, Shu Yan University and Chu Hai College of Higher Education. At Lingnan College, he received a grant from “UGC” to direct a project on Tertiary Teaching and Technology, in which 13 videos (DVD) were produced, e.g Teacher Evaluation, Motivating Learning, Teaching Portfolio, Micro-teaching, etc. His interests include: (A) Research: education, communication, technology, creativity, body language, etc. (B) Teaching: creative teaching, effective presentation, media/ TV, public speaking, theatre-arts, etc. His publications include “Education, Communication, Technology”, “Communication: Poetry 300”, “The Power of Oral Communication” and “Education, Communication, Creativity”.
Seminar Title: Reflection on the Development of “Education, Communication, Technology” During the Last Seventy Years (with Video Viewing and Roundtable Discussion)
(Assisted by Mr. Hon Yat-Kiu, Dr. Chung Chak, Mr. Cheng Ngai-Kin)
Abstract
The plenary speech comes in two parts. Part One is a brief presentation on the development of “Education, Communication, Technology” during the last few decades in Hong Kong. The major views in each domain, and the key “evolution” of their perspectives will be presented.
"The Trinity of Educational Technology: Education, Communication, Technology":
“For education sheds lights on our minds,
Facilitating our whole being to grow so divine;
For communication nourishes our hearts,
Regulating men to interact and to share so fine;
For technology reduces our labour,
Making our minds and hearts shine.”
(Dedicated to AECT, 1990)
1. Education: A.A. Lumsdaine, 1964, advocated a pedagogical system in education:---“Natural Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Behavioral Science”, which was evolved later to “STEM”, “STEAM”, “STREAM”, and some others. However, the fundamental instructional strategies in teaching and learning did not to seem to catch up or to align with these developments.
2. Communication: Effective communication, in the context of classroom teaching, effective teaching, depends on many skills and elements. These include skills in questioning, interaction, presentation, verbal and non-verbal communication, body language, inter-personal and intra-personal communication, coaching, and empathetic listening. They are the basic skills to help facilitate quality teaching and learning.
3. Technology: Edgar Dale, 1966, in his work: “Media in Education” introduced the ‘Cone of Experience’ model to show that people could learn from concrete (first hand/direct) and abstract (through symbols/indirect) experience. Using video-based micro-teaching is essential for e-learning.
This AV/Film/TV electronic media movement in education could be the “dawn” for the “Mother Computer “to flourish and nourish the “digital, 3D, AI, ..….” information technologies to grow. Nevertheless, Nicholas Negroponte reminded us in his book, “Being Digital”, that it is humanism which makes the technology serve civilized people. Artificial Intelligence should earn the same “humanistic urge” as Digital technology.
In Part Two of the plenary session, there will be a video viewing. The excerpts of three videos from Lingnan College (then University) - UGC Funded Project (1995-1999) “The Consortium for the Promotion of Teaching Skills and Technology” are as follows: (1) “Motivational Design for Learning”, (2) “Micro-teaching Communication Skills” and (3) “Video Technology for Tertiary Education”
The plenary session will end with a round-table discussion and sharing. The plenary session will be conducted in English, Cantonese and Putonghua.