from individuals to networks and sustainable communities?

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    from individuals to networks and sustainable communities? - Presentation Transcript

    1. from individuals to networks and sustainable communities? Steven Warburton King’s College London http://claimid.com/stevenw
    2. “ the first IWMW was more like therapy”
    3. dimensions of communities
      • descriptors:
        • connected, authentic, visible, bounded (fuzzy), symbolic artefacts
      • processes:
        • social, shared purpose, self identity (enlightening), collaborative, negotiated, emergent, ephemeral
      • typologies:
        • formal, informal, non-formal
        • ‘ real’ and ‘virtual’
        • communities of practice, of innovation, of interest, of learning and so on
    4.  
    5. community
      • problematic
      • negotiated and fluid
      • community exists in relation to the individual
      • boundaries are contested
      • roles
    6. architecture the discourse of virtual learning environments
      • rigid, formal and hierarchical - a scaleable industrial model with an agenda of control (tracking and administration)
      • teacher/course centric push model (content delivery and assessment)
      • standards (SCORM, LOM, QTI, LIP, IMS LD) and quality frameworks
      • contributions are owned by the institution, designed to protect IP
      • poor record of innovation and interoperability
      • self centred knowledge acquisition
      where is the locus of power? discourse of control?
    7.  
    8. policy institutional web managers users IA design/brand IPR access accessibility AUP knowledge quotas monitoring
    9. paradigm shift?
    10.  
    11. merely rhetoric?
      • freedom, choice, ownership
      • sharing, collaboration
      • creativity, creative commons
      • technical choices expanded (free, opensource, proprietary, in-house, outsourced, distributed)
      • informal versus formal - disruptive spaces
    12. ecology the discourse of personal learning environments
      • open, distributed, interconnected - a flattened structure with user chosen services linked by feeds
      • integration of both personal and professional interests
      • provision collaborative and individual workspace
      • a profiling system for making social connections
      • support for community-based knowing within disciplines, programs, institutions and individual learning contexts
      • protects and celebrates identity
      • respects academic ownership
      • net-centric supporting multiple levels of socializing, administration and learning
    13. community map
    14. network map driven by the individual as node rss/tags
    15.  
    16. digital identities
      • curating the self
      • leveraging a number of services
      • structured and unstructured data
      • creating a distributed identity
    17.  
    18.  
    19. digital identity: impact and policy? institutional reputation management personal reputation management
    20. ethical issues
    21. consent
      • personal, autonomous, owned
        • how do we reconcile personal freedoms and institutional responsibilities
      • public and private domains
        • respect for and protection of student privacy
        • student visibility/invisibility, the quiet learner
      • identity performance
        • adding personal spin, managing reputation, transparency
      • tracks and traces
        • the permanence of blog posts
      • developing new policies in these areas? responsive and agile?
    22. first step? digital literacy for participation ( Eshet-Alkalai, 2004)
      • photo-visual literacy: the art of reading visual representations
      • reproduction literacy: the art of creative recycling of existing materials
      • branching literacy: hypermedia and non-linear thinking
      • information literacy: the art of skepticism
      • socio-emotional literacy
      “ Digital Literacy: A Conceptual Framework for SurvivalSkills in the Digital Era” Jl. of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia (2004) 13 (1),93-106
    23. second step? towards empowerment
      • cultural literacy (judgment, self knowledge)
      • digital literacy to identity literacy
      • acknowledging institutional structures (inscribe power)
      • unlearning (tutor literacy)
    24. iwm community and roles
      • shared purpose
      • community responses to new pressures
      • articulation of understandings
      • are many of these issues both socio-cultural and socio-technical?
    25.  

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