Cognitive Surplus: The Great Spare-Time Revolution | Magazine - 0 views
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Somehow, watching television became a part-time job for every citizen in the developed world. But once we stop thinking of all that time as individual minutes to be whiled away and start thinking of it as a social asset that can be harnessed, it all looks very different. The buildup of this free time among the world’s educated population—maybe a trillion hours per year—is a new resource. It’s what I refer to as the cognitive surplus.
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Shirky:
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Pink: A surplus that post-TV media—blogs, wikis, and Twitter—can tap for other, often more valuable, uses.
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About Fotobabble - 0 views
Personal Branding with DigiPorts (my talk at Schools of the Future) - Sweet and Gruesome - 0 views
Open university: Joi Ito plans a radical reinvention of MIT's Media Lab (Wired UK) - 0 views
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They have a maker space in a church, a place where the kids can learn how to build a computer, a bike shop where they can learn how to do repairs. The kid who runs this place, Jeff Sturges, is awesome.We're sending a bunch of Media Lab people to Detroit to work with local innovators already doing stuff on the ground."
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in which any bright talent anywhere, academically qualified or not, can be part of the world's leading "antidisciplinary" research lab. "Opening up the lab is more about expanding our reach and creating our network," explains Ito, appointed director in April 2011.
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as Ito sees it, the formal channels of academia today inhibit progress. "In the old days, being relevant was writing academic papers. Today, if people can't find you on the internet, if they're not talking about you in Rwanda, you're irrelevant. That's the worst thing in the world for any researcher. The people inventing things might be in Kenya, and they go to the internet and search. Funders do the same thing. The old, traditional academic channel is not a good channel for attracting attention, funding, people, or preventing other people from competing with you.
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Calhoun School: Steve's Blog Is it Learning or Training? - 0 views
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proponents claim, the methods “work,” as represented by higher test scores. Because, they add, the methods are efficient, meaning you can produce results with brutal economic efficiency and large classes. And, in ed policy-speak, the systematized, highly structured methodologies are “scaleable,” easily replicated and exported to other schools.
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Anyone intensely “drilled” in facts or simple algorithms will demonstrate superior performance when tested on short-term retention. The students in programs like that at Williamsburg Collegiate are being trained to give the “right” answers, but they are learning little or nothing. Other evidence exposes the folly of these practices, as test score gains among younger students are not holding as the same students move into older grades. But the policy response in most places is reflexive, not reflective. Drill them more and test ‘em again!
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Perhaps the greatest tragedy of this approach to education is that it disregards, often punishes, the qualities that most characterize real learning. Children are discouraged from expressing a point of view – no time for that and it isn’t on the test. Creativity is irrelevant. Children who are sensitive and poetic are devalued, forced into quick, aggressive responses by a drill sergeant teacher. Critical thinking is not welcome. Where is the space for empathy and imagination? What about the child whose unique intelligence is the ability to visualize something beautiful, to see another possible way to solve a problem, to turn a history assignment into a song?
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Steve Hargadon: Web 2.0 Is the Future of Education - 0 views
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The new Web, or Web 2.0, is a two-way medium, based on contribution, creation, and collaboration--often requiring only access to the Web and a browser.
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when people ask me the answer to content overload, I tell them (counter-intuitively) that it is to produce more content. Because it is in the act of our becoming a creator that our relationship with content changes, and we become more engaged and more capable at the same time.
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Imagine an electronic book that allows you to comment on a sentence, paragraph, or section of the book, and see the comments from other readers... to then actually be in an electronic dialog with those other readers. It's coming.
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