Contribute, Communicate, Collaborate: The Internet as Workplace in the Digital Arts

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Author(s)
Draper, Paul
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2007
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The twenty-first century has brought great advantages to a new digital workforce, empowered by affordable technologies and global networks. It also brings greater casualisation for those who must negotiate increasingly borderless workplaces. Nowhere is this more present than in the creative industries where new breeds of digital artists now ply their independent wares on an international stage. For creative and performing arts students to be able to negotiate such a setting, universities need to revise their notions of 'authentic' training, particularly in areas of on-line delivery, work-integrated learning and intellectual ...
View more >The twenty-first century has brought great advantages to a new digital workforce, empowered by affordable technologies and global networks. It also brings greater casualisation for those who must negotiate increasingly borderless workplaces. Nowhere is this more present than in the creative industries where new breeds of digital artists now ply their independent wares on an international stage. For creative and performing arts students to be able to negotiate such a setting, universities need to revise their notions of 'authentic' training, particularly in areas of on-line delivery, work-integrated learning and intellectual property. Pedagogy, curricula and access need a rethink.
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View more >The twenty-first century has brought great advantages to a new digital workforce, empowered by affordable technologies and global networks. It also brings greater casualisation for those who must negotiate increasingly borderless workplaces. Nowhere is this more present than in the creative industries where new breeds of digital artists now ply their independent wares on an international stage. For creative and performing arts students to be able to negotiate such a setting, universities need to revise their notions of 'authentic' training, particularly in areas of on-line delivery, work-integrated learning and intellectual property. Pedagogy, curricula and access need a rethink.
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Conference Title
"Contribute, Communicate, Collaborate" : Proceedings of the Apple University Consortium Conference
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Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2007. The attached file is posted here with permission of the copyright owner for your personal use only. No further distribution permitted. For information about this conference please refer to the publisher's website or contact the author.