Anyway, he tied in the three major themes of this conference: reusability, social software, and open learning. I thought he was a perfect closing keynote because he had taken pictures and notes from all the presentations he had seen and used them in his own presentation.
He's a visionary man. he said that “In general new technology is introduced in two stages … First, it duplicates existing products and services. Second, it obliterates them.”
Examples of this phenomenon are:
- Blog vs. newspapers
- Internet vs. Television
- Skype vs. Telephone
- Wikipedia vs. encyclopedia
Back to Stephen. He presented some dichotomies between models. The old model is broadcast, commercial, bundled, proprietary. The new model is open, network, free. He then asks:
"What has worked in the past?He then said that we are at the point now were in e-learning we have duplicated the existing model of education. The next step is to leave the model and go on to something new. He believes one thing we need to change is to stop trying to organize and structure e-learning. He quotes David Wiley that "Instead of trying to organize learning communities, we should focus on how learning communities can organize themselves."
FTP, email, usenet, the web, blogs, RSS …
What did these have in common?
They were …
- - simple
- - decentralized
- - open – We could all play
- - free, etc.
My opinion? I'm not sure, but I think I'm halfway. We need general boundaries, but without dictating exactly how e-learners have to talk, walk, and listen. If we get too ordered, then we're like the pharisees and stifle their ability to grow. We should provide some general structure, and then let the communities dictate how they will relate and grow and we should be there as instructional designers to support them.
To finish, I'll paraphrase Stephen again:
"We have to gain our voice, to speak for ourselves, to reclaim our language, our media, our culture. Could we learn to read and write if only a small number of people had access to language? No, we need openness for everyone. Go fast, go cheap, let it go out of control."
He quotes a writer who describes it as 'Educhaos'. He feels we should "let go" and let learners take the digital medium to its deteministic end.
To paraphrase him again:
Which ties into our behavioristic/constructivist discussion this week, eh?
- "Social software- we need a way to support conversations with content, and not just content.
- Learning – we need to leverage the principles of self-organizing networks.
- We need to transform learning … from something we do for people to something they do for themselves."
1 comment:
Hi Rick,
Stephen is actually not of Educommons, he is with the National Research Council of Canada, Institute for Information Technology (e-Learning Research Group).
http://iit-iti.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/personnel/downes_stephen_e.html
Rod Savoie (of the same Group)
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