High-tech classrooms irk some profs, delight others
Even with the latest technology available in many of Dartmouth's "smart" classrooms, earth sciences professor James Aronson remains loyal to low-tech teaching methods.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
8 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Even with the latest technology available in many of Dartmouth's "smart" classrooms, earth sciences professor James Aronson remains loyal to low-tech teaching methods.
A group of Dartmouth Medical School students released a calendar last December that offers an unusual take on the traditional calendar photographs of scantily clad women.
The World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition jury announced the winning design yesterday, choosing to construct "Reflecting Absence," the proposal of Dartmouth alumnus Michael Arad '91.
Democratic presidential candidates have proposed education platforms that differ little from each other, but nonetheless provide alternatives to many of President George Bush's education policies, according to some members of the Dartmouth faculty.
When James Kaiser '99 graduated with an engineering major, he had neither a job nor aspirations of attending medical or law school. With money he had made trading internet stocks during his undergraduate years, Kaiser decided to enter the business of self-publishing travel guides. He founded Destination Press and is now author of the two bestselling travel guides it has published to date.
Homecoming weekend brings alumni of all ages back to their Hanover "home" to see old friends, dorms and fraternities, as well as to spend time with current students.
Professors and students alike generally praise Dartmouth's off-campus programs for their convenience, fun and ready accessibility -- but administrators at other schools feel their programs provide a depth Dartmouth's programs lack.
Innovative internet phones offered to incoming Dartmouth freshmen garnered national attention this week, but many Dartmouth students, including freshmen, remain unaware of the new technology that would allow them to use their computers as telephones free of charge.