My work on teaching and learning finds its way into the media on a somewhat regular basis. Below are some of the more recent examples.
- “Interview: T. Mills Kelly on ‘Lying About the Past’,” Aleks Krotoski, DML Central, April 2, 2013
- “Mischief,” BBC Radio 4, Digital Human series, April 1, 2013
- “As Colleges Evolve, So Must Their Presidents,” Jeff Selingo, Chronicle of Higher Education, March 4, 2013
- “Flipping the Curriculum: Introductory Courses Should Be Just as Good as the Capstone Experience,” Jeff Selingo, Chronicle of Higher Education, December 2, 2012
- “Here There Be Monsters,” Brendan Fitzgerald, The Morning News, September 21, 2012
- “Hoax history is bunk but there are truths to be learned from it,” Times Higher Education, August 2, 2012
- “The 10 Most Creative People in Higher Education Today,” OnlineColleges.org, June 20, 2012
- Spark: With Nora Young (CBC), interview, June 8, 2012
- “The anatomy of the online hoax,” Voice of Russia, May 22, 2012
- “How Reddit Caught The Professor That Tricked Wikipedia,” Caribbean Media Vision, May 21, 2012
- “GMU Prof Teaches How To Falsify Wikipedia — and Get Caught,” SlashDot.org, May 17, 2012
- “Reddit culture well-tuned to spot hoaxes,” BoingBoing.com, May 16, 2012
- “The Junkman’s Dilemma: How The Internet Has Changed How We See History,” TechCrunch.com, May 16, 2012
- “How the Professor Who Fooled Wikipedia Got Caught by Reddit,” TheAtlantic.com, May 15, 2012 [The most downloaded tech story on TheAtlantic.com of 2012]