I'm calling this a placeholder post. My teaching has taken priority as the term begins to heat up, so I haven't been able to blog much about my #etmooc or #edcmooc reflections. I am still working through the material though, and equally important, keeping up with my blog reading. It's a momentary lurking interlude, and the material produced by these two learning communities is challenging, enlightening, and most importantly, inspiring. This brief post is my message in a cyber bottle to the members of these two communities: I'm still here, still reading, and still being inspired. So thanks! :)
Next week is Reading Week, so I hope to be more explicitly engaged -- and certainly more prolific in my blogging.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
The iPad Diaries
The digital chronicles of an academic mom, mobile instructor, e-learner, and unrepentant bookworm.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
William Gibson's "The Winter Market" and #EDCMOOC Week1
One of the blog prompts for this week asked us to reflect on utopian/dystopian representations of cyberculture on film. After working my way through the recommended video clips and readings for the week, my thoughts are focused on a short story -- William Gibson's "The Winter Market." The story was one of the first encounters I had with an artifact that interrogated cyberculture and therefore, it holds an important place in my thinking about it.
The assigned artifacts for this week of EDCMOOC made me think of "The Winter Market" because each of the artifacts, as the title of this topic suggests, embraces either a utopian or dystopian view of technology and cyberculture. Conversely, Gibson, in my opinion, effectively negotiates the complexities of cyberculture in this short story. On the one hand, there are all sorts of troubling questions raised by Lise's "crossing over" into the net. Most significantly the story asks, what happens to her humanity? To her ability to relate to other people? For Lise, what are the consequences of assuming a "pure" consciousness, free from the perceived interference of a broken, addicted, and insensate body? Indeed, one of the central themes of this story is the failure of the human body in contrast to the limitless but disturbing potential for experience offered by technology. The story seems to offer rather bleak commentary in response. On the other hand, the "real life" environment of the short story offers little comfort to its inhabitants, and a strong argument can be made that technology offers Lise the choice to exercise her own agency, whether her friend and "cyber lover," Casey, the narrator, fully supports or understands that choice or not.
The short story raises many of the themes addressed in this week's artifacts: agency, consciousness, human interaction, humanity, even, though to a more subtle extent, the environmental repercussions of technology. And yet, it offers no easy answers, no firm closure to say that yes, technology is an evil, or yes, technology promises the next utopia. "Real" life, in this story, is not posed as superior to digital "life." As I was working through this week's artifacts, I continually stumbled on my own low-grade frustration at the persistence of these good/bad, real/unreal dichotomies, and the ways in which they seem to perpetually inform discussions about technology in general and educational technology specifically. The resolute messiness of Gibson's "Winter Market" is what makes this story stand out for me. It suggests to me, that with digital technology, like other tools humans have developed (and worshipped, and denigrated) there are difficult complexities that must be addressed. Technology--any technology--does not exist outside the human context. There are proponents and detractors. There are pitfalls that must be mapped. And there are positive applications that can make meaningful differences.
(Does my text-based analysis of a textual artifact mark me as a digital immigrant, I wonder? Is the digital immigrant/digital native dualism even meaningful? This dichotomy, too, is one I need to consider in more detail.)
The assigned artifacts for this week of EDCMOOC made me think of "The Winter Market" because each of the artifacts, as the title of this topic suggests, embraces either a utopian or dystopian view of technology and cyberculture. Conversely, Gibson, in my opinion, effectively negotiates the complexities of cyberculture in this short story. On the one hand, there are all sorts of troubling questions raised by Lise's "crossing over" into the net. Most significantly the story asks, what happens to her humanity? To her ability to relate to other people? For Lise, what are the consequences of assuming a "pure" consciousness, free from the perceived interference of a broken, addicted, and insensate body? Indeed, one of the central themes of this story is the failure of the human body in contrast to the limitless but disturbing potential for experience offered by technology. The story seems to offer rather bleak commentary in response. On the other hand, the "real life" environment of the short story offers little comfort to its inhabitants, and a strong argument can be made that technology offers Lise the choice to exercise her own agency, whether her friend and "cyber lover," Casey, the narrator, fully supports or understands that choice or not.
The short story raises many of the themes addressed in this week's artifacts: agency, consciousness, human interaction, humanity, even, though to a more subtle extent, the environmental repercussions of technology. And yet, it offers no easy answers, no firm closure to say that yes, technology is an evil, or yes, technology promises the next utopia. "Real" life, in this story, is not posed as superior to digital "life." As I was working through this week's artifacts, I continually stumbled on my own low-grade frustration at the persistence of these good/bad, real/unreal dichotomies, and the ways in which they seem to perpetually inform discussions about technology in general and educational technology specifically. The resolute messiness of Gibson's "Winter Market" is what makes this story stand out for me. It suggests to me, that with digital technology, like other tools humans have developed (and worshipped, and denigrated) there are difficult complexities that must be addressed. Technology--any technology--does not exist outside the human context. There are proponents and detractors. There are pitfalls that must be mapped. And there are positive applications that can make meaningful differences.
(Does my text-based analysis of a textual artifact mark me as a digital immigrant, I wonder? Is the digital immigrant/digital native dualism even meaningful? This dichotomy, too, is one I need to consider in more detail.)
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Questions about Rhizomatic Learning from a Connected Learning Convert: Reflections on #ETMOOC Week 3.
Week 3 of ETMOOC is complete, and once again, I am thrilled to find myself with some answers -- but equally as many questions.
I finally stole an hour to watch the archive of Dave Cormier's session on Rhizomatic Learning. In the Q and A following the session, Dave talked about how responses to this theory tend to cluster in two camps: those who aren't thrilled by it, and those who recognize their own beliefs and practice in it. I definitely fall into the latter camp. I recognize in this theory not only an approach to learning, but also a broader philosophy about how people can (and maybe should?) interact. When Dave said he does not want to create a dependency between himself as teacher and his students as learners, it was a moment of recognition for me. Having said that, however, I still have many questions, most of which probably stem from the fact that my academic background is not in Education. I am going to focus on two here for now.
Who Are the Ideal Learners in Rhizomatic Learning?
One of my current interests as an online facilitator, instructor, and perpetual learner is Adult Education, and especially, online learning and the adult learner. I am working toward completing my CACE (Certificate in Continuing and Adult Education). Because I see in my online classes increasing numbers of mature students, as well as undergraduates who I would characterize as non-traditional (i.e. young adults whose education competes with increasingly "adult" roles such as parenthood, employment, and/or caring for elderly or sick parents -- roles that necessarily influence emotional and intellectual development, in my opinion), I am interested in tailoring my teaching methods to address their different learning needs. What kinds of strategies can I utilize that will allow me to balance the needs of the different types of learners in my classroom? Thus, the different characteristics of adult versus youth learners is a topic to which I keep returning.
I finally stole an hour to watch the archive of Dave Cormier's session on Rhizomatic Learning. In the Q and A following the session, Dave talked about how responses to this theory tend to cluster in two camps: those who aren't thrilled by it, and those who recognize their own beliefs and practice in it. I definitely fall into the latter camp. I recognize in this theory not only an approach to learning, but also a broader philosophy about how people can (and maybe should?) interact. When Dave said he does not want to create a dependency between himself as teacher and his students as learners, it was a moment of recognition for me. Having said that, however, I still have many questions, most of which probably stem from the fact that my academic background is not in Education. I am going to focus on two here for now.
Who Are the Ideal Learners in Rhizomatic Learning?
One of my current interests as an online facilitator, instructor, and perpetual learner is Adult Education, and especially, online learning and the adult learner. I am working toward completing my CACE (Certificate in Continuing and Adult Education). Because I see in my online classes increasing numbers of mature students, as well as undergraduates who I would characterize as non-traditional (i.e. young adults whose education competes with increasingly "adult" roles such as parenthood, employment, and/or caring for elderly or sick parents -- roles that necessarily influence emotional and intellectual development, in my opinion), I am interested in tailoring my teaching methods to address their different learning needs. What kinds of strategies can I utilize that will allow me to balance the needs of the different types of learners in my classroom? Thus, the different characteristics of adult versus youth learners is a topic to which I keep returning.
For other non-teacher educators, and for reference sake, here is a useful table that explains, in a very general way, the differences between "adult" learners versus "youth" learners. In particular, after watching the archived version of Dave Cormier's session on Rhizomatic Learning, I have been thinking about the paradigm's ideal learners. Is this paradigm better suited to some learners rather than others? Although I am unsettled by the firm distinction between "adult" and "youth" learners, I still see some ways in which adult learners might be better suited to learn through this approach, and other ways in which youth learners might prove more successful rhizomatic learners.
For instance, the literature suggests that adult learners are more successfully self-directed learners, which seems like a prerequisite for success in this approach. However, adult learners also prefer to be able to see the relevance of what they are learning to their own lives -- which may not be compatible with the focus in rhizomatic learning on learning "which has no answer" in Dave Cormier's words. Conversely, while youth learners seem more dependent on their teachers, and are hesitant (perhaps developmentally unable?) to assume responsibility for their own learning, the entire premise of their learning is based on uncertainty -- they learn despite not necessarily knowing for what purpose their knowledge will serve.
So, in keeping with the conversations that were occurring in the session I watched, I am left with the question: are some learners, at different developmental stages, better suited to this type of learning? Which students are more likely to avoid the "mile wide inch deep" pitfall -- the solution to which, to me at least, seems to hinge on adequate learner motivation. Or can the approach be modified appropriately to suit learners at different levels?
Can practices inspired by this learning theory coexist, within one course, with more traditional instructional practices?
My second question is a practical, though at this point, hypothetical one. I'm imagining a hypothetical course in which there would be two organizational components: 1) a structured component in which I assume a more traditional instructional position, and provide a foundational space for students; and 2) a more open learning space, modelled on a cMOOC, informed by rhizomatic learning/connectivism. In this open space, students will explore issues that are immediately relevant to them and their communities. Ideally, they will then return to the more structured space and share what they have learned from their own contexts. As a class, ideally, we will begin to examine the individual experiences within disciplinary methodologies. Is it possible, I wonder, for traditional teaching methods and poststructural teaching methods to co-exist in the same space? Are there potential pitfalls to this hypothetical design?
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Reflections on ETMOOC, Week 2
Week 2 of ETMOOC has drawn to a close, and Week 3 is waiting in the wings. So far I have not been blogging regularly, but I have been reflecting quite a lot on the range of fascinating topics that my emergent learning community has explored.
On Sharing Learning
My thinking, in response to the prompt, "How do you share/show your learning" has been circling around a concept map I created in 2009. The purpose of this CMAP was to show my understanding of what constitutes a PLE, and to help me understand what my PLE looked like at that time:
After watching the archived version of Alec's session on connected learning, I have been thinking about how differently my visualization might look now. The graphic illustrates my emphasis on adding tools to expand my learning environment -- tools to help me aggregrate information and turn that information into knowledge.
There isn't much emphasis on people in this diagram. They're present, of course, but the emphasis is on my own individual process of accessing information, curating it, and essentially, storing it away. There isn't much emphasis on the PLN -- the network of people. The people are crucial because, according to George Siemens, "the connections that enable us to learn more are more important than our current state of knowing."
So how can I broaden my rudimentary PLE to be a more inclusive, more connected PLN? In last week's Twitter chat, I discussed with some other ETMOOC participants some of the practicalities of sharing: blogging more, sharing/promoting my blog posts (read: not being terrified of showing my learning process!), and commenting on others' posts more regularly. I did not catch Sue Water's session on blogging, but I gather that she covered some of these tips. I hope to catch up with that session soon. Doing more than retweeting others' material -- including at least MT-ing -- is another strategy I will be trying. So far I have found the ETMOOC community very supportive, and as a result, I have gathered many more followers on both Twitter and G+. Now, according to connected learning paradigms, it is my responsibility, even as a "new" node in the network, to share what I know.
The importance of sharing is clearer to me now. However, I am still troubled by issues of privacy and intellectual property, which I hope we will discuss in more detail at some point, and which I hope to work through more fully in another post.
On Connected Learning and Teaching Practice
One way that George Siemens characterizes connected learning is through the example of social networks. He writes that "within social networks, hubs are well-connected people who are ale to foster and maintain knowledge flow. Their interdependence results in effective knowledge flow, enabling the personal understanding of the state of activities organizationally."
The teacher/learner as a knowledge hub is a metaphor that appeals to me enormously. It shifts thinking and practice away from the teacher/student hierarchy which has traditionally dominated the classroom. Will thinking about teaching and learning through the lens of connected learning enable me to really move beyond the teacher/student hierarchy of the traditional classroom? I hope so.
However, I still have some questions. For example, as Angela Vierling-Claassen asks: "What kind of educational practices are possible when we confront the true unknowability and incompleteness of our pedagogies, when even as we come together we lack the knowledge necessary to answer basic questions of survival and justice? As Ellsworth asks, “What kind of educational project could redefine ‘knowing’ so that it no longer describes the activities of those in power ‘who started to speak, to speak alone and for everyone else, on behalf of everyone else.’” (Ellsworth, 1989, p. 321) To me, a question then becomes can a constructivist MOOC, moocified course, or personal learning network do exactly what Ellsworth is calling us to do? How can we be sure that these projects will really bring out the new voices instead of just brining us the voices that have already spoken?"
In addition, it seems to me, that there are still lingering practical issues to be overcome. How can I, in the words of bell hooks, teach to transgress, if my students (especially those who would benefit most) have limited or constrained access to online technologies? Or if they don't, contrary to widespread belief, have smart phones? Tablets? Or even a reliable computer? It seems unlikely, but every term, a small but significant proportion of students encounter basic access issues. I wonder, then, in the spirit of curiosity more than critique, to what extent this paradigm of learning, even as it promises the potential for social justice, takes into consideration issues of privilege?
Works Cited
Siemans, George. "Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age." elearnspace. 12 December 2004. 25 January 2013.
Vierling-Claassen, Angela. "MOOCs as a Liberatory Project." Liberation Math. 22 January 2013. 25 January 2013.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
It's good to stumble...a little...now and then...
Tonight's inaugural #etmooc Twitter chat was surprising for me. I've been using Twitter for some time now, mostly as a tool for maintaining personal social networks and aggregating news and research items. I have used it as part of an informal learning network, too, to learn new skills from people with similar interests. I've had conversations with groups, and I'm familiar with hashtags and RTs and so forth, so I thought this Twitter chat would be easy.
Wrong.
First: my iPad is not a laptop. If I'm going to use it in this way, I must remember to connect the external keyboard in order to keep the pace in a Twitter chat of such magnitude.
Second: Twitter for iOS did not have adequate functionality for the challenge.
I was very quickly overwhelmed. I stumbled.
Propitiously. Because, as I was flailing about (definitely not waving but drowning) members of #etmooc threw me some water wings (thanks for the analogy @EHordyskiLuong) and offered me all kinds of useful suggestions about apps to try. I now have Hootsuite on the iPad and reacquainted myself with Tweetdeck on the laptop; both are ready and waiting for next week.
More importantly, #etmooc members offered encouragement. It was an example for me of a point that was made in the orientation sessions -- that learning occurs when students feel safe. I fear that I sometimes forget what it must be like for my students when they encounter Blackboard for the first time. Mine is a very small scale example, but it was good to be reminded of what it feels like to be anxious and frustrated by an overwhelming learning environment, and then to feel encouraged and supported. The beginnings of trust. The beginnings of community. It reminds me of the urgency of setting the right tone for students upon their entry into my online courses.
I think I see forming the kind of professional learning network/community I had hoped I would find here. :)
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Wrong.
First: my iPad is not a laptop. If I'm going to use it in this way, I must remember to connect the external keyboard in order to keep the pace in a Twitter chat of such magnitude.
Second: Twitter for iOS did not have adequate functionality for the challenge.
I was very quickly overwhelmed. I stumbled.
Propitiously. Because, as I was flailing about (definitely not waving but drowning) members of #etmooc threw me some water wings (thanks for the analogy @EHordyskiLuong) and offered me all kinds of useful suggestions about apps to try. I now have Hootsuite on the iPad and reacquainted myself with Tweetdeck on the laptop; both are ready and waiting for next week.
More importantly, #etmooc members offered encouragement. It was an example for me of a point that was made in the orientation sessions -- that learning occurs when students feel safe. I fear that I sometimes forget what it must be like for my students when they encounter Blackboard for the first time. Mine is a very small scale example, but it was good to be reminded of what it feels like to be anxious and frustrated by an overwhelming learning environment, and then to feel encouraged and supported. The beginnings of trust. The beginnings of community. It reminds me of the urgency of setting the right tone for students upon their entry into my online courses.
I think I see forming the kind of professional learning network/community I had hoped I would find here. :)
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Gearing Up for #etmooc: An Introductory Post
#etmooc won't be my first experience in a massive, open, online course: I took #CCK09 with George Siemens a few years ago, and I have lurked in a couple of the MOOCS offered by Coursera in the past year. I have been an online instructor since 2004, and have taken other courses about educational technology, so the subject matter isn't entirely new either.
However, I am very excited about the potential for building communities and networks in the context of the course. I also find that I am increasingly interested in issues relating to digital literacy and digital citizenship, and what it means to model those kinds of practices as an instructor, and so I'm very much looking forward to those sections of the course.
We have been asked to blog during the course, and I will be blogging here. Welcome!
However, I am very excited about the potential for building communities and networks in the context of the course. I also find that I am increasingly interested in issues relating to digital literacy and digital citizenship, and what it means to model those kinds of practices as an instructor, and so I'm very much looking forward to those sections of the course.
We have been asked to blog during the course, and I will be blogging here. Welcome!
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