| Teaching with Technology in Higher Education |
The following sites, selected by Michele Jacobsen, provide additional information, both practical and philosophical, about teaching with technology in higher education.

Modern technology was designed to empower us and set us free. So why do we often feel more like its slaves than its masters? In this "must-have" book, psychologist Michelle Weil and educator Larry Rosen explain why technology often makes people feel under the gun -- and how to preserve your humanity and sanity in a digital world.
This American Association for Higher Education site presents a list of specific examples of (E.U.I.T.) Educational Uses of Information Technology, presentated by Dr Dorothy Frayer for the AAHE TLTR Information Technology Conference, Colleges of Worcester Consortium, Fitchburg, Massachusetts April, 1997, that might help faculty members recognize specific ways in which technology can be used to meet pedagogical needs.
Hosted by Brigham Young University, this site provides helpful information about integrating technology into campus teaching.
The goal of Technology Tools for Today's Campuses is to provide you with informative, sometimes intimate, accounts of colleagues who have agreed to share with others their encounters with using technology in their classes. This collection of 72 articles, presented in seven sections, includes important and useful information that you can use in deciding if you want to use various technology tools, such as listservs, e-mail, the World Wide Web (WWW), in your teaching.
In this online paper, G. Roger Sell, PhD, (University of California at Santa Barbara) discusses some of the challenges in using technology for the improvement of undergraduate education.