Tuesday, January 28, 2014

W3C2 Rights and Safety

Class discussion
Create a Google account (choose a login and password that is different from your university ones, and send your gmail address to hrdswon@gmail.com). The topic of online right and safety is thorny. Issues can result in grave consequences for any individual or workplace, and you will see many powerful arguments for using web 2.0 tools as well as against it. 

I believe, debates on whether the Web is safe for school kids/youth, or whether one should participate in Facebook or not, or whether companies must ban or monitor social media will completely miss the point. Web and social media are drivers of social and market changes, and balance is most important - simple that is. Any workplace and individuals must proactively plan, manage, evaluate, and improve online rights and safety, if they plan to leverage web and social media.

I encourage you to explore URLs here. If about an hour, watch first two videos. Then, check further resources #1, 2, 3, and 6, which talk about how to measure your online presence (Klout), how to build up your reputation (by utilizing popular services, such as facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, etc), and how to address/protect privacy. Others are related to policy and resource examples to address these issues through instruction or laws/regulations. Your comment for this posting is optional, but  don't forget to complete respond to the next post, which asks you to summarize your understanding of the first three weeks contents.
  1. Be aware online filter bubbles (Eli Pariser, TED 9 min)
  2. Google Profiles, Online Reputation Management, and Digital Footprints by Wesley Fryer (the second video: digital dossier inside the link, 4 min is strongly recommended)
  3. The Online Amplification Effect by Margaret Soltan (many examples that show how stories can spread rapidly and affect individuals and workplaces)
  4. Your phone company is watching (by Malte Spitz, 9 min)
  5. Copyright-Friendly and Copyleft Images and Sound (Mostly!) for Use in Media Projects and Web Pages, Blogs, Wikis, etc. by joycevalenza - as an IDT major, if you want to share your work more with others or like to use their work properly, you must read this and also check the video on the top (3 min video)
  6. Your online life, permanent as a tattoo (Juan Enriquez's TED talk video, 5 min) 
  7. Recut, Reframe,Recycle by the Center for Social Media at American University - Did you ever wonder about whether you can use commercial work in your video or school project? Check the short video on fair use (about 4-5 min)
Further resources

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

W3C1 Trends in Ed and Society

Class discussion (per each source)
#1 - Shows how learning would be like at school and work in the (near) future.
#2 - His book, the world is flat is one of the most popular sources people use to support globalization. See which 'flatteners' Friedman says as driving globalization. If you are keen on social justice and sustainable economic development, you will find Cambridge prof. Chang's work, entitled Bad Samaritans and his other work to be fascinating. He is not a capitalism skeptic.
#3 - His book Growing up digital captures core characteristics of digital youth very well, and discusses implications for organizations (hiring, career, development, etc.). Together, #1~3 gives both - positive and critical aspects of technology, innovation, and globalization. Infographics and data can be very useful for understanding any abstract but important phenomenon, such as global development (by Hans Rosling, 20 min TED talk).
#4 - Interested in leveraging social media for good causes? Based on a Stanford course on using social media, book includes many great cases as well as a model/framework for effectively planning/analyzing, designing, and implementing social media projects.
#5 -  Creating and leading a 'great' learning system is not easy, it involves visionary leaders, students, effective processes and support. Revisiting cases from Finland and Singapore from W2 will be very helpful seeing exemplary cases for Ken's talk.
  1. A day made of glass (by Corning, 6 min)
  2. Thomas L. Friedman’s 2007 MIT talk “The World is Flat 3.0” (Listen up to 37 minutes)
  3. Growing up digital by Don Tapscott (26 min) (If further interested, also watch his 2012 TED talk: 4 principles of the open world, 17 min)
  4. Dragonfly effect (changing the world using social media) - Blog site
  5. Lastly, to make education right, it should be on teaching and learning, not on standardized tests or STEM only. Key Robinson is one of the most popular TED presenters. If you plan to create a holistic and systematic learning system, try applying his principles. Watch How to Escape Education's Death Valley (TED Talk, 19 min) and also Do School kills creativity? (20 min). How YouTube is driving innovation (Chris Anderson, TED talk, 18 min) can be one example of educational innovations.
Further resources - * Each source can take a while to read/review. You can skim each briefly, then devote more time later to peruse for particular interests.
Exemplary projects and initiatives - Last week, when we talked about learning 2.0, many said participating in and utilizing (online professional) communities as the best way to leverage learning 2.0. You can click open each of the following, spend no more than a minute or two, can join selectively to spend more time later.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

W2C2 Learning 2.0

Class discussion
#1~3 illustrates emerging/promising practices and challenges surrounding education. #4 and 5 embody the power of experiential and hands-on learning driven by authentic and relevant tasks. #5 incorporating elements of situated learning, communities of practice, and Dewey's productive inquiry. It introduces many innovative and exemplary educational practices from all over the world.
  1. Information R/evolution by Michael Wesch (under 6 minutes)
  2. What is Web 2.0 by UTech (under 6 minutes) - Another good video on Web 2.0 (consisting of interpersonal computing, Web services, and Software as a Service (SAAS) (7 min)
  3. Learning to change - Changing to learn (5 minutes)
  4. From Knowledge to Knowledgeable by Michael Wesch (17 mins video)
  5. Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0 by John Seely Brown and Richard P. Adler
You will see that media always portray brighter pictures of technology, when the reality of tech integration for teaching/learning and its impact are  complex, dynamic, and often slow/disappointing. I say, technology is as only good as people behind it. People balk about something as the next killer application, much less discussed among practitioners is how instructional design and learning principles should apply to guide the use of media (because those two drive what people do with tech). Further resources below introduce many short and informative videos about today's learners and what's happening with teachers and schools.
As/after you review these materials, think about:
  • What is learning at its core? How one should learn? How has your view of learning changed?
  • How learning will become different because of the Web? 
  • Should any workplace or school actively adopt/use web tools/services into curriculum?
  • If you are an ID person or one with expertise in instructional technology, what are the implication of these materials?
Further resources:

Monday, January 6, 2014

Week 2C1 First Discussion

For course overview and expectation, please see the syllabus.
This course blogging site will work as an archive of web tools and services. Per selected week, the instructor will post a prompt for students’ blogging participation, which will work for your personal reflection as well as formative evaluation (e.g., suggestion, satisfaction, correction, etc.). Your comment can be brief, directed to the instructor’s post or others’ comments, and should address your positive/negative experiences, suggestions for improvement, and/or insights for improving the course. The only criterion is, your comment must add 'substance' to your learning or to the course.

The first prompt for you to comment is to share attitude/belief about web tools/services (e.g., whether they will truly change education/learning, whether it is another hype or passing trend, whether they must be used more for teaching/learning, etc). If there is a tool you already use for learning or sharing and you find it as very beneficial, you can use your experience to support your argument. Before class on W, check how others think of web tools for teaching/learning. There is no correct or wrong answer - you can be honest!