Posts Tagged: HASTAC


20
Aug 08

Digital Media and Learning Competition 2008

Great news from the HASTAC team – the 2008 DML Competition has launched! Following the success of the 2007 competition, the team is awarding another $2,000,000 in grants to projects exploring participatory learning. From the announcement:

Awards will be given in two categories:

  • Innovation in Participatory Learning Awards will support projects that demonstrate new modes of participatory learning, in which people take part in virtual communities, share ideas, comment on one another’s projects, and advance goals together. Successful projects will promote participatory learning in a variety of environments: through the creation of new digital tools, modification of existing ones, or use of digital media in some other novel way. Submissions will be accepted from applicants in Canada, People’s Republic of China, India, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States, countries in which HASTAC or MacArthur have significant experience. Winners will receive between $30,000 and $250,000.
  • Young Innovator Awards are designed to encourage young people aged 18-25 to think boldly about “what comes next” in participatory learning and to contribute to making it happen. Winners will receive funding to do an internship with a sponsor organization to help bring their most visionary ideas from the “garage” stage to implementation. For this competition cycle, submissions will only be accepted from applicants in the United States. Winners will receive between $5,000 and $30,000.

This year’s competition will include an online forum where applicants can post their ideas, solicit feedback, offer their services, and connect with other applicants and potential collaborators. All material posted to this “Digital Media and Learning Scratchpad” is publicly accessible. Participation is voluntary and not required for application.

I was lucky to work with the HASTAC team on some of their digital initiatives for the DML Competition, and I’m happy to see another successful competition launch. If you’re thinking of applying, get moving soon – the deadline for applications is October 15, 2008.


27
May 08

Imagined Identity: Envisioning the Future of Social Networks

This past weekend, I was in Los Angeles to attend the wonderful HASTAC conference. Highlights included Howard Rheingold’s keynote, Curtis Wong’s discussion of the World Wide Telescope, and Bill Tomlinson’s demo on human-mediated networking. I was asked to join a panel entitled Trends in TechnoTravels/TeleMobility, so I thought I’d share what I spoke about here – a talk entitled Imagined Identity: Envisioning the Future of Social Networks.


The talks on the panel were short, so rather than presenting research I mined Unit Structures to talk about some emergent themes I’m observing in social networks. Readers of my blog may recognize these themes: Closeness, Curation and Imagined Identity. A lot my thinking is influenced by sites like Twitter, Tumblr, Muxtape and even ClaimID – sites where people are being social in smaller, more focused ways. Here’s the quick explanation, with links to reference posts with longer explanation:


Closeness: I see closeness in social network sites as a function of smaller friend networks and more personalized content. With more focused networks, the contextual challenges that lead to self-censorship are diminished. Compared to a site where one has hundreds of friends, including the boss, family members and friends, in a close site one knows their audience and engages them personally. Examples: Twitter, LiveJournal, Tumblr.

Curation: Curation emerges in sites built around social objects. Unlike Friendfeed, which is a decontextualized mess of everything a person creates, a curation-oriented site focuses on limited, curated content. Our identity wants to be faceted, and curation-oriented sites allow us to best present certain parts of our persona. Examples: Muxtape, Flickr, Vimeo.

Imagined Identity: Some sites are moving away from first-generation social network profile, one in which your identity is explicitly enumerated. Next-gen sites induce identity in more nuanced fashions. In Twitter, your bio is limited to 140 characters, meaning your “profile” or “identity” in more a function of your production. This is engaging, as the identity you produce naturally winds and changes as you “update” your profile by sending messages. Certainly more interesting that listing your favorite movies and changing them every six months. Examples: Twitter, Seesmic.

I was also asked to think about mobile social networks. I’ve been notoriously down on MoSoNet (or whatever it’s called) because so much of the technology requires freshening of handsets. If we have to wait for the whole world to get iPhones or Boost mobile devices, and then we have to get those devices to work together on proprietary networks, then we’re going to be waiting forever.

Thinking about these themes – Closeness, Curation and Imagined Identity – I see a push back against the ideology of bigger, better, faster. Perhaps mobile networks that leverage these simple themes may be able to construct meaningful social networks across devices, with simple tools and techniques. There’s still a lot standing in the way of mobile networks, including cost and carrier interoperability, but perhaps this simpler approach may be beneficial.

There are a number of caveats attached to these themes. They are inherently emergent, meaning we’re not going to see the social networks market change to them overnight (or anytime soon). They also don’t reward the “biggest” networks, instead concentrating on smaller clusters. This is clearly in opposition to the goals of large players like Google, Myspace or Facebook. Perhaps these tools enable the long tail of social networks, which I think is an interesting possibility. We always though niche social networks would be the long tail of social networking. While niche networks will certainly represent a part of the tail, perhaps it is close networks, with inherent small-group personalization, that offer us a way forward.


10
Apr 08

News and Notes: Conferences, Grants and more

Over at Unit Structures, this has been the week of linking out. Don’t fear, overlong psuedo-academic ramblings on social software will come back next week, but for right now I’ve got a few pointers for you.

First and foremost, a reminder to register for the HASTAC II conference. The conference will be held at UCI and UCLA May 22-24; the fee is a very reasonable $100, and for those in LA, it is right in your backyard. I’ll be heading out to meet some of my new coworkers, if you’re planning on attending, please drop me a line!

Via the Carolina Center for Public Service, news of a new, insteresting grant program “to support the facilitation of better engagement of college students in service through social media.” Run by the Corporation for National and Community Service, these are federal funds open to individuals affiliated with educational institutions. The grant pool is $2.3MM, and CFP date is 5/7/08.

Finally, news from Micah Laaker that MyBlogLog now supports MicroID. I’m a proud MBL user and I’m happy to see they’re supporting MicroID (and a bunch of other open-socialy kind of things).


23
Apr 07

How they’ll learn

This weekend, I participated in the first HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Advanced Collaboratory) conference, which proved to be an illuminating experience. The conference had a visionary focus, which led to some great discussions and panels. A theme that came up again and again was the future of learning (as the MacArthur Foundation was a key sponsor, and Connie Yowell was in attendance, certainly not surprising).

In a panel entitled “Funding the Digital Future”, Yowell talked about MacArthur’s view on digital learning, and how digital learning will ultimately be a long-tail endeavor. Granted, the long tail gets paid a lot of lip service, but as I processed the applicability to youth education, it was really striking. If you think a little bit differently about education, you can see some very interesting opportunities.

There are lots of different methodological approaches to education, and I won’t even act like I know a lot about them them. In most models, the instructor is the “center” of the model. As instructors have a limited quantity of time and patience, this is inherently an inefficient model. Indeed, questions go unanswered, children get “left behind” – but there aren’t a ton of other ways to go about it, and this model enforces the pseudo-egalitarian principles of our society.

This is a classic short-tail (anti-long-tail?) model. The problem with turning education into a long tail model, however, is confounding. In the long-model of education, the learners must also be teachers. As you’ve probably noticed, as you progressed through school, you were more likely to engage in group projects. As we get older, the educational system develops some faith in our teaching ability. Groups represent this long-tail teaching/learning model, but these are still constructed, controlled experiments.

With technology, however, we can always work in groups. In fact, it is natural to work socially, in groups. Think about the role of instant messenger as children work together on math homework. Kids have adopted and internalized uses of these technologies to make the learning process more efficient – ad hoc networks of peer-teachers emerge. The only problem here is that we’d generally call this cheating, so lets think reevaluate this assumption for a second.

The assignments coming from teachers are built on short-tail models. That is, everyone gets the same questions, they work on them alone, and they turn them in. Teacher has limited time for grading and answering questions, so we’ve got to use this model. So lets think outside of the box for a second. What if each student in the class got individual assignments, and they were encouraged to work on the homework collaboratively via instant messenger. This solves the cheating problem, and it encourages peer-to-peer learning and teaching. Of course, we’d need a system to assist the teacher in grading and evaluation (as grading is not simply the right/wrong evaluation, but also recognizing patterns to understand what the children learned or didn’t learn), but we’re thinking about the “future” of learning here.

The future of our knowledge economy is built on collaboration. If we are always in touch, then we are always able to work together. Why then do our schools not work to optimize collaboration skills? In this collaboration economy, the most successful participants will be the ones who combine knowledge and critical thinking skills with an ability to extend their knowledge via the network. Under our current scheme, the student who can sit alone in the library studying for hours may get the best grades, but they may be missing a critical skill for operationalizing their ability.

If we’re going to enable the long-tail of education by turning students into peer-teachers, then we’ll need to do two things. First, we must update our system of goals and expectations. It is not enough to simply say “let’s let them use technology”, as technology alone is never the single answer. Second, we’ve got to create structures or “architectures for participation”, in which the natural tendencies for collaboration are rewarded and evaluated. Is this games-based learning? Is it virtual collaboration? Is it telepresence or remote instruction? As we move towards the future or learning, we’ll see all of that and more.

The most important thing, however, is that we must update our expectations and evaluation criteria. They kids are already using these collaborative technologies – they’ve been doing it for years, and they’ll do it on the job and throughout their lives. Let’s reward them for this natural tendency.

Please feel free to contribute your thoughts to this thread…I’d particularly like to hear creative ideas for how we can use technology in long-tail learning situations.