Intercultural Literacy |
World Association for Online Education (WAOE) members share their cultures and personal observations for greater international awareness. To publish your response to an entry, just e-mail us. WAOE as an NPO disclaims opinions expressed here. For our professional selves concerning online education see the WAOE Home. |
September 19, 2003
September 18, 2003
Posted
9/18/2003
by Steve McCarty
The World Association for Online Education newsletter WAOE Electronic Bulletin (WEB) is meant for members, so please keep in mind that you need to join WAOE to receive the free services. The latest is a mentoring project on informal learning where online education projects in need are matched with a group of volunteer mentors. See the Vol. 3, No. 3 (August/September 2003) issue of WEB for details and other features. To join our NPO for free, just click on "Join WAOE" at the WAOE home page and fill in the Web form. Thank you.
Posted
9/18/2003
by Steve McCarty
Dr. Mark Warschauer has asked me to edit the distribution list Papyrus News (PN) at the University of California from here in Japan. About 1,500 ESL/EFL teachers and scholars in other fields around the world subscribe. Two or three times a week I plan to send out gathered Web resources, news articles, academic opportunities, and ideas on distance education and the topics Mark has indicated: technology in education, literacy, language learning/use, human/social development, culture, and equity. Please send me annotated resources, including URLs, of possible interest to the subscribers. You can also subscribe to Papyrus News. September 02, 2003
Posted
9/02/2003
by Steve McCarty
For travel in Western Japan or studying Japan's religious heritage, my newly released encyclopedia entries on the Shikoku pilgrimage, Mount Koya, and Buddhist Syncretism (combining many Asian religions) may be of interest. This is my fourth site to receive a 4-star rating, very useful for social sciences research, from the Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library based at the Australian National University. Each article includes photos from the encyclopedia. The other sites and year they received the 4-star rating are: Multilingual Guide to the Pilgrimage Island of Japan (2003) (Alternating English and Japanese for learners of either language; also Spanish, French and Dutch WWW versions of the whole book) Japan Journal of Multilingualism and Multiculturalism (2003) (English-Japanese) Bilingualism and Japanology Intersection (1997, 2001) (Online publications, English and Japanese annotated versions) Collegially, Steve McCarty, Professor, Kagawa JC, Japan - Bookmark July 29, 2003
Posted
7/29/2003
by Steve McCarty
Toward a code of ethics for distance education envisioned by our virtual organization WAOE, some other recent writings may be of interest: passages on intercultural communication by K. S. Sitaram, from the Sumerian and Harappan cradles of civilization to the latest communication technologies, and my responses to passages from Bill Readings' The University in Ruins.
July 25, 2003
Posted
7/25/2003
by Steve McCarty
Like to see what I read as well as publish from here in Japan? News and views on Japan, Asia, the world, and education through the Internet. This page is at a university faculty Website in the U.S., so among other things it represents my Reverse Culture Shock =:-| May 28, 2003
Posted
5/28/2003
by Steve McCarty
New cross-cultural psychology article for intercultural literacy: The purpose of this article is to give Westerners a deeper understanding of Japan, East Asia, and themselves! Please see: "East-West Cultural Differences in Basic Life Stance." Japanese Institute of Global Communications Colloquium #31: May 26, 2003. Tokyo: International University of Japan. Word travels fast on the Internet, so a California State University Psychology and Traditional Asian Thought course has already requested the article for one of its readings :-)
May 21, 2003
Posted
5/21/2003
by Steve McCarty
![]() Greetings from the beautiful Pacific Northest in Oregon, USA. I am very happy to see actual pictures of people! It helps to make this virtual world more real to me. I also appreciate learning much more about the wonderful members in WAOE. It is refreshing to find a group of people that share some of my passions about online learning and are willing to share something of themselves and their culture as well. My given name is Marguerita, but I go by Maggie. Though I am a third generation Scotch/Irish American, my family roots are still very much in the celtic traditions. A recent visit to Scotland and Ireland in 2000 reinforced so many of the stories, music, and experiences I grew up with. It is wonderful to visit ones roots and to immediately feel at home.
May 19, 2003
Posted
5/19/2003
by Steve McCarty
![]() Greetings from the beautiful island of Penang in Malaysia. I am Associate Professor Dr Rozhan M. Idrus of the School of Distance Education at the Universiti Sains Malaysia. I have 17 years experience in DE and am actively involved in research, publications and attending DE Conferences, both locally and internationally. I am looking for opportunities to expand my research endeavours by collaborating with fellow DE practitioners worldwide so that we can conduct research and publish together. If there is a chance to visit our respective countries, that would be all the better.
Posted
5/19/2003
by Steve McCarty
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May 10, 2003
Posted
5/10/2003
by Steve McCarty
![]() The world of Professor Steve McCarty in Japan on the Web: bookmark for multilingual, Asian Studies, and online education projects | bio-data home page | WAOE President's site | online library of publications (Japanese annotated version also available) | site for Internet-enabled mobile phones in Japan: surf.to/imode | photo album | published bilingual haiku | Global University System Asia-Pacific Framework | Multilingual Guide to the Pilgrimage Island of Japan | Consultant on Asian religions and contemporary issues for TheoWeb at the University of Exeter | Internet EFL classes [until 2004] | Japan Journal of Multilingualism and Multiculturalism Website editor [until 2004] | Sample article: "Cultural Liberation: East-West Biculturalism for a New Century" Comment from Prof. Roberto Mueller in Vicosa, Brazil on the photo album shots of 2,000 meter sacred Mt. Ishizuchi in Western Japan:
Thank you for the nice photos and beautiful landscape. You are in the environment of peace. May your thoughts reach others and enhance fraternity. Love is all around you. I can hear a flute playing a concert with the birds' song. That mountain nature is calling for the testimony of able witnesses.
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