Introduction
It is well known that technology is very important aspect in human life and Critical Engagement with Technology class held lot of concepts and theories with regard to how to look at and understand technology that helped in changing some of the previous understandings. The class helped in developing the skills to be able to evaluate different approaches and ways of thinking in regards to understanding technology. Also to know the issues that impact the management of technology and how the technology influenced managers’ abilities to provide better management of both resources and people. The class also examined the drivers and factors that impacted technology implementation such as social, political, economic, among others. The new way of thinking about the technology and how it is driven was presented in class through several topics that was introduced such as:
“Nothing New Under the Sun”, Historical Perspective on Technology
The Industrial Revolution
Technology as the Context for and Product of Human Endeavour
Technological Determinism
Social Shaping of Technology
Management, Power and Technology
The course further gave us the opportunity to pick a technology and ably what we learned in the class. Our case study that we picked talked about the clocks and how the society shaped the way of measuring time throughout history. The clock nowadays are technology that has been taken for granted. The focus of this case study is to show the importance of time measurement and how our life nowadays revolves around it. By going through history all the way from using the sun and stars to the development of clocks that neither lose nor gain one second in 200 million years to show how humanity searches for more accuracy by developing the tools to measure the time.
Literature Review
As mentioned earlier, the course provided us with lot of concepts and theories with regards to technology that in
References: Borst, A. 1993. The ordering of time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Cardwell, D. and Cardwell, D. 2001. Wheels, clocks, and rockets. New York: W.W. Norton. Cotter, C. 1977. The elements of navigation and nautical astronomy. Glasgow: Brown and Ferguson. Dale, R. 1992. Timekeeping. New York: Oxford University Press. Franz, M. 1978. Time. New York: Thames and Hudson. Gould, R. and Dyson, F. 1976. The marine chronometer. London: The Holland Press. Mackenzie, D. and Wajcman, J. 1999. Introductory essay: the social shaping of technology. The social shaping of technology, pp. 3--27. May, W. 1973. A history of marine navigation. New York: Norton. Reeves, T.C., Duncan, W.J. & Ginter, P.M. 2001, "Motion study in management and the arts: A historical example", Journal of Management Inquiry, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 137-149. Schivelbusch, W. 1986. Railway journey. Berkeley: University presses of California. Sherman, J. 2005. How do we know the nature of time. New York: Rosen Pub. Group. Wagner, C.G. 2008, "New Clocks: It 's About Time", The Futurist, vol. 42, no. 3, pp. 10. Webster, J., Davies, H., Stankiewicz, M. & Fleming, L.C. 2011, "Estimating the Time Involved in Managing the 'Unoccupied Bed: ' A Time and Motion Study", Nursing Economics, vol. 29, no. 6, pp. 317-22.