December 28, 2008
World Without Walls: Learning Well with Others | Edutopia
I have been experimenting with using Diigo to improve my blog workflow. Part of that improvement plan is to use worthwhile articles as touchstones for my own thoughts. Diigo makes this plan simple although the commenting is never easy. Today’s blog is a commentary on Will Richardson’s World Without Walls: Learning Well with Others | Edutopia.
Welcome to the Collaboration Age, where even the youngest among us are on the Web, tapping into what are without question some of the most transformative connecting technologies the world has ever seen. These tools are allowing us not only to mine the wisdom and experiences of the more than one billion people now online but also to connect with them to further our understanding of the global experience and do good work together. These tools are fast changing, decidedly social, and rich with powerful learning opportunities for us all, if we can figure out how to leverage their potential.
- If this is true (that we are entering the Collaboration Age) then what are the implications for such ‘non-collaborative’ dudes like me. What does it mean in my life both professionally and personally? I have to say that collaboration is what is missing in my university life. In high school I worked with students in drama classes and that seemed to scratch that itch very happily, but in higher education the isolation can be even more profound, especially for non-tenured staff teaching five courses a semester. - post by tellio
Our ability to learn whatever we want, whenever we want, from whomever we want is rendering the linear, age-grouped, teacher-guided curriculum less and less relevant.
- My question is this: is collaborative work supplanting curriculum, is it supplementing, is hybridization occurring, or is this something as yet undescribed, inchoate, and emergent? Messy, yes? I think that we can safely say that with access to larger circles and greater resources that the curriculum is turning into a many armed spiral with each student at its core. - post by tellio
Working together is becoming the norm, not the exception.
- Somebody needs to point me to a place where this assertion is quantified. In my life I don’t find this to be true except at the household and family level. At the tribal level not so much and at the organizational level, hardly at all. - post by tellio
The Collaboration Age is about learning with a decidedly different group of "others," people whom we may not know and may never meet, but who share our passions and interests and are willing to invest in exploring them together. It’s about being able to form safe, effective networks and communities around those explorations, trust and be trusted in the process, and contribute to the conversations and co-creations that grow from them. It’s about working together to create our own curricula, texts, and classrooms built around deep inquiry into the defining questions of the group. It’s about solving problems together and sharing the knowledge we’ve gained with wide audiences.
- Great a definition with criteria! Good on ya, Will. 1. We will bowl with strangers who share our passions and learning goals. 2. We will collaborate in safety. 3. These collaborations will crystallize around various threads in networks–expeditions/quests. 4. We will co-evolve as we talk and create together. 5. What we will create is the road of our own learning, a circuit that spirals out and then back around the ‘deep inquiry’ we are sharing. 6. These collaborations will solve problems and share results. Sounds like large scale science as it is being practiced today. Where are these models and how can we adapt them to learning lives. 4. - post by tellio
I believe their best, most memorable, and most effective teachers will be the ones they discover, not the ones they are given.
- This is the basic idea behind ‘unschooling’ and has its intellectual heritage in John Holt and Ivan Illich and Paolo Freire. This was the credo I lived by when my wife and I raised our children at home. - post by tellio
More than learning content, the emphasis of these projects is on using the Web’s social-networking tools to teach global collaboration and communication, allowing students to create their own networks in the process.
- I would like to see some follow-up of these students as they take these skills into their personal and learning lives. - post by tellio
The complexities of editing information online cannot be sequestered and taught in a six-week unit. This has to be the way we do our work each day.
- I think that the idea of role modelling may have jumped this shark. First, the suggested role here is way wider than any ever contemplated by organizational charts anywhere. In fact, most teachers would say, "This is way above my pay grade." Second, the role suggested here is more like that of a parent or an elder or a guru. None of these is democratic enough to suit the collaborative model Will suggests earlier. Third, we have to decide what is developmentally suitable for learners. Last, to do this "at every turn, in every class" is neither realistic or necessary. Part of the problem of schools is this relentless, misapplication of workflow efficiency. I say add back the interstices. We need the silent gaps, the lube of pointless conversation, and the joy of pointlessness. - post by tellio
The process of collaboration begins with our willingness to share our work and our passions publicly — a frontier that traditional schools have rarely crossed.
- School frontiers? That is an oxymoron. Schools are mostly interested in their own imperatives. I don’t think that they are interested in pushing into any direction that ultimately threatens those institutional imperatives. Rarely crossed? Nicely understated. They are ‘traditional’ schools by virtue of having never crossed them. That is why I think that when conditions arise, most schools will fold like a newbie at Texas holdem. - post by tellio
Look no further than Wikipedia to see the potential; say what you will of its veracity, no one can deny that it represents the incredible potential of working with others online for a common purpose.
- A stone has potential, too, but until someone picks it up and uses it (perhaps to throw it through the crystal palace of traditional schooling) it is pretty much useless. I know and appreciate the work some people are doing to lay down the parallel tracks for a new learning space. Will is pointing to one of these new spaces. To my mind it is no specific place, but rather anywhere people gather to learn. Our role is to go where the learners are and ask them how we can help. - post by tellio
The technologies we block in their classrooms flourish in their bedrooms
- OK, this is the crux. Either we go where they are or we go away. If they ignore us like they do now, then the effect is the same. We are dead teachers lecturing. You say, "Class dismissed," and look up to see they are long gone and there is chalkdust on all the desks. - post by tellio
Anyone with a passion for something can connect to others with that same passion — and begin to co-create and colearn the same way many of our students already do.
- How can we make this as second nature as going to school for twenty years has become? There are very few societal supports for such a ’structure’ but we must take advantage of those that are there and we must make sure that no one (Google and Facebook to name two) get their hands on the wheel alone. - post by tellio
I believe that is what educators must do now. We must engage with these new technologies and their potential to expand our own understanding and methods in this vastly different landscape. We must know for ourselves how to create, grow, and navigate these collaborative spaces in safe, effective, and ethical ways. And we must be able to model those shifts for our students and counsel them effectively when they run across problems with these tools.
Yes, we must prowl around this new ‘Serengeti’. Yes, like Odysseus, we need to be skilled in all ways of contending in this sea of terror and delight. Yes, it must be clear to students that we are learners on a continuum and that respect is earned by not only walking the walk, but in making the road as we walk it with them. - post by tellio
Thanks, Will for being my touchstone.
Filed under Category Breaking by tellio
November 25, 2008
Using Diigo to Improve Blog Workflow
This is a demonstration of the power of diigo as a research and info gathering system. All of what you see below is a nearly automatic result of using diigo to bookmark, annotate, and highlight web content. I use diigo to find content, to highlight, to annotate, and to post via integrated blog tools included in diigo. I now have an edit of my previous post which is now less raw commentary on Jeffrey Young’s excelent chronicle article with some links and slideshow added. My next posts will pull out a few relevant and interesting items and then elaborate a bit on them.
-
Will Electric Professors Dream of Virtual Tenure? - Chronicle.com
-
-
Singularity University
- How far are we going to allow computers to advise us? Perhaps they would make better learning brokers or at least be better in bringing the multiplicity of the net and aggregat it into a "program of study".
- How far are we going to allow computers to advise us? Perhaps they would make better learning brokers or at least be better in bringing the multiplicity of the net and aggregat it into a "program of study".
- Interdisciplinary, Intercultural and International:
- These are the trinity of the International Space University. I think that they might also be the mission statement for any futureversity.
-
How would thinking machines reshape campus life?
- This is the meat of the article. I want to know how this singularity university affects me. Will I be out of a job? Will it make my job easier, faster, better? Where will I need to go to accomodate? Do I need to check out of higher ed and move into another form of ed? Worldwide effects?
-
"I’m one or two orders of magnitude more productive today because of the global knowledge system the Internet has enabled."
- I would have to agree with this. Google as second brain (some seem to think that it is their only brain) is a metaphor I use with my students in class all the time. I can only imagine the connectivity online search represents to get tighter and more profound at the same time just as it already has.
- I would have to agree with this. Google as second brain (some seem to think that it is their only brain) is a metaphor I use with my students in class all the time. I can only imagine the connectivity online search represents to get tighter and more profound at the same time just as it already has.
-
"Perhaps we’ll soon have machines recording everything we say, see, and hear, allowing us to retrieve experiences we now lose to forgetfulness."
- Reminds me of Kevin Kelly’s website, The Quantified Self–Good info is inevitably customized to small "t" truths that make your life meaningful.
- Reminds me of Kevin Kelly’s website, The Quantified Self–Good info is inevitably customized to small "t" truths that make your life meaningful.
-
Computerized research assistants
- What kind of topology is being suggested here? Would these research assistants be experts on top or on tap? As it exists now humans are still at the hub of any system, but perhaps we need to move to a heliocentric system where the research bots are at the center and we orbit them. Personally, I prefer a jungle ecology system, a learning society of mind like MInsky writes about.
- They already exist–google alerts for example. What we need are researchbots–oops they already exist, too.
- What kind of topology is being suggested here? Would these research assistants be experts on top or on tap? As it exists now humans are still at the hub of any system, but perhaps we need to move to a heliocentric system where the research bots are at the center and we orbit them. Personally, I prefer a jungle ecology system, a learning society of mind like MInsky writes about.
-
"The whole fabric…"
- Interesting metaphor, our strength derives from the interlocking thread elements.
- Interesting metaphor, our strength derives from the interlocking thread elements.
-
"Let’s face it, the human brain isn’t getting any zippier."
- What a great motto or signature or bumper sticker! I certainly wish I could tag this comment.
- What a great motto or signature or bumper sticker! I certainly wish I could tag this comment.
-
"These new computer teachers will have more patience than any human lecturer, and they will be able to offer every student individual attention — which sure beats a 500-person lecture course."
- All hail the Comptutor! This frees up teachers to do…..? Creative work. Designing even wiser and better comptutors?
- All hail the Comptutor! This frees up teachers to do…..? Creative work. Designing even wiser and better comptutors?
-
"Virtual professors probably won’t ask for tenure. And Mr. Goertzel sees them as key to expanding educational opportunities, by greatly reducing the price of a high-quality education."
- I think that we are already well past the fork in the road and some of us are dead teachers walking. Take a look at David Wiley’s slideshare on this and then rub that thought together with the idea of the comptutor as learning broker and you will know what I mean.
-
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own.
-
"For example, if the technology falls into the wrong hands, it could aid terrorists or repressive dictators."
- I could see an educational panopticon with the ultimate evil high school counselor sitting like a giant hypnotoad in the center of it all directing us toward the greater good.
- I could see an educational panopticon with the ultimate evil high school counselor sitting like a giant hypnotoad in the center of it all directing us toward the greater good.
-
Filed under Category Breaking by tellio
This is a demonstration of the power of diigo as a research and info gathering system. All of what you see below is a nearly automatic result of using diigo to bookmark, annotate, and highlight web content. I use diigo to find content, to highlight, to annotate, and to post via integrated blog tools included in diigo.
-
Will Electric Professors Dream of Virtual Tenure? - Chronicle.com
-
Singularity University
- How far are we going to allow computers to advise us? Perhaps they would make better learning brokers or at least be better in bringing the multiplicity of the net and aggregat it into a "program of study". - post by tellio
- Interdisciplinary, Intercultural and International - post by tellio
-
how thinking machines would reshape campus life.
- This is the meat of the article. I want to know how this singularity university affects me. Will I be out of a job? Will it make my job easier, faster, better? Where will I need to go to accomodate? Do I need to check out of higher ed and move into another form of ed? Worldwide effects? - post by tellio
-
I’m one or two orders of magnitude more productive today because of the global knowledge system the Internet has enabled."
- I would have to agree with this. Google as second brain (some seem to think that it is their only brain) is a metaphor I use with my students in class all the time. I can only imagine the connectivity online search represents to get tighter and more profound at the same time just as it already has. - post by tellio
-
Perhaps we’ll soon have machines recording everything we say, see, and hear, allowing us to retrieve experiences we now lose to forgetfulness.
- Reminds me of Kevin Kelly’s website, The quantified self–http://www.quantifiedself.com/ Good info is inevitably customized to small "t" truths that make your life meaningful. - post by tellio
-
Computerized research assistants
- What kind of topology is being suggested here? Would these research assistants be experts on top or on tap? As it exists now humans are still at the hub of any system, but perhaps we need to move to a heliocentric system where the research bots are at the center and we orbit them. Personally, I prefer a jungle ecology system, a learning society of mind like MInsky writes about. - post by tellio
- They already exist–google alerts for example. What we need are researchbots–oops they already exist, too. - post by tellio
-
The whole fabric
- Interesting metaphor, our strength derives from the interlocking thread elements. - post by tellio
-
let’s face it, the human brain isn’t getting any zippier.
- What a great motto or signature or bumper sticker! I certainly wish I could tag this comment. - post by tellio
-
These new computer teachers will have more patience than any human lecturer, and they will be able to offer every student individual attention — which sure beats a 500-person lecture course.
- All hail the Comptutor! This frees up teachers to do…..? Creative work. Designing even wiser and better comptutors? - post by tellio
-
Virtual professors probably won’t ask for tenure. And Mr. Goertzel sees them as key to expanding educational opportunities, by greatly reducing the price of a high-quality education.
- I think that we are already well past the fork in the road and some of us are dead teachers walking. Take a look at David Wiley’s slideshare on this and then rub that thought together with the idea of the comptutor as learning broker and you will know what I mean.
-
-
International Space University
-
For example, if the technology falls into the wrong hands, it could aid terrorists or repressive dictators.
- I could see an educational panopticon with the ultimate evil high school counselor sitting like a giant hypnotoad in the center of it all directing us toward the greater good. - post by tellio
-
Filed under Category Breaking by tellio
July 13, 2008
Issuu: Create Your Own Magazine
Such a beautiful product. Check out what others have done, then see if you can do it. I know just the person to send this to.
I especially liked the issuu of Wild Swim:
Filed under Category Breaking by tellio
May 20, 2008
Calvin and Hobbes: Radical Education Reformers
Filed under Category Breaking by tellio




Digg/tellio
Flickr/tellio
Myspace/tellio2000
Facebook/Tellio
Friendster/Tellio
Virb/1038603895506750/your_home
Linkedin/pub/1/87b/629
Twitter/tellio
YouTube/tellio
Last.fm/tellio
Del.icio.us/tellio
Wikipedia/User:Tellio
Wishlist/Tellio
GMail/Tellio
coComment/tellio
iJigg/tellio
Upcoming/Tellio
Kongregate/tellio
Zaadz/username
Technorati/tellio
MyBlogLog/tellio
Blog/Tellio