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Terry Elliott

6IRCNet Synchtube - 0 views

shared by Terry Elliott on 16 Apr 15 - No Cached
  • It's all connect...or not.
    • Terry Elliott
       
      connected like ginger or bamboo or mushrooms.
Terry Elliott

tsheko: Waiting for Freire A play ... - Notegraphy - 0 views

  • sitting in an overgrown garden
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • birds twittering
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • One person’s weeds
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
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  • another person’s capital.
  • One person’s weeds is another person’s medicinal.
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • It rains. More weeds grow. They do not leave.
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • weeds are
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • flowers?
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • Coz they ain’t mine.
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
      NSFW.
  • Waiting for Freire
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
      A larger view of the thousands of blooms.
  • Let a thousand weeds bloom.
    • Terry Elliott
       
      People forget that this phrase has some of its origins in Mao's expression, "Let a hundred flowers bloom" and that it was piece of disinformation.  Speak the truth, Mao implied, and the truth shall set you free.  The real truth is that if anyone spoke the truth they were revealed as heterodox, as dissident.   Or maybe this is all about marijuana de-criminalizaton?
  • My weeds oppress (stifle) my flowers.
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • an oppressed flower
    • Terry Elliott
       
      "Every street of Kabul is enthralling to the eye Through the bazaars, caravans of Egypt pass One could not count the moons that shimmer on her roofs And the thousand splendid suns that hide behind her walls"  Saib Tabrizi
    • Terry Elliott
       
  • a weed
    • Terry Elliott
       
    • Terry Elliott
       
      All this talk of flowers and weeds and thousands reminescent (flourescent even) of 'a thousand plateaus', an idea that transcends 'rhizome' in D&G Great video on D&G, pomo and  Zizek.  Thinking about taking the whole course, sticking it on Vialogues and having a conversation with myself and others.  Sometimes you have to break through the thousand flowers, the thousand gardens, the thousand weeds, and the thousand shining suns to get through to a new plateau.
Maha Bali

Autoethnography: An Overview | Ellis | Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Quali... - 0 views

  • describe and systematically analyze personal experience in order to understand cultural experience.
  • challenges canonical ways of doing research and representing others and treats research as a political, socially-just and socially-conscious act.
  • challenges canonical ways of doing research and representing others
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  • systematically analyze (graphy) personal experience (auto) in order to understand cultural experience (ethno)
  • scholars began illustrating how the "facts" and "truths" scientists "found" were inextricably tied to the vocabularies and paradigms the scientists used to represent them
    • Maha Bali
       
      This reminds me of someone (scott or simon?) that they had always felt research was representing the researchers' views more than the participants'.
  • autoethnography is both process and product.
  • autoethnography is both process and product. [1]
  • political, socially-just and socially-conscious act
  • new relationships between authors, audiences, and texts
  • helped people make sense of themselves and others
  • closer to literature than to physics, if they proffered stories rather than theories, and if they were self-consciously value-centered rather than pretending to be value free
    • Maha Bali
       
      Some values to me include the value of elevating participant voice, rather than imposing my own (this is still even hard in an autoethnog).
  • increasing need to resist colonialist, sterile research impulses of authoritatively entering a culture, exploiting cultural members, and then recklessly leaving to write about the culture for monetary and/or professional gain, while disregarding relational ties to cultural members
  • canonical forms of doing and writing research are advocating a White, masculine, heterosexual, middle/upper-classed, Christian, able-bodied perspective
  • eschewing rigid definitions of what constitutes meaningful and useful research;
  • also implies that other ways necessarily are unsatisfactory and invalid.
  • Furthermore, scholars began recognizing that different kinds of people possess different assumptions about the world—a multitude of ways of speaking, writing, valuing and believing—and that conventional ways of doing and thinking about research were narrow, limiting, and parochial
  • these experiences are assembled using hindsight
  • autobiography
  • . In writing, the author also may interview others as well as consult with texts like photographs, journals, and recordings to help with recall (DELANY, 2004; DIDION, 2005; GOODALL, 2006; HERRMANN, 2005). [5]
  • times of existential crises
  • An ethnographer also may interview cultural members (BERRY, 2005; Nicholas, 2004), examine members' ways of speaking and relating (ELLIS, 1986; LINDQUIST, 2002), investigate uses of space and place (COREY, 1996; MAKAGON, 2004; PHILIPSEN, 1976), and/or analyze artifacts such as clothing and architecture (BORCHARD, 1998), and texts such as books, movies, and photographs (GOODALL, 2006; NEUMANN, 1999; THOMAS, 2010). [7]
    • Maha Bali
       
      That's why to me it made sense to use blogs, and to interview Dave for JPD and include it... But it's not "their" auto if they're not writing the analysis
  • ethnography, they study a culture's relational practices, common values and beliefs, and shared experiences for the purpose of helping insiders (cultural members) and outsiders (cultural strangers) better understand the culture
  • participant observers
  • epiphanies
  • When researchers do autoethnography, they retrospectively and selectively write about epiphanies that stem from, or are made possible by, being part of a culture and/or by possessing a particular cultural identity. However, in addition to telling about experiences, autoethnographers often are required by social science publishing conventions to analyze these experiences
    • Maha Bali
       
      Analysis + relation to culture are what differentiate autoethnog from autobiog
  • telling [your] story—and that's nice—but people do that on Oprah
  • What makes your story more valid is that you are a researcher. You have a set of theoretical and methodological tools and a research literature to use.
    • Maha Bali
       
      This sounds UNBEARABLY ELITIST TO ME! He thinks coz he's a researcher his story is more valid, more important?!? More real? Just because another person is not a researcher does not mean their experience is any less valuable or worthy!
  • consider ways others may experience similar epiphanies;
    • Maha Bali
       
      Too much use of "must" in this article like it's almost prescriptive
  • researchers write ethnographies, they produce a "thick description" of a culture
  • understanding of a culture for insiders and outsiders, and is created by (inductively) discerning patterns of cultural experience—repeated feelings, stories, and happenings—as evidenced by field notes, interviews, and/or artifacts (
    • Maha Bali
       
      That's our coding process :)
  • autoethnographies, they seek to produce aesthetic and evocative thick descriptions of personal and interpersonal experience.
  • by producing accessible texts, she or he may be able to reach wider and more diverse mass audiences that traditional research usually disregards, a move that can make personal and social change possible for more people
    • Maha Bali
       
      This aspect also really important to me
  • Reflexive ethnographies document ways a researcher changes as a result of doing fieldwork. Reflexive/narrative ethnographies exist on a continuum ranging from starting research from the ethnographer's biography, to the ethnographer studying her or his life alongside cultural members' lives, to ethnographic memoirs
    • Maha Bali
       
      Wanna do one like Baxter Magolda's piece
  • autoethnography differ in how much emphasis is placed on the study of others, the researcher's self and interaction with others, traditional analysis, and the interview context, as well as on power relationships. [15]
  • Interactive interviews are collaborative endeavors between researchers and participants, research activities in which researchers and participants—one and the same—probe together about issues that transpire, in conversation, about particular topics (e.g., eating disorders). Interactive interviews usually consist of multiple interview sessions, and, unlike traditional one-on-one interviews with strangers, are situated within the context of emerging and well-established relationships among participants and interviewers (ADAMS, 2008). The emphasis in these research contexts is on what can be learned from interaction within the interview setting as well as on the stories that each person brings to the research encounter
    • Maha Bali
       
      Now this can be part of the evolution of collab autoethnog, interviewing each other or at least posting comments asynchronously on the google doc of narratves
  • frame existing research as a "source of questions and comparisons" rather than a "measure of truth" (p.117). But unlike grounded theory, layered accounts use vignettes, reflexivity, multiple voices, and introspection (ELLIS, 1991) to "invoke" readers to enter into the "emergent experience" of doing and writing research (RONAI, 1992, p.123), conceive of identity as an "emergent process" (Rambo, 2005, p.583), and consider evocative, concrete texts to be as important as abstract analyses (RONAI, 1995, 1996). [20]
  • community autoethnographies use the personal experience of researchers-in-collaboration to illustrate how a community manifests particular social/cultural issues
    • Maha Bali
       
      Interesting terminology....
  • Community autoethnographies thus not only facilitate "community-building" research practices but also make opportunities for "cultural and social intervention" possible (p.59; see KARDORFF & SCHÖNBERGER, 2010)
  • Co-constructed narratives view relationships as jointly-authored, incomplete, and historically situated affairs. Joint activity structures co-constructed research projects. Often told about or around an epiphany, each person first writes her or his experience, and then shares and reacts to the story the other wrote at the same time
    • Maha Bali
       
      Yep, sounds like something we could be doing, right?
Rick Bartlett

Rhizomatic Learning - A Pedagogy of Risk | Jenny Connected - 0 views

  • Mention of safety in relation to online space raises for me the link between space and risk.  With space comes risk and with risk comes ethical responsibility. I would suggest that the more open the space, the greater the risk for both learner and ‘teacher’, and the greater the ethical responsibilities of all participants, but particularly the ‘teacher’.
  • the ‘virtue of space’ as being freedom, but with this freedom comes a number of risks. He recognises that a common response to these risks in an educational setting is to close down the space, rationalising this as being in the students’ best interests – but as he points out ‘No risk, no space’ – and space is needed if the students/learners are going to become ‘authentically themselves’.
Rick Bartlett

do you know networks? on leaving the Garden of Eden | the theoryblog - 0 views

  •  I like doubters, complications, ideas that break down assumptions and build toward further questions, not answers.
  • the Tree of Knowledge is not an apple, in my belief systems. It is a weed.
  •  To ask how it has come to be that participatory networked practices are more likely to be framed as threats than opportunities for education in the 21st century.
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  •  Things written in print are either finished or not. They do not blend into each other; they do not create webs. They create canons, privileging some over others and erasing the steps of their logic so as to make it all appear natural.
  • But…and this is important…it was the free exchange of ideas and communications we valorized in that Enlightenment ideal. Not actually the small yet increasingly commodified paper packet. Yet we conflated the two. And in the process, we allowed the grammar of schooling to reinforce a Romantic identification of books, in particular, with all things noble about humanity.
Rick Bartlett

Communications & Society: Jenny, Rhizomatic Learners, and #rhizo14 - 0 views

  • The rhizomatic learner, on the other hand, is for me a metaphor which expands our understanding of one thing (the process of learning) in the light of another thing (a botanical rhizome). The metaphor learning is a rhizome is similar, then, to the metaphor love is a rose.
Rick Bartlett

The Beginner's Guide to Deleuze | HTMLGIANT - 1 views

  • For Nietzsche, Deleuze, and myself, direct engagement is a mistake.  Diffuse or indirect engagement is preferable
  • The only form of power one can truly wield is the power of action, of affirmation, of creation.
  • *James Gleick – Chaos: Making a New Science
Terry Elliott

Rhizomatic Education : Community as Curriculum | Dave's Educational Blog - 0 views

  • define what counts as knowledge.
  • painstaking process by which knowledge has traditionally been codified.
  • Knowledge as negotiation
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  • The rhizome metaphor, which represents a critical leap in coping with the loss of a canon against which to compare, judge, and value knowledge, may be particularly apt as a model for disciplines on the bleeding edge where the canon is fluid and knowledge is a moving target.
  • clear definition of the word "knowledge" is difficult
  • simply another part of the way things are"
  • Horton and Freire
  • no community can live a healthy life if it is nourished only on such old marrowless truths.
  • a negotiation (Farrell 2001)
  • social contructivist and connectivist
  • (Cormier 2008).
  • we see as our goal the co-construction of those secret connections as a collaborative effort
  • Changing Knowledge
  • the conversion of information to knowledge
Terry Elliott

Claire Boonstra on the Shift to Value-Centered Education at TEDxAmsterdamED 2012 - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    Classic take down of 'one way thinking'--the opposite of rhizomatic thinking.
Terry Elliott

P2PU | Rhizomatic Learning - The community is the curriculum - 0 views

  • Rhizomatic learning is a story
    • Terry Elliott
       
      Is this a narrative played out in nature or is it an artificial, man-inspired story/sortie?
  • What happens if we let that go?
    • Terry Elliott
       
      I think that there are layers of letting go. There is the primary one you describe in the first paragraph--an aware sloughing off of the skin of coursework and curriculum and student and teacher and syllabus--the whole catastrophe. This is very hard unlearning. It requires a continuous monitoring of old metaphors and thinking in the light of ...well, you know not what. The secondary letting go is individual baggage schema we each prize. We call it experience. It is an even greater unlearning. It is the matter of taking Coleridge's axiom, "the willing suspension of disbelief", to heart in ways that most of us are unwilling to do. We say we can do it, but such work is perceived as dangerous. It requires a vulnerability to and presence of the immediate, unmediated now. That is some scary shit, compadre.
  • trust the idea that people can come together to learn given the availability of an abundance of perspective, of information and of connection?
    • Terry Elliott
       
      We are quite capable of doing this. We just have to remember what it was like to be an infant learning once more. Yeah, just open up a vein while you're at it. I will try, but how do I try to do this? First, I have to accept as given that everyone has best intentions at heart. That means that I have to have the very best intentions myself. Not perfect, but the best that I can muster. Second, I have to bring immediate and vulnerable stuff to the table. That means no bullshit to the best of my ability. Or even better, I will be honest. For example, I am trying to be straightforward about my worries here and about what I expect of myself and what I expect of others. And I have to acknowledge that I might be wrong, yes, totally wrong about all or part of what I have already written.
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  • resident in a particular field
    • Terry Elliott
       
      As a farmer, I am enamored of the idea of working in a field. I acknowledge that there are pre-existent, but not largely predetermined paths. I understand that there is mystery here and unknown unknowns that can play out like Taleb's black swans unbidden and unpredictable. As a farmer, I know that I am always working behind the arc of the future, a future that is as often as not curling and ready to collapse in gnarly waves crushing or carrying me forward into the present and then the past.
  • the class is made up of the collected paths chosen by all the students, shaped by my influence as an instructor and the impact of those external nodes they manage to contact.
    • Terry Elliott
       
      I am simultaneously the best conformist and worst iconoclast I know of. I have had plenty of practice at doing what I am told. Plenty. At the same time I have found it quite impossible to do so. For example, my wife and I homebirthed all of our children in a time and place where finding midwives was a challenge. There were no certified nurse midwives. In fact, getting a physician to help with pre-natal care was problematic. We found exceptional help on the margins. Our midwife had gotten her training and experience working in Texas with very poor folks exactly like us. Our midwife's assistant opened up a world of knowledge that we didn't know existed. Our firstborn had some interesting complications including a cord wrapped around the neck. Thank God we had them. My point is simple--we only became iconoclasts because the issue was so personal and important, so important that we could not leave the work to experts. Just like we could not leave our kids' learning to the not so tender ministrations of schools, public or private. Just like we can't leave our food and water and housing entirely to others. This behavior probably shouldn't be called 'iconoclastic' in the good ol' USofA, but it is.
  • Course starts January 14th
    • Terry Elliott
       
      I must get past my personal iconoclasm to get to the community. This will be hard for me. I have some experience last summer working with some fabulous folks from the National Writing Project. They took me on and I learned how to connect better. That community-centeredness is not foreign to me, it is just now always been the way I have gotten along best in the world. I love helping every Tom, Jane, and Harry, but I really don't like institutional groups all that much. I shy away from Rotarians and churches alike. This will be part of my continuing effort to get out of my comfort zone. God help me.
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