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    Serendipity 2.0: Missing Third Places of Learning

    From infe, 2 years ago Add as contact

    My opening keynote presentation at EDEN conference 2007, Naples, Italy

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    1. Slide 1: “The future cannot be predicted, but futures can be invented” - Dennis Gabor
    2. Slide 2: Serendipity 2.0 Missing Third Places of Learning Teemu Arina CEO, Dicole Ltd. 2007-06-14 EDEN Conference
    3. Slide 4: Discover, Collaborate, Learn
    4. Slide 6: Today each of us lives several hundred years in a decade Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: Lakerae
    5. Slide 7: Problem Changes in society Ability of education to adapt Time
    6. Slide 8: Third Places of Learning     First Third Second “3rd place hosts the regular, voluntary, informal, and happily anticipated gatherings of individuals beyond the realms of home and work” ― Ray Oldenburg
    7. Slide 9: Artist: Lotta Viitaniemi, Story: Kim Forsman & Teemu Arina Dicole Ltd.
    8. Slide 10: Serendipic Learning Serendip - old name of Sri Lanka “Serendipity is the art of making an unsought finding” - Pek van Andel The Three Princes of Serendip: “They were always making discoveries, by accident and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of” - Horace Walpole, 1754 Photo: Cocca
    9. Slide 11: Finnish Sauna ;) Löyly - Spirit or life Photo: Jezz
    10. Slide 12: Zemblanity of Education “So what is the opposite of Serendip, a southern land of spice and warmth, lush greenery and hummingbirds, seawashed, sunbasted? Think of another world in the far north, barren, icebound, cold, a world of flint and stone. Call it Zembla. Ergo: zemblanity, the opposite of serendipity, the faculty of making unhappy, unlucky and expected discoveries by design.” William Boyd
    11. Slide 13: Artist: Lotta Viitaniemi, Story: Kim Forsman & Teemu Arina Dicole Ltd.
    12. Slide 14: Artist: Lotta Viitaniemi, Story: Kim Forsman & Teemu Arina Dicole Ltd.
    13. Slide 15: The mark of our time is its revulsion against imposed patterns Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: Lalallallala
    14. Slide 16: Pattern Recognition “Information overload is an opportunity for pattern recognition” – Marshall McLuhan Image: jbum
    15. Slide 17: Artist: Lotta Viitaniemi, Story: Kim Forsman & Teemu Arina Dicole Ltd.
    16. Slide 18: Technology as an extension of the body Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: Don J. McCrady
    17. Slide 19: Human Evolution Homo Habilis Homo Erectus Homo Sapiens 2.5m - 1.8m years ago 1.8m - 70k years ago 250k years ago Brain: 500 - 800 cc Brain: 950 - 1100 cc Brain: 1000-1850 cc Tools Advanced tools Art, writing, speech “Man the Wise” - Carl Linneaus
    18. Slide 20: We shape our tools and afterwards our tools shape us Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: JJay
    19. Slide 21: Symbolic linking (Symballein: draw together) Icon (resemblance) A = B Index (causal relations) A → B Sign Symbol (abstract concepts) A ~ B, ✝ Charles Sanders Pierce (1894) Photo: Hauntedpalace
    20. Slide 22: The spoken word was the first technology by which man was able to let go of his environment in order to grasp it in a new way Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: Don J. McCrady
    21. Slide 23: We Extend our Bodies Belief systems Clothes Advanced technology Sense-enhancements Controlled energy Advanced social organization Environmental adaptivity Advanced language Trade networks, exploration Innovative abstract thinking?
    22. Slide 24: Spirit of the Age (Zeitgeist) Homo ludens (man the player) -Johan Huizinga Homo creativus (creative human) -Sam Inkinen Homo aestheticus-informaticus (knowledge-intensive human) -Aki Järvinen Homo cyber sapiens (technologically improved man) -Luc Steels Homo electricus (man implanted with microchips) -Michael & Michael
    23. Slide 25: Social Web = Noosphere? • Planetary thinking network • Interlinked system of consciousness and information • Global net of self-awareness, instantaneous feedback, and planetary communication Teilhard de Chardin (1881 - 1955) Photo: Don J. McCrady
    24. Slide 26: Distributed cognition Physical Social Virtual Mental Inspired by: Kai Hakkarainen
    25. Slide 27: Homo Contextus Contextus = connected or weaved together Context = Circumstances in which an event occurs Homo habilis → Homo sapiens: Brain size increases physically Homo sapiens → Homo contextus: Brain size increases virtually Connected human escaping the physical limitations of connectivity with modern network technologies Photo: Uli Schneider
    26. Slide 28: Homo Contextus Electricity and light: mechanical age extended our bodies. Eletronic age will extend our nervous system Connectivity focus: focusing on diversity of connections to people who use tools to extend their mind and bodies High media production skills: for object centered sociality Prosthesis of thinking: extending cognitive capabilities Photo: Don J. McCrady
    27. Slide 29: Parasitic Learning Learner using someone as a teacher through virtual means without the knowledge or consensus of the host Photo: Spike55151
    28. Slide 30: Deschooling Society A good educational system should have three purposes: 1. Provide all who want to learn with access to available resources at any time in their lives 2. Empower all who want to share what they know to find those who want to learn it from them 3. Furnish all who want to present an issue to the public with the opportunity to make their challenge known Ivan Illich (1971) Photo: .AMagill
    29. Slide 31: Case: Network Oasis Collaborative working, learning and development environment Space designed to inspire spontaneous and guided encounters of different individuals Glow: interface between physical and virtual Virtual mobility, Hybrid space, Serendipity Ref: Ilkka Kakko
    30. Slide 36: Case: Dicole Knowledge Work Environment Areas Blogs Wikis Feeds
    31. Slide 37: Artist: Lotta Viitaniemi, Story: Kim Forsman & Teemu Arina Dicole Ltd.
    32. Slide 38: Four questions: 1. What does it extend? 2. What does it make obsolete? 3. What is retrieved? 4. What does it reverse into, if it’s over-extended? Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) Photo: Don J. McCrady
    33. Slide 39: Contact: CEO Teemu Arina   Dicole Ltd.  +358 - 50 – 555 7636  teemu@dicole.com  Blog: tarina.blogging.fi  www.dicole.com