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I am an Associate Professor at the College of Computing at Georgia Tech,
and a member of the
Graphics, Visualization, and Usability
(GVU) Center.
I received my PhD from the
Epistemology and Learning Group at the
MIT Media Lab in 1997,
and my BA in physics from
Harvard University in 1987.
I do research
on online communities and education, and
am the founder
of the
Electronic Learning Communities
(ELC)
research group.
My research applies the "constructionist" philosophy of education to the
design of online communities. Constructionism advocates learning
through design and construction activities -- learning through working
on personally meaningful projects. The Internet has a unique potential
to make constructionist learning scalable and sustainable in real-world
settings, because it makes it easy to provide social support for learning
and teaching. In electronic learning communities, participants can help
motivate and support one-another's activities.
One focus of my current research is studying open-content publishing
environments (like Wikipedia) as constructionist learning environments.
Amy is a member of project Georgia Computes!,
an NSF Broadening Participation in Computing (BPC) Alliance.
I founded the College's
Undergraduate Research Opportunities in Computing
(UROC) program.
My office is in the
Technology Square Research Building (TSRB), room 338. Office
hours: email me or just drop by.
My research is funded by
the National Science Foundation (grants
from the CAREER, ALT, and BPC programs),
as well as generous grants from
IBM,
Intel,
Microsoft Research,
Neometron, and
Ricoh Silicon Valley.
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