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  • Campus Party Brasil 2009

    Posted: December 29th, 2008, 7:42pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Campus Party LogoEdney de Souza (Interney) is in charge of the Campus Blog at the 2nd edition of the national Campus Party, which will take place in São Paulo from January 19th to 25th  2009.

    The mega event,  sponsored by Futura Networks and Telefonica, was first launched in Spain and  is now yearly organized in Brazil, Colombia and Ibero-America. It covers  12 different areas:  Astronomy, Blog, Games, Modding, Robotics, Simulation, Design, Photography, Music, Video, Development e Open Source. Last year’s creativity session was split up into Design, Photography and Video, so as to better mark the event as a cultural happening.

    Like last year, I will also be part of the blogging area. I was invited to participate in a round table on “Blogs in the Classroom” together with Eric Messa (FAAP), Luiz Biajoni (Instituto Macuco), Claudir Segura (PUC-SP)  on Wednesday 21st at 16:35.  The panel will be moderated by Bob Wollheim (Sixpix Content).

    Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the Web and Pau Garcia-Milà (eyeOS) are some of invited stars and you bet I will be tweeting, photographing and reporting on the event.


  • Black Sheep Only

    Posted: December 16th, 2008, 12:45pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Could not resist this invite from Cazé (Espaço Gafanhoto) in my inbox - Black Sheep Only and confirmed my presence for Wednesday, 17th (the Results ON Day)  to hear what an intrepid group of web entrepreneurs has to say about innovation, entrepreneurship, how crisis is a synonym to opportunity, reflect on strategies and maybe start partnerships.

    A series of quick 30-minute talks has been scheduled, during which each entrepreneur will present their projects and plans. It is also the launch of the special edition of the ResultsON Startups highlighting the best 2008 startups and entrepreneurs, some of whom I have befriended during blogcamps and barcamps. Edney (Interney and Pólvora) invited me for a round table on educational blogs at the next Campus Party in January 2009 and promised to give this poor educator some tips on how to survive in this Brave New World.

    The event is being supported/sponsored by Sebrae, Senac and Nokia.

    Agenda

    14:30 Opening
    15:00 Fiore Mangona (Nokia) - Innovation and (R)evolution
    15:30 Alexandre Thomé (Endeavor) - Why venture out now?
    16:00 Luiz Colombo (Motiv) - Digital signage
    16:30 Emerson Calegaretti (MySpace) - Web business
    17:00 Edney Souza (Pólvora) - Social Media
    17:30 Intervalo
    18:00 Franco Lazzuri (Cietec) - Let’s invest
    18:30 Ariel e Mackeenzy (Videolog / TiVi) - Creating new businesses
    19:00 Daniel Heise (Customer First) - Innovating
    19:30 Manoel Fernandes (Bites) - The meeting of 2 worlds: blogs and businesses
    20:00 Alexandre Fugita (Startupi) - The art of starting up
    20:30 Johny Carvalho (PontoMobi) - Opening new markets
    21:00 Aleksandar Mandic (Mandic) - The entrepreneur: a black sheep?
    21:30 Launch ResultsON Startups
    21:45 Cocktails and night out

  • OER at STOA

    Posted: December 8th, 2008, 7:57pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Ewout ter Haar (STOA) and Carolina Rossinni (Berkman Centre) organized an open informal meeting on Open Educational Resources at USP last Friday morning. Invited international speakers, Melissa Hagemann ( OSI ) and Joel Thierstein ( Associate Provost from Rice University and CEO from Connexions ) came together with a group of Brazilian academics  to give a brief outline of their projects and discuss issues like sustainability, federated architectures for OER implementation, Creative Commons Licenses, the impact of such projects on intellectual property and the implications for the publishing industry. It was interesting to participate in this event, get to know what is happening here and the issues faced. (presentations can be found here).

    After an explanation of the work conducted at the Open Society Institute and a brief outline of the history of the Open Education movement and initiatives,  Melissa pointed to The Cape Town Open Education Declaration, which is

    at once a statement of principle, a statement of strategy and a statement of commitment… meant to spark dialogue, to inspire action and to help the open education movement grow.

    1741 individuals (1742 now that I have added my name) and 177 organizations have signed the declaration. Pilot countries comprise Poland, Australia and Brazil.

    Some open repositories (which do not require a subscription fee) : Arxiv, DOAJ, Dspace, PubMedCentral, OpenDoar, Eprints Soton, Scielo Brazil, Hindawi, Public Library of Science, Springer Open Choice, Bioline International.

    While Connexions founder Richard Baraniuk was discussing OER at the Berlin Online Educa,  Joel Thierstein, Cnx’S executive director, showed us (here in São Paulo) how their open source platform allows professors and teachers to  “Create Globally, Educate Locally” by giving them the possibility to create, collaborate, build/share custom collections. Users and authors can find content on a page by page basis through an interconnected repository (400+ textbooks, 7000+ lego modules from students, teachers, professionals  worldwide) and remix it for their needs. Authors retain copyright and license it via open access licence to share, copy and transmit the content. Hard cover copies of personalised textbooks created by mashups of different content were passed around.

    Differently from the States and other developed countries, in Brazil, information and expertise are still scarce, which reinforces the educational gap between the haves and have-nots. Ironically, state funded  and  free higher-ed ( like the University of São Paulo) cater for the higher middle-class who paid for their studies in private secondary schools and preparatory courses to succeed in the university entrance exam. The federal campuses are usual far from the city centre and transport difficult for those without a car. As a result of this, the most needy have to pay high tuition for overcrowded “one size fits it all” night classes at private commercial institutions, many of which of doubtful standard. In formal or vocational education, there is no recognition of prior and experiential learning, which further restricts the entry of qualified people to help out as facilitators, guides or curators.

    OERs and open education should be more than “a blip on the educational radar”.  It is important to have access not only to broadband and resources but also peers and experts who help learners filter, discuss, re-mix, create and make this content personally and contextually meaningful.

    I hope these first steps will allow Brazilian educators from all extractions find a way to collaborate and partner in networks beyond their schools and universities - across the river in the city of knowledge as Gilson Schwartz  put it and share instead of just “planning to share” so that more people and initiatives follow to open access to meaningful and dynamic education in our country.

  • Same or different languages, cultures and practices?

    Posted: November 28th, 2008, 12:19am GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Last August, I was honoured to receive an invitation from Larry Johnson and Alan Levine to join the New Media Consortium (NMC)  2008-9 Horizon Project Advisory Board (pdf file), a multi-disciplinary and international team whose annual work informs the annual Horizon Report on Emerging Technologies for teaching, learning and creative expression. I was a bit taken by surprise as I am not American, do not represent any institution and am not a “regular” member of the organization. Alan assured me that my experience in using new technologies and wide network were of interest, though.  According to him, the NMC wants to reach out more internationally by inviting non Anglo-Saxon members to contribute with their perspectives and get more exposure in Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries. Some steps in this direction:

    It has been enlightening to contribute to and participate in this carefully constructed process (totally online and open). The experience , as Larry puts it,

    is like a crash course in emerging technology, with the class made up entirely of very knowledgeable experts and futurists.

    I also echo Scott Leslie’s words in his post “The Value of Openness - creating the Horizon Project, out in the open.

    while I hope you do find the report useful when it comes out in late January 2009, you too can derive much the same benefit as I simply because the process to advise on the Report takes place ‘out in the open’ on this wiki. Indeed, I honestly find the raw materials gathered in the Research Questions (as well as the ongoing hz09 tag in delicious) to be ultimately the most valuable part of the process; inevitably, in order to create a ‘unified’ picture that can be summed up in a printed report certain details are lost, smushed together, improved upon, etc. But all of the raw materials are there for anyone who cares to dig.

    Since my exposure to the Future of Learning in a Networked World series of unconferences and during this sabbatical year, I have taken advantage to open myself up to different local communities, participate in various national educational and cultural initiatives and meet the actors. This roaming exposure  (one is usually confined to a professional track, idea or a classroom) and free (but expensive) time has allowed me to observe, compare and reflect on the mores and cultural traits of the different groups locally and internationally.

    Participating in the Brazilian Práxis community this year has been one of many such instructive insights. It introduced me to fellow colleagues in different institutions in São Paulo, who are in some way or another involved in the use of new technologies. Like the NMC,  Práxis aims at convening people around ideas and practice, catalyze dialogue, discussion and contributions to the field in the form of cases, papers, demonstrations and other related projects.

    However, differently from NMC, an NGO which relies on paid membership and whose open initiative projects happen mostly online to include perspectives, discussions and research from organizations all over the US and abroad, the Práxis community activities are basically local and presential (São Paulo city) and supported/directed by the Bradesco Institute of Technology, which is in turn funded by the Bradesco Foundation.

    In 2004,  a small group of K12 ICT coordinators and CIOs from the private school sector in São Paulo gathered at the occasion of an e-learning event to exchange ideas, practice and better get to know each other. In 2008, although most community members still represent these elite institutions, membership has opened up to encompass a variety of new people (who are selected through personal nomination), including technical schools, colleges, universities, edtech, e-learning businesses and big corporations. Membership is renewed annually by a public acceptance to follow at least 70% of the face to face  monthly meetings, during which practice/experience or products (100% proprietary until now) are demonstrated. The Moodle environment serves as a communication distributor, information archive and occasional discussion forum.

    I have noticed there is a striking difference between the way innovation is envisaged and practiced. Is it this a result of a national or an organizational culture? Is it local, global or both?

    Last night, during our last meeting of the year, Alexandre Zapparoli, from Gartner (Brasil) and Yang Sik Pak, from Daul Soft Brasil made their presentations.

    Gartner Hype Cycle 2008

    Gartner Hype Cycle 2008

    Now, although Gartner partners and networks with institutions and consultants to track breakthrough ideas and how they become established and part of general practice, it targets basically the corporate world business leaders in th etechnology/communications industry.  Its research process and methods are totally closed and the advice reports are delivered for a high fee.

    I noticed that the data collected and the trends openly suggested by educators for the 2009 Horizon Report did not differ significantly from the ones presented in the graphic above. The focus and objective are a bit different, though.

    Gartner recommends an open and free form adaptive structure, open to participation and modification, visible work in progress and create_organize_find_interact flow instead of rigid schemes, access rights, templates and costly infrequent change. Organization should reflect current use and needs and natural group formation should be based on activities and interests. Links, tags, ratings and usage are to determine importance and quality. One should find content through people links and people through content links. Interaction records reinforce personal and group identity, reputation and memory.

    As for Daul’s authoring tool combo (TeachingMate and LectureMaker) , although it evidences progress over the ready-made one-size-fits-all software, it still operates in the closed environment model, centred on  transmission mode, which does not help transform the educational practice but perpetuates the sage on the stage, closed silos and expensive walled gardens.

    Education, IMHO,  is much more complex than a linear series of events, a politician’s discourse /short-term policy or a measurable and defined pre-packaged product. Learning is a process of reactions and layers which lasts a life-time.

    The age of information and knowledge has led education into the media and big business spotlight and  schools/colleges and universities have fallen into the vicious circle of student /teacher bashing. Will educational institutions and businesses ever understand that transplanting a foreign model, installing an LMS system, revamping a classroom with a whiteboard, or submitting and enforcing the use of new technologies will not automatically lead to change?  Focus on people rather than technology, enable and support processes and weave in connections and possibilities for empowerment.

    In spite of the innovative discourse and good intentions of many, I still feel that in the country of Paulo Freire and the government’s innovative initiative to support OSS, banking education and delivery practices are still a strong reality. Too many have no or very restricted access to information and social connections and many are paying too high a price for it.
  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-18

    Posted: November 19th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Participatory Media and Practices

    Posted: November 12th, 2008, 3:55pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    This week my interest and involvement with social media in education granted me another invitation to participate as an “interaction facilitator” by twittering the Roda Viva interview with Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia founder),  together with Pedro Markun (communicator and social activist) and Pedro Valente (journalist).  It also led me to the WikiBrasil event in the evening, featuring well-known figures of the São Paulo intelligentzia , who gathered to share their experience and debate open and participatory media in diverse areas.

    Update (video)

    Live Broadcasting by Ustream

    I am also taking part of the II ABCiber Symposium (Brazilian Association of Cyberculture Researchers) at PUCSP, covering a variety of related themes, studies and propositions on how these new technologies are impacting our daily lives, uses, best practices and threats.

    Though severe brainfry has set in after listening to so many people speaking, I am also having some difficulty in following the tempo of this generation C - (connected, creative and click).  So, I have forced myself to sit down this morning, set some time aside, concentrate and focus on some of the common traits I have noticed during these events:

    • the possibility to join the debate, witness knowledge being constructed openly and being shared (from many and with many) through social tools and platforms like mobiles, Twitter (+ all mashups), Flickr, blogs, livestreaming, tagging;
    • a tendency of academia and traditional journalists to monopolize the conversation, engage in a navel gazing monologue instead of encouraging and partaking a dialogic relation with the guest speaker and audience.
    • a contradiction between innovative theoretical discourse and conventional institutional practice;
    • a difficulty in bridging the gap between hope and happening, structure and agency, the material and the ideational;

    As Jimbo mentioned at some point, the challenge does not really come from the technology itself, which is continuously being improved to facilitate connections, networking and working together. The real obstacles to an open culture of collaboration are deeply imbued economic/social/educational processes, practices and the need to control,  which hamper these conversations and the possibility of exchange and sharing.

    Off to one more afternoon and evening at ABCiber and tomorrow a whole day with Práxis members at BIT (Bradesco Institute of Technology) in Campinas for a meeting and lunch with Mitchel Resnick, from  the MIT Media Lab,  with whom Bradesco partners.

  • Tweets for 2008-11-11

    Posted: November 12th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • @fugita aproveite pois não sei quando será a próxima vez -) #
    • na ABCiber ouvindo a 2a mesa redonda do dia - por que ler para o público se podemos fazer isso nós mesmos? #
    • passando adiante: flashmob pela liberdade na Internet, contra o PL Azeredo: SP, sexta, 18h, Paulista 900, canteiro central… #
    • testing #bet tag for braztesol edutech sig twitter conversations #

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-10

    Posted: November 11th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Live interview with Jimmy Wales: [tinyurl.com]. Use #rodaviva to send in questions and comments. Time: [tinyurl.com] #
    • #rodaviva at the studio on the Twitter perch - Jimbo just before us - we’re about to begin #
    • send your comments and questions to #rodaviva #
    • #rodaviva music by Chico Buarque - Roda Viva has just started #
    • #rodaviva Lilian Witte Fibe opens with a short intro about Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales and his new commercial venture Wikia #
    • #rodaviva Wikiquote “A few years ago, I was just some guy sitting in front of the internet.” Jimmy Wales #
    • #rodaviva Now I send an e-mail or edit an article and it makes headlines around the world. I used to be just a guy — now I’m Jimmy Wales. #
    • #rodaviva … I used to be just a guy — now I’m Jimmy Wales. #
    • #rodaviva Otavio Dias wonders whether after obama’s election new technologies will open up democratic processes #
    • #rodaviva JW believes the challenge is how to get communities to collaborate together #
    • #rodaviva questions about the future Obama mandate and possibility hate organizations publishing on the web #
    • #rodaviva Will organizations become flatter ? the fact you have open and participatory media does not really mean the process is uniform #
    • #rodaviva wikipedia model is based on free (like in free speech) source - open software - who funds it? #
    • #rodaviva I wonder whether this model can apply to the Brazilian context, where knowledge is still very scarce and people earn money from it #
    • #rodaviva @carlaarena this is what everyone is looking forward - nothing will happen if the people do not collaborate and make it happen #
    • #rodaviva Wikipedia model relies on donations - 6 million $ a year to keep it running #
    • #rodaviva Can Internet volunteers improve journalism like we are doing now? #
    • #rodaviva Wikipedia is all about a committed community working together - not an easy task #
    • #rodaviva Lilian impressed by the size of Markun’s and Amadeu’s Asus -) has never seen or heard about it #
    • #rodaviva JW on challenge of building search engine transparente and powered by the community - not Google or Coca-like model #
    • #rodaviva is there transparency on Wikipedia? Who are the members of the cathedral? How are they chosen ? #
    • follow the #rodaviva tag on twemes #
    • #rodaviva JWales in Wikiquote : We aren’t democratic. Our readers edit the entries, but we’re actually quite snobby. #
    • #rodaviva JM Wikiquote The core community appreciates when someone is knowledgeable, thinks some people are idiots & shouldn’t be writing. #
    • #rodaviva wikiquote core community appreciates when someone is knowledgeable, and thinks some people are idiots and shouldn’t be writing. #
    • #rodaviva JW on priorities, freedom and money making #
    • #rodaviva even non-profit project needs a “business”model #
    • #rodaviva @fugita mas a wikipedia na realidade tem uma catedral que filtra e censura…não é somente o bazar beneficiente -) #
    • #rodaviva @fugita no entanto tb confio mais em algo que é rapidamente “updated” #
    • #rodaviva good article with JW on digital journalism [tinyurl.com] #
    • #rodaviva Brazilians are at the forefront in CC , open software and culture #
    • #rodaviva our society & culture is not uniform - community based organizations respect and understand local views #
    • #rodaviva belcolucci interviewing JW privately #
    • #rodaviva Cory Doctorow on copyright: [tinyurl.com] #
    • #rodaviva @cristinacost cultural awareness - easier said than done - our challenge in 21st century #
    • #rodaviva de acordo com @suzzinha…o nome da catedral é Capital #
    • #rodaviva there is a core group who knows each other and decide - who are these people? how transparent is this process? #
    • #rodaviva I like criticism but funny how some people insist only on the dark side #
    • #rodaviva wikiquote real struggle is not between the right & the left but between the party of the thoughtful and the party of the jerks. #
    • #rodaviva what makes one thoughful and the other one jerk? I wonder. #
    • #rodaviva discourse - aristocracy, the homepage czar, meritocracy, reputation and respect come from knowledge, time involvement #
    • #rodaviva is it possible to join the inner circle of the community? how open is it to others and criticism? #
    • #rodaviva my last tweets do not seem to have been captured by twemes -( #
    • #rodaviva I find it interesting how people see the world with the new replacing the old - models co-exist! #
    • #rodaviva access to information is key - people should contribute with their local content so that others can use #
    • #rodaviva did not know there were more Wikipedia articles in Portuguese than in Spanish #
    • #rodaviva how can people with oral literacy express themselves on Wikipedia? #
    • #rodaviva end of program..I hope you have enjoyed it! #
    • @suzzinha # rodaviva boa pergunta..que infelizmente não foi feita -( fica para hoje à noite #

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-07

    Posted: November 8th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Nov 10th livestream transmission/twittering interview with Jimmy Wales at #rodaviva at 11:30am check your time: [tinyurl.com] #
    • An interesting film <http://tinyurl.com/misterlonely> featuring my young friend Michael-Joel Stuart <http://mjstuart.wordpress. … #

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-06

    Posted: November 7th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • @cristinacost congrats on wonderful presentation - meant to be there but now at parents and difficult to connect on heavier platforms #

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  • Tweets for 2008-11-03

    Posted: November 4th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-29

    Posted: October 30th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-27

    Posted: October 28th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Mark Deuze on People Formerly Known as Employers [tinyurl.com] #
    • @cristinacost cannot join the chat..what is the url? #
    • @cristinacost just music and no chat? Where to go? #
    • at Emerge Sounds Bazaar on Digital Identities [tinyurl.com] #
    • @carlaarena the advantage of VoiceThread is that you can listen to it in bits, go back, comment #
    • @carlaarena which images? They are all referred to..the ones that are not, I do not remember where they came from..lol #
    • A book to read (in French if possible) - Amin Maloouf’s Identités Meurtrieres or In the Name of Identity: Violence and the Need to Belong #

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  • Colloquium on Global Communication

    Posted: October 27th, 2008, 5:52pm GMT by Barbara Dieu
    Enclosure: [download]

    Elizabeth Hanson-Smith sent an invitation to members on the Webheads in Action list to participate online in the Colloquium on Global Communication for the The Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia in Moscow. I accepted to give a presentation together with Sus Nyrop from Denmark, Cristina Costa in England, Rita Zeinstejer from Argentina and Ronaldo Lima Jr and Erika Cruvinel from Brasilia. After a series of mail exchanges, I set up a wiki , where we all gradually added our information, links resources and slides. I also used the presenters’ abstracts to compose the Wordle image that appears on the front page and which Elizabeth added at the bottom on the other pages as a sort of a logo.

    As Natalie Udina (the organizer of the event in Moscow) and some of the presenters were not very familiar with the Elluminate platform in Learning Times, we set a number of rehearsal times for people to test and ask questions.

    On the day of the event (October 24th) I almost missed the session because of the heavy traffic on the ring when coming back from the countryside, but fortunately I managed to arrive almost on time. Among the people present at the conference in Moscow, there was Dr. Anastasiya Atabekova, a representative from the culture section of the US Embassy in Moscow, some members of the local government, the University Dean, the pro-rector in science and other participants from different countries from Eastern Europe.

    As my sound quality was poor and the wifi connection uneven, I have decided to record it again. While the original raw footage is archived and a bit difficult to retrieve inside  the Webheads in Action room at Learning Times, the polished and interactive recording is here for those who do not want to log in.

  • Tweets for 2008-10-24

    Posted: October 25th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Check out this SlideShare Presentation : Colloquium on Global Communication [tinyurl.com] #

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-21

    Posted: October 22nd, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • in 3 hours twittering Jana Bennett’s interview for Roda Viva [www.tvcultura.com.br] link + details of live streaming later #
    • #rodaviva about to start - make up and chatting in the backstage #
    • #rodaviva Jana Bennett - CEO BBC -one of the most influential persons in British media #
    • #rodaviva takes are repeated - Lilian mentions she is embarassed - Jana says it’s the same out there #
    • #rodaviva questions to [www.tvcultura.com.br] #
    • #rodaviva Paulo Caruso is our live cartoonist #
    • #rodaviva no other country has such a powerful conglomerate as the BBC…how can this explained? #
    • #rodaviva British has a strong news culture and the Web has helped a lot - the BBC works internationally with many partners #
    • #rodaviva Patricia Kogut - how do the new media redefine the relationship with the spectators? #
    • #rodaviva Web and TV are working together and bring young people into interaction and you can always catch up later #
    • #rodaviva Bowling Alone shows how many American institutions have lost their relationship with the public, democracy and citizenship #
    • #rodaviva Lucia Araujo is the concept public TV being relevant? #
    • #rodaviva JB - the model of the Web being free makes the appeal stronger and this makes TV free to the audience #
    • #rodaviva the international perspective is extremely important as well #
    • #rodaviva NH: in Brazil big debate on public TV - how can public TV attend such a diverse population ? #
    • #rodaviva JB - there should be a public debate and public TV is a social choice #
    • #rodaviva EB - who finances this TV- spectators, advertisers? #
    • #rodaviva JB in Britain people pay a license and this represents the bulk 95% of the money that finances it #
    • #rodaviva JB programs are not sponsored in Britain #
    • #rodaviva JB does not feel comfortable in giving advice in a foreign country - public broadcasting needs freedom and quality #
    • #rodaviva JB - independence comes from lack of political interest and not competing for commercial advertising #
    • #rodaviva people accept the license fee as it pays for this independence and quality #
    • #rodaviva The BBC has embraced some reality shows - program on fashion - teens were taken to India to understand different realities #
    • #rodaviva reality TV can be educational - all depends on what the focus is #
    • #rodaviva questions from public: do TVs share standards globally? BBC tries to find ways of doing things + efficiently and cheaply #
    • #rodaviva @fredpill isso é para a rede internacional -) #
    • #rodaviva JB well understood tradition in Britain - controversial issues are debated after the broadcast not before #
    • #rodaviva JB BBC tries to involve people in issues and not lecture them on benefits or disadvantages #
    • #rodaviva the BBC Trust may be selected thru the gvt but it is not political - what counts are their skills and not their affilitation #
    • #rodaviva in Brazil young population has migrated to games and other technologies - how has the BBC faced this challenge? #
    • #rodaviva JB - BBC has taken the TV to the Web, where the public is and combines both #
    • #rodaviva JB stresses the need to focus on young people and what their interests are - same should happen in education #
    • #rodaviva JB user-generated content by young people is inserted into the programs & allow for interactions - different tools are used #
    • #rodaviva different programs ask for different tools & different kinds of interaction - need to feel and know what works where #
    • #rodaviva LWF how has the BBC faced merchandising inside independent programs? #
    • #rodaviva JB although some products are shown for realism, care is taken not to make them that visible and rotate them - #
    • #rodaviva PK do young people want just to passively watch? JB - teens also like to chill out but enjoy quality #
    • #rodaviva Jb different types of behaviour /tastes to be expected at different times of the day #
    • #rodaviva digital TV in Britain started about 10 years ago and now all channels are digital but some homes are not (10%) #
    • #rodaviva L ..how is public value measured? #
    • #rodaviva as the BBC is not a profit-making company they try to give value to all those who pay the fee #
    • #rodaviva BBC measure each program for quality (scores to understand what people think), literacy campaigns + convergence radio, TV, Web #
    • #rodaviva differently from other countries where TV is seen as ephemeral, Britain has a strong reflection tradition on its media #
    • #rodaviva TV is as cultural object and everybody debates it on other media and at home #
    • #rodaviva make the good popular and the popular good - so programs can be smart, serious and entertaining #
    • #rodaviva JB ex smart mob on classical music : opera in railway session - giving people space and time for creativity and innovation #
    • #rodaviva international question: why BBC puts its iPlayer content behind a wall that blocks outside outside of GB. What is the rationale? #
    • #rodaviva @lezzles I think it is because the British pay a license fee for it and you do not - but you can get it on the Web for 7 days #
    • #rodaviva BBC - programs should have more to them than just spectacle #
    • #rodaviva TV as an inspirational medium - being serious and didactic does not mean that humour cannot exist - life is a mixture of things #
    • #rodaviva different countries have different infrastructure for mobiles - BBC has mostly invested on the Web - focus is good quality first #
    • #rodaviva LWF is the BBC produced for a white ageing middle class? #
    • #rodaviva JB BBC tries to cater for everyone and there are programs - not about rich and poor but regionality #
    • #rodaviva JB BBC does not abandon audiences and tries to reach out to new ones #
    • #rodaviva CA what is the ideal format to target young people? #
    • #rodaviva for JB : comedies and drama - programs which allow teens to relax, sit back and identify themselves with characters #
    • #rodaviva over #
    • @tvcultura não vi meus tweets no site de vcs. É por causa do inglês? #

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  • Roda Viva - Interactive TV experiment

    Posted: October 21st, 2008, 8:19pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Last night, Bel Colluci, from TV Cultura asked me (through a quick message on Gtalk) to participate in an “experiential participatory transmission” they are conducting: streaming the Roda Viva interview program raw and live footage on the Web a week before its polished taped version is shown on TV. The idea is also to get online participants to interact with the program through the Radar Cultura page and Twitter while the interviews are being carried on.

    The whole setup in the studio consists of a mobile unit : a laptop connected to the Internet, a mini DV video camera, a tripod, a photo camera. Live transmission is done through streaming using Mogulus (video), Cover it Live (multimídia chat), Flickr (photo storage), YouTube (video storage) and Twitter (live coverage). The crewman follows what happens to the guests and journalists from the moment they arrive until they leave.

    Bel confided she was happy to have been given this opening and space for action. I accepted as I was eager to check not only the environment but also the efforts that are being made in this very traditional broadcasting mode to incorporate new technologies and make it interactive - the same challenge we are facing in education. Not all schools accept experimentation and going beyond the fixed walls of their “studios”.

    The interviewee for this event was Jana Bennett, CEO of one of the largest media conglomerates in the world - the BBC. I read about her a bit before going to bed and, as I decided to tweet in English for an international audience, I sent word through the various lists and communities I belong to around the world.

    A chauffeur came to fetch me, Lucia Freitas and Bel early this morning and off we went across town to Fundação Padre Anchieta, where TV Cultura is housed. On arrival, we met Aloisio Milani, our fellow twitterer ; the other journalists who were going to interview Jana: Lilian Witte Fibe, Carmen Amorim, Patricia Kogut, Eugenio Bucci, Lucia Araujo, Nelson Hoineff and Paulo Caruso, a live cartoonist. After a scrumptious breakfast in the best Brazilian style (orange juice, coffee, pao de queijo, sandwiches, fruit and cake), we were led to the make-up room (no shiny noses or disheveled look permitted) and then to the studio .

    update - Lucia Freitas has just sent me the cartoon Paulo Caruso made of us

    Lucia, Aloisio and I sat on the perch at the top, overlooking the scene.

    It was fun but more like quick note-taking for me, as I had little audience - Vance connected but I missed him on the scrolling page and Dennis (from the Webheads) made a number of comments. I must confess I found it difficult to multi-task on so many levels: pay attention to new faces and context, what people were doing in the studio,  what journalists were asking/what Jana was answering, reporting/commenting and paying attention to what was streaming from outside and responding . I guess that like all in life,  it’s a matter of getting used to it and practicing. I would have definitely adopted another strategy had I had an audience watching the stream and asking questions or making comments, which is what happened in Portuguese. My own tweets (in English) can be found on a filtered Tweetscan (reverse chronological order), everyone else’s both on Twitter search (keyword rodaviva) and Twemes.

    Good marketing for TV Cultura and Roda Viva program - an attempt to make a TV program interactive and showing all backstage live one week before the recorded program goes on air. Twittering also provides a written record of what went on from different perspectives - which finally converged in spite of the different languages. Some blogging will divulge the event and maybe bring on more people to watch it next Monday.

    I found that many of the questions (fortunately with some good exceptions) were navel gazing, asking for advice or models for a cultural and societal context which is entirely different from the UK. Most did not really probe or unveil anything that you cannot already find on Google about Jana or the BBC annual reports.

    Jana Bennett was very much herself and emphasized the importance the BBC gives to quality programs, international partnerships, catering for the different needs/ages/tastes and how new technology is being used to interact with the audience and integrate user-generated content whenever possible. Also important - the absence of political/commercial pressure when producing and broadcasting. According to Jana, quality depends on money (95% from license fees paid by viewers who trust and endorse quality), time alloted to production, independence and autonomy for program producers who (unlike in Brazil) are free from political, commercial (and economic) pressure. A Trust Committee, with different members chosen according to their expertise (not affiliation), regulates what goes on by reflecting and discussing the choice of controversial programs AFTER they are broadcast. Differently from the American or Brazilian TV, whose use by a younger generation is declining (for lack of quality content), Jana mentions that in the UK teens enjoy TV to cool off, relax and choose their programs according to their mood and time of the day as they are made relevant to them. She gave an example of an educational “reality show” which brought together teens interested in fashion - they were taken to different production areas both in England and India, exposed to quality work and sweatshops and asked to reflect upon this experience. The American PBS series follows a similar concept (Merchants of Cool).

    It was interesting to participate in this - wondering now how we can mobilize our schools to follow a similar path, discarding the mouldy, senseless layers of bureaucracy which seem to have gripped the system and frozen it. How can we converge by giving value both to what is past and present quality and inviting young people to pave the future by contributing, innovating and creating new channels for expression and interaction . Although education and culture evolve in a slower tempo than art, fashion and commerce, once the infrastructure and governance are laid out, we should feel the change- slow but powerful. As an ancient proverb says “the journey of 1,000 miles starts with a single step”. Have you taken yours?

  • Tweets for 2008-10-20

    Posted: October 21st, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Trebor Scholz’s cautionary note on the use of social media: [tinyurl.com] make sure it’s open and transparent! #

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-16

    Posted: October 17th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Good Ultralab article:mobiles in education: [tinyurl.com] #
    • Stephen Heppell chatting tonight for k12 conference online: [tinyurl.com] #
    • excellent blog post by Bill Kerr on Stephen Heppell’s keynote at Vitta: [tinyurl.com] #

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-14

    Posted: October 15th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • 13th October 1998 I was in SF on a field trip to the West Coast with 44 teens. Documented live (Sony Mavica) at [tinyurl.com] #
    • @jeffreykeefer thank you so much for the link and very informative summary on Lyotard posted on Scope -) #
    • especial para @jasper -) [qik.com] #

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  • Instructional Design

    Posted: October 14th, 2008, 9:49pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Instructional Design , presented by Paula Carolei and Andrea Filatro , will be the next meeting (of a series) organized by Praxis. Once a month, actors from various institutions of the educational scene here in Sao Paulo get together f2f  to network and talk about our practice. Although we are all highly connected  and/or very much interested in new technologies, the online exchange is still incipient, centralized on a Moodle platform mostly used as a message board and list, with very little leeway for collaboration ( something I have already complained about some time ago), and which fortunately our two newcomers seem to want to challenge with a preparatory activity.

    As a warm-up, we were asked to brainstorm on what instructional design means to us, deconstruct it and contribute to the forum with a non-verbal representation of how we see it.  We are allowed to use images, symbolic audio-visual material or daily and concrete images of our professional space.

    This is how I represented my vision of Instructional Design using CC images I got by typing tags to Peter Shank’s  Flickr CC and uploading them to Flickr Toys Mosaic Maker. I could have used VoiceThread and some music…but then words are forbidden.

    Not sure it makes much sense without explaining but maybe you would like to give it a try. How would you interpret it? Is there anything you do not quite understand or missing from your perspective?

  • Tweets for 2008-10-10

    Posted: October 11th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • give me line…lots of line…don’t fence me in -) ? [blip.fm] #
    • Rita just nails it down to basics … no fluff -) ? [blip.fm] #
    • @shareski both -) #
    • Oh…I’m transported to last century…and my heart just aches and aches with the king of metaphor - lovely poetry ? [blip.fm] #

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-09

    Posted: October 10th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Listening online to the live launch of Univesp - Virtual University in Sao Paulo [www.tvcultura.com.br] #
    • @lufreitas os cursos me parecem bem quadradinhos e top down -( #
    • @lufreitas espero que não seja o velho modelo com roupas novas #
    • #univesp as tecnologias estão aí, mas o modelo é top down, e-learning fechado. Será que vão reproduzir o velho modelo com roupinhas novas? #
    • @carrapatoso #univesp Foco nos textos e não no experimental, interação e reflexão? #
    • @carrapatoso #univesp Estamos assim formando professores que vão reproduzir a forma como aprenderam - nada vai mudar nos próximos 30 anos! #

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  • Tweets for 2008-10-01

    Posted: October 2nd, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • Hog riders! Ya know Captain America rolls…listen to the primal scream, take the world in a love embrace and ex… ? [blip.fm] #
    • An interesting mix -) ? [blip.fm] #
    • 7”38′, if you can make it …just what you want to be … you will be in the end -) ? [blip.fm] #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-30

    Posted: October 1st, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • 1st Web Curriculo

    Posted: September 30th, 2008, 3:50am GMT by Barbara Dieu

    Last week (it’s already old news), we had the 1st WebCurriculo conference, which took place at PUC SP and was blogged and streamed live. I submitted a paper about my 10-year school experience using social tools, networks and interaction  in the classroom to complement, extend and transform the curriculum. 

    This was a challenge I set out for myself . It was the first time I sent my work to a Brazilian university . Ironically, what I have been doing at school was first shown and recognized abroad instead of inside my own organization (school) - which does not even know about this paper…so closed it is inside its own processes.  The web and networking was an outward movement.  I am now coming back and trying to find my place in the local educational environment. Not easy.  Second challenge (minor and fun), believe it or not  - I had never made an academic poster before.  Incredible how fussy some people can be over standard, form and norm and how anxious you can get for fear of not being accepted if you do not “conform”.

    I had already written about my experience in Portuguese for Praxis (a 30-page ) but needed to condense it twice  - first for the submission paper: “Ferramentas Sociais, Redes e Interação”  (webcurriculo - (thanks Neli for lending me a hand) and then later for the poster. In spite of my lack of experience in this field, I managed to make one after after a quick search on the web. It was a good exercise in synthesis and visual distribution/impact.  Once it was printed, and hung,  I immediately realized I should have done it totally different.  This how one learns - set yourself a challenge, go for it, do your best, verify results, adjust, lather, rinse and repeat…or is it the other way round?  -)

    As I listened to the various presentations, I compared the reactions to mine and was reminded of the steps I have made these years towards trying to find a balance in my courses. At the language institute I first worked,  I was just an instructor, training people to develop their communication and linguistic skills in a foreign language, not really engaged in any reality but the service I was delivering.  However, when I moved to the secondary school, although the job profile was the same as before, I increasingly became an educator and as such, gradually much more aware of the social engineering  we are subjected to through the uniform, over-structured, inflexible and centralized programs imposed . While trying to implement these new technologies in the classroom , I was constantly confronted with the unresponsive wall of institutional bureaucracy.

    While writing this post, I dug up this drawing made by the Time Project team and compared it to a sketch late Lee Baber asked me to check some time ago. There is so much talk about different curricula.  Education surely involves some amount and  quantity - skills and competencies -  but I’d say it is mostly about quality - values and a better understanding of action and knowledge in time - Chronos and Kairos. How do you achieve it on the Web?

    1. Core Subjects and 21st Century Themes

    2. Learning and Innovation Skills

    * Creativity and Innovation Skills
    * Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Skills
    * Communication and Collaboration Skills

    3. Information, Media and Technology Skills
    * Information Literacy
    * Media Literacy
    * ICT Literacy

    4. Life and Career Skills
    * Flexibility & Adaptability
    * Initiative & Self-Direction
    * Social & Cross-Cultural Skills
    * Productivity & Accountability
    * Leadership & Responsibility

    and four 21ST CENTURY SUPPORT SYSTEMS:

    1. Standards and Assessment of 21st Century Skills
    2. Curriculum and Instruction
    3. Professional Development
    4. Learning Environments

  • Tweets for 2008-09-25

    Posted: September 26th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • welcome to twittersphere @rachelivana -) #
    • good morning (afternoon?) @fascinatenina it’s 10:00 pm (Wednesday) in São Paulo, Brazil . Welcome to twittersphere -) #
    • Ni hao @motherchina -) #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-24

    Posted: September 25th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • @cbsiskin brighten a dark and rainy day -) #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-23

    Posted: September 24th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • at PUC SP…following 1st conference on Web Curriculo and presenting a poster on 10 year work - Social Tools, Networking and Interaction #
    • @Dennis_Phoenix & @cbsiskin you always do -) #

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  • A nagging question

    Posted: September 22nd, 2008, 11:08am GMT by Barbara Dieu

    I have been increasingly invited to take part in events, conferences and even keynotes.  So far so good - it means people deem I have something to give and share.  However, with very few exceptions, I notice a recurring pattern - the invitations are one way only - not only you are not paid for the time you spend on preparing and presenting your work,  but in many cases you have to disburse money from your own savings to share your knowledge.

    While in the past big conferences were the only opportunity to meet people and share knowledge, they have now become a ripoff for independent teachers who are not funded by the institutions they work for, have a business or sell the wares of a publishing house.  Technology has facilitated access and you apparently can now “build on your social capital”  through the  web.   Increased cooperation on wiki farms with experts from different fields is a more efficient way of discussing “potential collaborative, learning, or creative applications of emerging technologies”. You can do all this from home - wonderful - saves on flights, lodging and food - and you contribute to the common good. “The primary costs are the investment of time required  for participation”.  Now,  I do not want to sound materialistic or utilitarian but haven’t you heard an expression somewhere that time is money?

    During a  recent conference on digital citizenship,  there were debates on how information networks, digital communication in an increasingly mobile scenario alter political practices and challenge us to defend and expand citizen rights. Professors Quéralto and Andoni Alonso bring to attention that we live today in an eras of strong pragmatic rationality  and would like immediate results so as to change the world. However,  we are progressively being alienated by an increasing number of activities which take time. We are now not only our own marketeers but also our own bureaucrats and have even more work in shadow time which consumes our rest, family and pleasure and does not fill the supermarket trolley at the end of the month. Knowledgeable digital educators and ” visionaries” furnish complex and specialized work in a totally abstract system which apparently does not envisage survival.

    Catherine Fitzpatrick in one of the Connectivism forum threads mentions  “One of the deep problems with Creative Commons is that it provides no easy way to say “use a copy of this if you pay me here: _”. Instead, it lays social pressure on people to make their content free and copyable for attribution only, with a vague notion that this will lead to…consulting or something. If no one can make a living from their content and the economy, if their intellectual property is always under pressure from “wanting to be free” for others to grab, they walk away. They stop making content. This has played out in Second Life with all the problems of IP and ripping of content there and people simply going out of business.”

    So the nagging question at the back of the mind persists.  Is this the price of reinventing yourself permanently, sharing and trying to remain creative, free and independent?


  • Tweets for 2008-09-21

    Posted: September 22nd, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • @josiefraser what’s your favourite #chutney and what do you like having it with? #
    • @MetaWeb20 how do you eat the mangoes there in Mexico? Raw or do you make sthg out of them? #
    • @josiefraser this sounds superb…I love mango #chutney with roast chicken & curried rice + pimiento jelly #
    • thanks @bgblogging ..going to make your #chutney next week…if mangoes not very ripe, double the corn syrup if you like it sweeter #
    • how you feel after a very strange night… ? [blip.fm] #
    • @JeffreyKeefer Celtic Solstice? I wonder whether I can find it on blip.fm #
    • What a miserable Sunday…raining, grey and dark -( #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-19

    Posted: September 20th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • 1 de outubro - evento organizado pela Sun Microsystems Inc. em parceria com a NetSquared
      [tinyurl.com] #
    • @bgblogging oh..always wanted a good recipe for tomato chutney - can swap my mango for your tomato -) #
    • stupefy with Stupeflix [www.stupeflix.com] #
    • @bgblogging which way is it more fun? a twitter recipe? or an interactive channel on Twemes with hash chutney? #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-15

    Posted: September 16th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-11

    Posted: September 12th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • looking forward to conferences today and tomorrow at Casper [tinyurl.com] #
    • ethical dimensions on the net - Ramón Queraltó (Univ. de Sevilla), Luis Joyanes (Univ. Salamanca), Andoni Alonso (Univ. Extremadura). #
    • listening to Andoni Alonso - commenting on plot of film August [www.imdb.com] #
    • the more people speak , the less they listen - attention is a scarce good #
    • Interesting articles on privacy in the latest SciAmerican [tinyurl.com] #

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  • Tweets for 2008-09-09

    Posted: September 10th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • unforgettable “metropolitan madness…musical kaleidoscope of America” ? [blip.fm] #
    • Y-a-t-il encore ” dans ce vaste supermarché qu’est devenue la planète, une place pour les cœurs purs”? Not… ? [blip.fm] #
    • Et Brassens pour compléter! ? [blip.fm] #

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  • On learning and instructional design

    Posted: September 9th, 2008, 8:27pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    On the Online Toys and Tools discussion forum,  Sirin Soyoz from Istambul states

    As far as I experience, it is instructional design that facilitates learning and learners must take on new roles in the learning process.

    This is very much the discussion now taking place in Week 6 of the FOC08 course, which I am also following  and participating in so I have decided to bring them together. Connecting thoughts, weaving threads and ideas.

    Like Stephen, I am skeptic of words like “must” and a universal solution. I question the whole industry of e-moderation, e-facilitation that has come in the wake of the e-hype and forces people into fragmented views and compartments.

    While instructional design may seem an efficient way of accomplishing tasks,  I do not see it necessarily conducing to learning. Instructional design is just another name for teaching -  acting upon or transmitting (through various methods, techniques and psychological & motivational maneuvers) the content or behaviour deemed to be correct or required for a certain end. So its motives reside outside the learners even if they are requested to take part and may influence the design.

    Learning, on the other hand,  is a continuous personal quest towards sense making, expressing it and making it work so as to accomplish not only our individual but also collective needs. Beautiful design, instruction, role taking may facilitate learning but are not a pre-condition for it to occur. Children learn different strategies and have insights while playing without any conscious design or control on the part of their parents.

    As Stephen illustrates well, in for some people in some groups or the software community, learning occurs in spite of

    commonality of purpose (some people are professionals, others merely interested), far from universal motivation to learn (others signed on for any of a variety of motives) and certainly no professional e-moderation.

    He asks:

    Given the absence of the elements claimed to be necessary to support learning - the absence of instructional design, the absence of professional e-moderation, the absence of commonality of purpose - then we have to ask, what is it, really, that is fostering the learning in such a situation.

    As I see it, from my own experience as a learner/teacher/mother/daughter/wife/citizen and many other perspectives I have acquired during my life, learning happens continuously consciously and unconsciously, by being immersed in life and not separated from it. We observe, relate to others, read, compare and contrast, expose ourselves, dip into the pool of collective knowledge trying to find answers to our questions, try, fail and endlessly repeat what seems to us the correct pattern with slight variations trying to perfect whatever we find incomplete or lacking.

    Very often we learn incidentally through exposure, immersion and observing what does not work or went wrong, which is not necessarily very “efficient” if measured against “time and ROI” which seem to drive everyone’s actions nowadays.

    I must say I have been very fortunate to have had many people who walked with me along the way - they shared with me some of their own insight,  sometimes held my hand,  sometimes instructed me, sometimes nudged or challenged me to overcome self-built obstacles - they helped me stretch a bit further each time. There are many roads that lead to knowledge and we cannot take them all as this experiment/course well illustrates. Each one of us will follow our own path according to background, assumptions, choices and needs.

    However, do we all have the choice, the time, the people and the resources to learn, expand and share our knowledge with others ? Does the economy/society we live in today allow for and recognize this kind of learning ? How can theories map a dynamic process? (remembering that the map is not the territory). Is it possible to measure and evaluate it? What for and how? Don’t we prescribe and obfuscate emergence by enforcing a model, a theory?

  • Wordle on Beespace

    Posted: September 9th, 2008, 3:07pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    I foolishly assumed that by giving Wordle the feed to my blog, it would automatically scan ALL the posts for word frequency and I would be able to visualize the most common semantic fields covered. Not yet there but  Jonathan Feinberg (and IBM) are on it. Like George says on the Connectivism Course Forum:

    Given the pace of info development, we’re going to increasingly rely on tools that provide some indication of the patterns evident in the abundance…

    Although word meanings do not have clear boundaries, the picture below gives you a fuzzy idea of what I has been in my mind in the latest posts (front page not counting this post :-)). It will be interesting to take the screenshots every x weeks to check how it changes like Tom Whyte is doing in What Wordle Shows about the Connectivism Course.

  • Twitter Updates for 2008-09-08

    Posted: September 9th, 2008, 2:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu
    • One of my very favourites…Keith Jarret’s concert in Koln. ? [blip.fm] #
    • into this world we’re thrown…like a dog without a bone…riders on the storm ? [blip.fm] #
    • Duas feras cantando juntas só pode ser Doce Morrer no Mar…. ? [blip.fm] #
    • I love Paris at all times and seasons as well -) Lovely city, lovely song and lovely lady. ? [blip.fm] #

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  • On community, facilitating, moderating and teaching

    Posted: September 8th, 2008, 1:59am GMT by Barbara Dieu

    I will try to bundle two weeks of questions, readings and reflections on what I have observed until now.

    What is an online community?

    This is the first question in the FOC08 course and Leigh introduces the topic with a warning and some advice.

    Most people use the phrase “online community” very loosely …and it is important that we try and develop an understanding of what exactly we are looking for, and techniques for looking.

    According to Wikipedia, in biological terms, a community is a group of interacting organisms sharing an environment. From this perspective, an online community at its very basic would be people who share and interact in an online environment.

    However, there is much more to it than meets the eye and it is important to question concepts and definitions we have grown used to and long taken for granted in our particular contexts.  In a period of change, when navigating uncharted territories and meeting new cultures, such general concepts must be questioned.

    History changes, but so does the meaning of words. Depending on the situation, words like freedom and tyranny and faith have different applications and consequences. When does faith constrict freedom? When does freedom become a cover-up for tyranny? Most important, who has the power to define these words? (Source: NY TIMES  CRITIC’S NOTEBOOK : FREEDOM TWISTED BY CORRUPT REGIMES by Margo Jefferson January 13, 2004)

    In the same way, the word “online community” has been used in so many situations by different people that the word does not stick to what it stands for. It is a loaded word, which may be used to manipulate people’s emotional needs for different purposes.

    So again just observing and noting down the different layers of meaning I have noticed.

    Differently from a traditional course during which the teacher and/or prescribed readings are the source of knowledge and impart it to others at a certain time and place, the starting point here are the participants themselves at their own places. They voice their points of view and perspectives arising from their own experience and check their assumptions against the readings suggested and what others have written.

    Even though the initial required reading list and course framework/progression were not decided upon by the participants themselves and the interaction seems to be limited to the particular context of the course and the people who have enrolled, the platform used is a wiki, an open collaboration tool which allows others to add to it. It is a flexible structure which could be eventually modified. Participants are encouraged to post their own reflections on their own blogs and link to others not only through their blogroll but also when referring or quoting others. As posts are online and open, they may be “eventually”  commented upon and challenged by others who are not part of this specific context (provided their comment area is open and allows for this kind of interaction).

    By posing the question “what is an online community?”, offering a number of articles from different professional fields (knowledge management, technology business, philosophy, sociology, education, research, politics) and by letting people show what they know, i.e., illustrate perceptions of community from their own context,  Leigh facilitates the explicit expression of knowledge.  By trying to define “an online community”,  the different individual answers reveal to others in turn what the initial common ground may be, where the intersections appear and where the differences (opinion, language, skills, netiquette or plain stubborness) may obstruct/impede communication and  make people remain silent, over-react, enter disputes, take diverging roads or quit.

    The moderator´s role would be to perceive these moments, calm or encourage such behaviours so as to maintain the community´s harmony.

    Therefore, the starting point is what each one of us already knows, how we represent it for ourselves and others, how this concept is used /understood and expressed by the different personae in their different fields of practice and interest.  

    A second step, an observation of language, an awareness of worlds/behaviours different from our own (not only geographical but social, cultural, linguistic) are  paramount to examine recurring patterns, how these are transposed in different situations - which community avoids them,  which reinforces them and why.

    “Eurocentrism, like Renaissance perspectives in painting, envisions the world from a single privileged point. . . . Eurocentrism bifurcates the world into the “West and the Rest” and organizes everyday language into binaristic hiearchies implicitly flattering to Europe: our ‘nations,’ their ‘tribes’; our ‘religions,’ their ’superstitions’; our ‘culture,’ their ‘folklore’; our ‘art,’ their ‘artifacts’; our ‘demonstrations,’ their ‘riots’; our ‘defense,’ their ‘terrorism.’ ” Shohat, Ella and Robert Stam. Unthinking Eurocentrism. Routledge. London and New York, 1994. p.2 “

    Individuals, communities, groups, networks…language and critical literacy are paramount.

  • Here comes everybody

    Posted: September 4th, 2008, 3:46pm GMT by Barbara Dieu

    The Power of Organizing without Organizations

    I have just posted my introduction to the Moodle Connectivism and Connective Knowledge Course which is about to start. The course, which has already been nicknamed MOOC (