A Brief History of the Lecture: A Multi-Media Analysis
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Friesen, Norm. 2014. “A Brief History of the Lecture: A Multi-Media Analysis”. MediaEducation: Journal for Theory and Practice of Media Education 24 (Educational Media Ecologies):136-53. https://doi.org/10.21240/mpaed/24/2014.09.30.X.

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Copyright (c) 2014 Norm Friesen

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Abstract

The lecture has been much maligned as a pedagogical form. It has been denigrated as a «hot ‎medium» that has long been «superseded» by the cooler dialogical and televisual forms. Yet the lecture ‎persists and even flourishes today in the form of the podcast, the TED Talk, Kahn Academy and the «smart» ‎lecture hall (outfitted with audio, video and student feedback technologies). This persistence ‎should lead us to re-evaluate both the lecture and the role of the media that have been related to it over time. This paper examines the lecture as a site of intersecting media, as «a site where differences between media are negotiated» as these media ‎evolve (Franzel 2010). This study shows the lecture as bridging oral ‎communication with writing and newer media technologies, rather than as being superseded ‎by newer electronic and digital forms. The result is a remarkably adaptable and robust form ‎that combines textual record and ephemeral event. It is that is capable of addressing a range of ‎different demands and circumstances, both in terms of classroom pragmatics and more abstractly, of the circulation of knowledge itself. The Web, which ‎brings multiple media together with new and established forms and genres, presents fertile ‎grounds for the continuation and revitalization of the lecture as a dominant pedagogical form.
https://doi.org/10.21240/mpaed/24/2014.09.30.X