interesting comment that online we trust more easily - is that because we are in space/unseen/ or is there an implied trust? #mscidel
@lconnelly09 I would say possibility of both... depends on the person/ situation? #mscidel
@thinktosync - I like the idea that it is an extension of ourselves #mscidel
@hamacleod - interesting -maybe - or is it my inability to explain in 140 characters (probably!!) :) #mscidel
peeragogy wiki - teaching using social media - Howard Rheingold http://t.co/Q7GIY6aY #mscidel
RT @lconnelly09: ....there was an element of 'newness' about self/internet ... #mscidel / So perhaps *we* are reading Turkle differently?
Does social technology isolate people from the real world, or augment our personal relationships? http://t.co/GbfB9BRx #mscidel
@hamacleod - true but there was an element of 'newness' about self/internet. we have learned a lot since then (perhaps?) #mscidel
“my identity is comprised of the ideas that others have about me, and the ideas I have about my ‘self’” (Barney 2004: 143) #mscidel
@lconnelly09 And I think that 'Life on the Screen' has some negative images as well. #mscidel
@hamacleod I think it is both. In 2011 'Alone Together' she identifies how technology and culture have and are changing #mscidel
@lconnelly09 Has Turkle really changed between 1995 and 2011? Perhaps the online world has changed? #mscidel
reflecting on Burbules p.388 - Turkle 1995 = Utopian view, 2011 = realistic? #mscidel
do we not have multiple identities offline (mother, daughter, friend etc) as well as online - but all are part of the 'self'? #mscidel
@thinktosync Is online an extension or alternative self? Sometimes offline can feel like the extension! #mscidel
One of our proudest long-term Design Thinking School programmes is taking place in Sydney, Australia, with MLC School. Back in November we kicked off a programme of pedagogical change, to inform a new school bulding, with an intensive design thinking workshop. More on that soon over on the NoTosh site.
It has already led to a different type of language being used in the school: refreshingly, instead of "yes, but", we are now hearing "what if..." and "so what, who cares..." as the key questions asked around policy ideas and pedagogy.
But the biggest challenge that came through our Building Blocks challenge, sourcing the main blocks to change, was Time (or the lack of it). You can see time forming as the key concern in the middle of this timelapse of the process:
Tom and I traded a few ideas based on the way we work, harnessing GTD, the Done Wall and a vision founded on fuzzy goals that allows us to achieve a lot without getting bogged down too much in adminstering that creativity.
A throwaway phrase in one exercise, though, was the notion that, at the end of the day, we have to invest time to make time. James, one of our star music teachers, explains on his blog:
"INVEST TIME TO MAKE TIME". This motto, which I have since repeated to myself daily, has been my ticket to FREEDOM. It has given me the courage to change the way I do things as it has taken the guilt and anxiety away from "wasting" time in class (and on my own at my desk) to plan topics and projects WITH my students.
Yes, I may spend two entire lessons with my students planning a learning project, but the earnings on this relatively small investment are so high (and not only time wise). I get through more topics in a shorter amount of time (tick, tick, tick goes my virtual pen on my syllabus document), the students are more engaged and consequently put MORE time and effort themselves into the project.
From the workshop I have also held quite tightly onto... [the] image of the curriculum being like a 3D matrix...: instead of working through our syllabus in a linear manner, we could visualise all the student outcomes in a three-dimensional matrix and tick them off at different points in time as the students meet them through their various projects. This is also a great way to help us see that interdisciplinary teaching through project based learning is DOABLE.
So, INVEST TIME TO MAKE TIME... in any area of your life, really.
Photo from Noukka Signe
Digital Writing Matters http://t.co/BxBS2hyn #mscidel
@Nikki_1976 same here Nikki, but will get used to it soon. #mscidel
@sbayne Asolutely. Do we feel that we really leave our bodies, and our emotions, behind when we go online? #mscidel
@sarumahomva Agree! Another contradiction is that his critique of 'disembodiment' assumes its possibility... Pure technoromantic! #mscidel
RT @daveowhite: JISC Emerging Practice in a Digital Age guide now available in ePub and Kindle http://t.co/ocq03XNQ #mscel #mscidel
RT @bbceducation: Gove: Academy opponents 'Trots' http://t.co/9YDkBxNf / Note the involvement of Twitter in this news story. #mscidel
RT @sarumahomva: @hamacleod No we dont but surely on-line comm.. opens up an opportunity to misrespresent oneself more than f2f #mscidel
@sarumahomva Yes, why should distance learning be more about "consumption" and less about "interaction" than classroom learning? #mscidel
@websjapan this activity is a virtual game of Calvinball. Don't like the rules? Change em! http://t.co/RMFn8id0 #mscidel #edidgbl