Posts Tagged: MacArthur


27
Jan 09

Reviews on new media practices

Mimi Ito’s team is posting reviews of new media practices to the Future of Learning blog.

For the past few months, I have been working with a team of researchers in conducting a literature review of new media uptake in different parts of the world. This work has been part of our work with the MacArthur Foundation Digital Media and Learning Initiative to understand the ways in which new media is intersecting with young people’s everyday learning. Our work thus far has been focused on the U.S. context, but now we are trying to understand how what we have learned relates to developments overseas.

We selected a set of countries where there are interesting developments in new media uptake, but there is relatively little research literature available in English. The literature reviews are broken down by country, with Cara Wallis taking the lead on Chiina, HyeRyoung Ok for Korea, Anke Schwittay for India, Heather Horst for Brazil, Daisuke Okabe and I for Japan, and Araba Sey for Ghana. We will be rolling these out in installments starting today and continuing through March. You can find the posts at our Futures of Learning blog.

via Mimi Ito – Weblog: International literature review on new media practices.


20
Nov 08

MacArthur’s Digital Youth Report

Via danah boyd and Mimi Ito, the MacArthur Digital Youth Project has released its findings.  Ito writes:

It’s been over three years in the making, but we are at long last releasing the results of our Digital Youth Project. The goal of this work was to gain an understanding of youth new media practice in the U.S. by engaging in ethnographic research across a diverse range of youth populations, sites, and activities. A collaboration between 28 researchers and research collaborators, this was a large ethnographic project funded by the MacArthur Foundation as part of their Digital Media and Learning initiative. I was one of the PIs on the project together with Peter Lyman, Michael Carter, and Barrie Thorne.

Over the past few years, I’ve paid close attention to this project.  I’ve met a few of the PI’s (sadly, never Peter Lyman), I’ve spent time with a number of the researchers, and I’ve always been impressed with (and more than a little jealous of) the work this team has accomplished.  The project produced countless presentations, reports and articles, as well as a book series that I consider foundational.  In my short graduate school career, I’ve looked at this project as a model of successful research.  Much credit also goes to the MacArthur foundation for having the foresight and willingness to endeavor this project; it has had a profound impact on the field.

The New York times writes about the effort:

The study, part of a $50 million project on digital and media learning, used several teams of researchers to interview more than 800 young people and their parents and to observe teenagers online for more than 5,000 hours. Because of the adult sense that socializing on the Internet is a waste of time, the study said, teenagers reported many rules and restrictions on their electronic hanging out, but most found ways to work around such barriers that let them stay in touch with their friends steadily throughout the day.

Of course, the “findings” of this project are interesting (and serve an important role countering popular discourse around young people and technology), but I’m equally interested in the networks this work has created.  The 28 researchers, PI’s, assistants, conferences, meetings, online chats, etc. have bridged the field and brought many to the table.  Perhaps greater than any findings will be the legacy of research and connections it leaves behind.  In the meantime, you can read the final report here.


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.


13
Dec 07

Download the MacArthur Series on Digital Media and Learning

Says danah:

I am very very very pleased to announce that the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning is now out in the world and ready for your affection. The purpose of the series is to “examine the effect of digital media tools on how people learn, network, communicate, and play, and how growing up with these tools may affect a person’s sense of self, how they express themselves, and their ability to learn, exercise judgment, and think systematically.”

This is great on many levels, but I’m most excited that all of the books are available for free download. Simply browse to the series’ page at the MIT Press website, and you can download the chapters. Kudos to the authors and the MacArthur Foundation for freeing this great content.