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    « Teaching and the unteachables | Main | Behind the Spin »

    July 06, 2006

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    Richard Bailey

    I like this, and I'm pleased to find I'm not the only person who compares teaching to PR practice. (The stresses are very different, of course, but I find teaching more challenging and more fulfilling...)

    Melissa Hayes

    I think this is an interesting parallel that I've never considered. It does a great job of connecting the two- pr practice & education.I have not read very much since graduating about the new wave of public relations (PR 2.0) and have not considered the relationship of things like blogging to teaching AND practice. It's very interesting to see how much the industry can change so quickly with technological trends. Just four years ago (when I graduated) blogging was not nearly as popular as it is now. Add to that a load of advancements in everything from cellular phones to the MySpace craze and I imagine the front of PR is very different.As far as your teaching philosophy goes, I think that your statements are accurate and your philosophy is great. I've always appreciated the way you treat your students. It's not merely a lecture series where you put yourself in the position of the expert, but instead you allow the learning to take place amongst groups of students with relevent topics. You have always maintained transparency, authenticity, collaboration and used multiple methods of delivery to get your message across.I think the exerpt is well-written and insightful. Keep me posted of anything else you add!

    Hela

    "As I see it, my responsibility as a teacher is to facilitate learning by developing a role for students in creating and sharing knowledge."Dr. Russell--You did the above so well! Having you for three of my undergraduate PR classes, I can attest to that.I've never heard of PR 2.0!! Certainly it makes sense in practice, but I had yet to hear of it within research. I agree with you that the two-way symmetrical system is normative. Symmetry is difficult because one side usually is more dominant than the other, so it cannot exist.Comparing teaching to blogging is interesting. I like the idea of transparency and loss of control, but again how much control should one give up on a blog and in the classroom? The teacher is like the host site of the blog, then? They lead discussion threads and engage in dialogue, which allows them to still have some control and oversight. How would transparency and authenticity fit into this? It's a very interesting topic - one that makes me miss graduate school!Thanks for sharing Dr. R, and I look forward to your comments!--Hela

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