- Nov 2024
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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sacred is connected to Value
This is what are building the structure for
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- Sep 2024
- Apr 2023
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winnielim.org winnielim.org
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It is difficult to see interdependencies This is especially true in the context of learning something complex, say economics. We can’t read about economics in a silo without understanding psychology, sociology and politics, at the very least. But we treat each subject as though they are independent of each other.
Where are the tools for graphing inter-dependencies of areas of study? When entering a new area it would be interesting to have visual mappings of ideas and thoughts.
If ideas in an area were chunked into atomic ideas, then perhaps either a Markov monkey or a similar actor could find the shortest learning path from a basic idea to more complex ideas.
Example: what is the shortest distance from an understanding of linear algebra to learn and master Lie algebras?
Link to Garden of Forking Paths
Link to tools like Research Rabbit, Open Knowledge Maps and Connected Papers, but for ideas instead of papers, authors, and subject headings.
It has long been useful for us to simplify our thought models for topics like economics to get rid of extraneous ideas to come to basic understandings within such a space. But over time, we need to branch out into related and even distant subjects like mathematics, psychology, engineering, sociology, anthropology, politics, physics, computer science, etc. to be able to delve deeper and come up with more complex and realistic models of thought.Our early ideas like the rational actor within economics are fine and lovely, but we now know from the overlap of psychology and sociology which have given birth to behavioral economics that those mythical rational actors are quaint and never truly existed. To some extent, to move forward as a culture and a society we need to rid ourselves of these quaint ideas to move on to more complex and sophisticated ones.
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- Apr 2022
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www.connectedpapers.com www.connectedpapers.com
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https://www.connectedpapers.com/
See also: - Research Rabbit - Open Knowledge Maps
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doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-021-02346-4
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02346-4
Oddly this article doesn't cover academia.edu but includes ResearchGate which has a content-sharing partnership with the publisher SpringerNature.
Matthews, D. (2021). Drowning in the literature? These smart software tools can help. Nature, 597(7874), 141–142. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-021-02346-4
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Connected Papers uses the publicly available corpus compiled by Semantic Scholar — a tool set up in 2015 by the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Seattle, Washington — amounting to around 200 million articles, including preprints.
Semantic Scholar is a digital tool created by the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Seattle, Washington in 2015. It's corpus is publicly available for search and is used by other tools including Connected Papers.
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In 2019, Smolyansky co-founded Connected Papers, one of a new generation of visual literature-mapping and recommendation tools.
https://www.connectedpapers.com/
https://twitter.com/ConnectedPapers
Something about the name Connected Papers reminds me of the same sort of linking name that Manfred Kuehn gave to his note taking software ConnectedText.
Tags
- artificial intelligence
- information overload
- Connected Papers
- preprints
- literature review
- ResearchGate
- Manfred Kuehn
- read
- research methods
- Eddie Smolyansky
- ResearchRabbit
- disclosures
- ConnectedText
- 2019
- bias
- literature search
- journalism
- tools for thought
- Semantic Scholar
- note taking
- FOMO
- references
- Open Knowledge Maps
- Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence
- apps
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- Mar 2022
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kanjun.me kanjun.me
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There are some additional interesting questions here, like: how do you get to the edge quickly? How do you do that across multiple fields? What do you do if the field seems misdirected, like much of psychology?
- How do you get to the edge quickly?
I think this is where literature mapping tools come in handy. With such a tool, you can see how the literature is connected and which papers are closer to the edge of understanding. Some tools on this point include Connected Papers, Inciteful, Scite, Litmaps, and Open Knowledge Maps.
- How do you do that across multiple fields?
I think this requires taking an X-disciplinary approach that teeters on multiple disciplines.
- What do you do if the field seems misdirected, like much of psychology?
Good question. It is hard to re-orient a field unless you can find a good reason (e.g., a crisis) for a paradigm shift. I think Kuhn's writing on [The Structure of Scientific Revolutions(https://www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/Kuhn.html) may be relevant here.
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- Nov 2021
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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today I'm here to describe that everything really is connected, 00:02:02 and not in some abstract, esoteric way but in a very concrete, direct, understandable way. And I am going to do that with three different stories: a story of the heart, a story of the breath, and a story of the mind.
These three are excellent candidates for multimedia Stop Reset Go (SRG) Deep Humanity (DH) BEing Journey.
It is relevant to introduce another concept that provides insights into another aspect required for engaging a non-scientific audience, and that is language.
The audience is important! BEing Journeys must take that into consideration. We can bias the presentation by implicit assumptions. How can we take those implicit assumptions into consideration and thereby expand the audience?
For a non-scientific audience, these arguments may not be so compelling. In this case, it is important to demonstrate how science can lead us to make such astounding predictions of times and space not directly observable to normative human perception.
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- Jul 2020
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ineducation.ca ineducation.ca
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Instead of viewing plays as individual texts to be studied and examined, theatre knowledge building invites teachers and students to examine the work together, to question why the play was written, to understand the relationship between form and content, to see how the play fits within theatre history and the work of the playwright, and to ask how the play has been performed and what challenges it presents to other theatre workers.
Make it an open-ended question that leads to conversation between students
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prism.ucalgary.ca prism.ucalgary.ca
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For example, in November 2014, the Grade 3/4 class at at St. Sylvester participated in a learning project devoted to set and costume design in connection with the theatre’s production of James and the Giant Peach
Teaching design to students, can this be a collaborative project with people from multiple locations?
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inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net
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opportunities for mastery of specialist language and practices.
Opportunities for mastery in a safe, non-graded space
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xperiences invite participation and provide many different ways for individuals and groups to contribute.
Participatory: web literacy
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Digital and net-worked media offer new ways of expanding the reach and accessibility of connected learning so it is not just privileged youth who have these opportunities.
So many online communities to choose from, but as of yet do not discuss the safety/privacy/security of connecting with these online communities
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learning that is socially embedded, interest-driven, and oriented toward educational, economic, or political opportunity.
Definition of connected learning
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Clarissa
Clarissa's interest in fan fiction led to her joining a supportive online community where they participated in editing and revising (changing to make better versions of writers) and gave her the opportunity to get accepted to Chapman and Emerson
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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Connected Learning in Teaching Practice
Great resource to put into practice!
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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They do this by being sponsors of what youth are genuinely interested in — recognizing diverse interests and providing mentorship, space, and other resources.
Find what students are interested in, give them the resources to find supportive groups and opportunities to explore those interests!
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity
Yes! A goal of mine as an educator is to help students become life long learners. I believe that by teaching to students' interests, we can help develop that love! I like the ideas about relationships as support and opportunities that come as a result.
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- Jun 2020
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Mohseni-Kabir, A., Pant, M., Towsley, D., Guha, S., & Swami, A. (2020). Percolation Thresholds for Robust Network Connectivity. ArXiv:2006.14496 [Cond-Mat, Physics:Physics]. http://arxiv.org/abs/2006.14496
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- Feb 2020
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www.teachthought.com www.teachthought.com
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Connected Learning
bookmark
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- Jan 2020
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www.statista.com www.statista.com
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Size of the warehouse management systems (WMS) market worldwide, from 2015 to 2024
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- Aug 2019
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extendboundariesofliteracy.pbworks.com extendboundariesofliteracy.pbworks.com
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Genus Species + Species Hybrids Example
Great examples of remixes in the real world
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Lessig (2005) provides a range of examples of the kinds of digital remix practices that in his view constitute “the more interesting ways [to write]” for young people. These include remixing clips from movies to create “faux” trailers for hypothetical movies; setting remixed movie trailers to remixed music of choice that is synchronized to the visual action; recording a series of anime cartoons and then video-editing them in synchrony with a popular music track; mixing “found” images with original images in order to express a theme or idea (with or without text added); and mixing images, animations and texts to create cartoons or satirical posters (including political cartoons and animations), to name just a few types. We accept this conceptual extension of “writing” to include practices of producing, exchanging and negotiating digitally remixed texts, which may employ a single medium or may be multimedia remixes. (We also recognize as forms of remix various practices that do not necessarily involve digitally remixing sound, image and animation, such as paper-based forms of fanfiction writing and fan-producing manga art and comics, which continue to go on alongside their hugely subscribed digital variants.
There are all very good examples. The great thing is, that as a language teacher there are so many different types of media that the students can really hone in on their interests.
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where someone creates a cultural product by mixing meaningful elements together (e.g., ideas from different people with ideas of one’s own), and then someone else comes along and remixes this cultural artefact with others to create yet another artefact.
I think this could be fun to with students in Spanish. I can introduce music, poems, art and have students remix them.
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- Jul 2019
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www.fluentu.com www.fluentu.com
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10 Authentic Spanish Materials to Take Your Class to Spain!
authentic digital material ideas
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www.edutopia.org www.edutopia.org
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Find Native Speakers
This is a great idea to engage students. I have thought about it before but I have not yet put it into practice. I did pen pal letters one year but snail mail was too slow. I am going to try an incorporate this idea even more.
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www.teachthought.com www.teachthought.com
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for caring adults, teachers, parents, learners and their peers to share interests and contribute to a common purpose. The potential of cross-generational learning and connection unfolds when centered on common goals.
important to have a caring, experienced community to rely on and learn from
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Powered with possibilities made available by today’s social media, this peer culture can produce learning that’s engaging and powerful.
this is what makes connected learning modern
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For more than a century, educators have strived to customize education to the learner. Connected Learning leverages the advances of the digital age to make that dream a reality — connecting academics to interests, learners to inspiring peers and mentors, and educational goals to the higher order skills the new economy rewards.
good summary quote
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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organizations and caring adults can form partnerships, broker connections across settings, and share on openly networked platforms and portfolios.
This is where networking, both in person and online, could come into play.
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earners need to feel a sense of belonging and be able to make meaningful contributions to a community in order to experience connected learning. Groups that foster connected learning have shared
I don't think real positive change or learning can occur unless a student feels safe, welcomed, and like they belong. See Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
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hrough collaborative production, friendly competition, civic action, and joint research, youth and adults make things, have fun, learn, and make a difference together.
shared interests and collaboration are instrumental for connected learning; reminds me of the phrase "great minds think alike"
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They do this by being sponsors of what youth are genuinely interested in — recognizing diverse interests and providing mentorship, space, and other resources.
sponsorship/adult support in connected learning = important to learning success and an important resource
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
absolutely true. passion+learning+education= change in the world for good
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embraces the diverse backgrounds and interests of all young people.
importance of diversity in connected learning will heighten cultural awareness
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- Jun 2019
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www.steve-wheeler.co.uk www.steve-wheeler.co.uk
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Many writers have highlighted the power of the global digital tribe, particularly the way groups tend to solve problems more effectively than individual experts (Surowiecki, 2009). We read of how groups can self-organise and co-ordinate their actions in connected global environments (Shirky, 2008) and that there seems to be no limit what a tribe can do when it is given the appropriate tools (Godin, 2008). Mobile and personal technologies that are connected to global networks have afforded us with the priceless ability to collaborate and cooperate in new and inventive ways (Rheingold, 2002), and allow us to rapidly self organise into new collective forces (Tapscott and Williams, 2008). Connected technology not only gives us access to existing knowledge, it encourages and enables us to create new knowledge and share it widely to a global audience.
I am enjoying this series Steve. A book that has influenced my thinking on the topic has been Teaching Crowds by Jon Dron and Terry Anderson.
One thing that I am left wondering is how the benefits and affordances change and develop over time? I was left thinking about this while reading Clive Thompson’s new book Coders compared with his last book Smarter Than You Think.
Also posted on Read Write Collect
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- Feb 2019
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity
When we understand our student's interests and build relationships with them, we can help them to love learning. We can do this collectively with our classes and we can do it with each student individually.
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educationaltechnologyjournal.springeropen.com educationaltechnologyjournal.springeropen.com
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The kind of participatory connected learning experiences that we are advocating for arenot easily described
What are some ways we who seem to "grok" participatory connected learning (or think we do) can make this concept more accessible to colleagues who lament the failure of "sit-and-get" faculty development/PD, but don't know what to do next? I was reminded of this a few days ago in a "mixed" meeting of faculty, staff, and administrators. We all meant well, but could have done better in planning some upcoming sessions that (we hope) will become a Community of Practice. I think a way to describe participatory culture in a room full of people who don't already know Henry Jenkins and Mimi Ito would help.
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- Oct 2018
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We propose “connected civics” as a form of learning that mobilizes young people’sdeeply felt interests and identities in the service of achieving the kind of civic voice andinfluence that is characteristic of participatory politics. Of course there is nothing newabout the idea that interest, affinity, and identity are drivers of political action, but toooften when it comes to learning, we can default to civic educational experiences that failto tap the kinds of cultural practices young people produce through their everyday sym-bolic expression
Does this feel different than Civics learning from your own middle or high school classes?
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- Jul 2018
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Recent statistics suggest that the average person spends about 50 minutes per day using Facebook, Instagram, and Facebook Messenger. Add that to the fact that most people spend over five hours per day on their cell phones, and it's clear that we love our technology. While it's awesome to make an effort to cut down on screen time in the name of health (especially before bed!), why not use the time you spend on your phone to your advantage? That's what members of health and fitness digital accountability groups are doing, and they're seeing amazing results.
This article goes along well with the class reading on "Connected Learning"- using digital accountability and support to reach goals (example: fitness)
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inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net
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What would it mean to consider an educational agenda that includes more flexible, informal, diverse, and interest-driven learning environments? Can we do this in a way that elevates all youth rather than serving the privileged minority?
Good point- using technology and media capabilities to bridge this gap between the poor and wealthy in education
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Despite its power to advance learning, many parents, educators, and policymak-ers perceive new media as a distraction from academic learning, civic engagement,
Many parents think this is true- while there are differing opinions on technology use, this is one such example where the stereotype needs to be broken
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attributes her success to the writing skills she developed in the role-playing world (see Case Study 1).Clarissa’s out-of-school engagement in creative writing is an example of what we have dubbed connected learning—learning that is socially embedded, interest-driven, and oriented toward educational, economic, or political opportunity.
good example: using "Connected Learning"- role play online to strengthen creative writing
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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harness these new technologies for learning rather than distraction.
good point- there is a hard gap to fill between elem grades and middle and high school- harness kids interests and use technology to the best advantage
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The “connected” in connected learning is about human connection as well as tapping the power of connected technologies. Rather than see technology as a means toward more efficient and automated forms of education, connected learning puts progressive, experiential, and learner-centered approaches at the center of technology-enhanced learning.
goes against standardized testing, teaching one to many, or fixed subjects. Connected learning to enhance human connection and technological as well
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- Mar 2018
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ontologyschmology.com ontologyschmology.com
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A rhizome ceaselessly establishes connections between semiotic chains, organizations of power, and circumstances relative to the arts, sciences, and social struggles.”
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teresa-nextsteps.blogspot.com teresa-nextsteps.blogspot.com
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Clavier has been part of that unexpected sequence of events and the network which has stretched around the world has seen me working with colleagues in Egypt, Poland, Sweden, Australia, the USA, Spain, Finland, Canada and the UK!
global network connected
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teresa-nextsteps.blogspot.com teresa-nextsteps.blogspot.com
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the connected approach to learning and teaching has been overwhelmingly positive for me
connection connected learning
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- Jan 2018
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marginalsyllab.us marginalsyllab.us
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Otherwise, changes in the school institution and tradition will be looked at as the arbitrary inventions of particular teachers; at the worst transitory fads, and at the best merely improvements in certain details—and this is the plane upon which it is too customary to consider school changes.
I think this quote serves as counterpoint to the Connected Learning and Research Agenda quote on Page 14 (Connected learning recognizes a tension... ... competition for scarce opportunities.) The tension that the Agenda describes is an incomplete implementation of connected learning that some may consider as a fad in the eyes of Dewey. Again, to make sure that the Agenda policy makers can implement the alternative connected learning pathways, policymakers must take on Dewey's broader social view that we must undertake the learning paradigms that enhance student learning...
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- Nov 2017
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events.educause.edu events.educause.edu
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Moving to a Web of Linked Data for Credential Ecosystems
Oh? Credentials going Semantic? CBE going TBL?
Might be worth a deeper discussion with @jeffgrann, at some point.
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- Oct 2017
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remikalir.com remikalir.com
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Annotating DML
Few conference sessions offer this level of supplemental reference. Thanks for rockin' DML!
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- Jul 2017
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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Connected learning is when someone is pursuing a personal interest with the support of peers, mentors and caring adults, and in ways that open up opportunities for them
Support is essential
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Connected learning isn’t a burden that one organization shoulders on its own, and is about building connections across different sites of learning
This is where the community partnerships come in
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Traditional education is failing to engage many students as they enter their middle school, high school, and college years.
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inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net
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Connected learning posits that by connecting and translating between in-school and out-of-school learning, we can guide more young people to engaging, resilient, and useful learning that will help them become effective contributors and participants in adult society. We also believe that networked and digital technologies have an important role to play in building these sites of connection and translation
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onnected learning is realized when a young person is able to pursue a personal interest or passion with the support of friends and caring adults, and is in turn able to link this learning and interest to academic achievement, career success or civic engagement.
Essentially, this is conecting personal interests to content learning to real world applications.
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- Apr 2017
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dmlcentral.net dmlcentral.net
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https://connectedlearning.uci.edu/
new Connected Learning Lab (CLL) at UC Irvine, an interdisciplinary research center dedicated to studying and mobilizing learning technologies in equitable, innovative, and learner-centered ways.
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- Jun 2016
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www.academia.edu www.academia.edu
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Connected Course Design at Virginia Commonwealth University
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jimmcgrath.us jimmcgrath.us
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I have Serious Rant-y Thoughts on requiring that students inhabit public spaces in professional contexts, and I do wonder how much a class hashtag is useful beyond self-promotion of the course and its amazing instructor.
You may consult input from amazing people like @GoogleGuacamole and @actualham who have very intentionally integrated (not just mentioning or requiring) Twitter use in their courses and implicated its value in students' connections with their professional network.
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- May 2016
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www.donnalanclos.com www.donnalanclos.com
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To borrow a phrase from libraries and archives, how do we get to a point where we curate connections rather than curating content?
connections over content. yes!
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- Apr 2016
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siriusreflections.org siriusreflections.org
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The Student-Centered Lecture
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googleguacamole.wordpress.com googleguacamole.wordpress.com
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A PLN is a self-directed system meant to support lifelong learning through the development, maintenance, and leveraging of digital networks.
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nextthought.com nextthought.com
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Connected Learning is based on the notion that learning is about expanding the connections between people and information within a learner's personal network
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jarche.com jarche.com
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We are naturally creative and curious. We just have to build systems that nurture our inherent abilities. Schools do not do that.
Not only do schools not do that, traditionally they have "taught" creativity and curiosity out of students.
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er.educause.edu er.educause.edu
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networked discovery of connections would be at the center of both the learning environment as designed by faculty and the learning environment as experienced by students
Would love to hear Campbell or Kuh elaborate on this. Identifying "connections" as more important than identifying content/information? A new way for searching the Internet? Mining connections among content/people? Mining the connections I've made among content/people on the Internet?
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elnamortensen1.wordpress.com elnamortensen1.wordpress.com
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Small Blog On Networked Learning
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www.plymouth.edu www.plymouth.edu
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What is “Connected Learning?”
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- Mar 2016
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the use of networks is gradually nudging aside more traditional problem-solving approaches based on the marketplace and the choice of a small leadership group or “hierarchies.”
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As Fung explains, wicked problems require “multi-sectoral problem-solving” and ways to remove the barriers to “pooling knowledge and coordinating action” through the formation of networks that connect organizations.7
Can't be solved without being "connected."
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cogdogblog.com cogdogblog.com
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And this leads me to another thought- it seems like in our field there is this desire to go big, to scale, to teach hundreds of thousands, to affect an entire sector. Scale at the dimension is really only achieved by a process of mass duplication where the level of heart-felt connectivity is probably low.
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www.edsurge.com www.edsurge.com
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“We wanted to create threads between courses so that students can understand connections,”
Blurring the lines between where one course stops and another starts.
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googleguacamole.wordpress.com googleguacamole.wordpress.com
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A Framework for Identifying and Evaluating Openly Networked Connected Learning Course Designs
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Connected Learning & Integrative Thinking: Teaching History at Virginia Tech
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dml2016.dmlhub.net dml2016.dmlhub.net
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Crafting Connected Courses
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- Feb 2016
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sites.google.com sites.google.com
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Pictures of Philosophy
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- Jan 2016
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er.educause.edu er.educause.edu
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Moreover, the experience of building and participating within a digitally mediated network of discovery is itself a form of experiential learning, indeed a kind of metaexperiential learning that vividly and concretely teaches the experience of networks themselves.
With a wide open network, it also makes the world look smaller.
This is a great essay by Gardner Campbell. I'd add more notes. But every time I try, I start sounding like a crazed revolutionary. Like this...
Ask not how you can be a more suitable corporate drone. Ask how you can knock them down a few pegs.
The computer is an unprecedented partner for the human mind. We've barely begun to tap its potential. Stop trying to turn it into television.
Stop training kids to do what they're told. Teach them to teach themselves and one another.
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medium.com medium.com
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The whole organic nature of learning experience through the #walkmyworld learning events meant that I learned what I needed to learn as I needed to learn it. It wasn’t a top down dictate of learning outcomes because the outcomes were determined by the process. It is a revolutionary concept — yet as ancient as Aristotle. Learning should never be measured solely by standard outcomes; people learn, and I mean really LEARN, when they discover for themselves what they know, what they want to know, and how they want to know it.
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- Dec 2015
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Series of webinars on the pedagogy of Web annotation.
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Black Culture is Cool, So Why Aren't Black People? has received over 20K views. It was written for a freshman writing class at Cornell University taught by Dexter Thomas, Jr..
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medium.com medium.com
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Drupal seems to have outstanding community building and support practices.
http://drupalladder.org/ladders<br> Drupal Core Ladder "This ladder teaches essential skills for contibuting to Drupal 8 Core." This is the first time I recall seeing an open source software project with planned pathways for potential contributors.
Contributor profiles, Jobs, and Marketplace pages.
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- Oct 2015
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eprints.lancs.ac.uk eprints.lancs.ac.uk
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The importance assumed for collaboration within NL has almost become ubiquitous and is frequently seen as unquestionably desirable.
Not always desirable
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hapgood.us hapgood.us
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Over time these things you write up start to form a deep network that helps you think.
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medium.com medium.com
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Greg's P&T portfolio
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- Sep 2015
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inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net inst-fs-iad-prod.inscloudgate.net
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Our design model builds on this approach by focusing on supports and mechanisms for building envi-ronments that connect learning across the spheres of interests, peer culture, and academic life.
To follow up on design supports
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Connected learning addresses the gap between in-school and out-of-school learning, intergenerational disconnects, and new equity gaps arising from the privatization of learning. In doing so, connected learning taps the opportunities provided by digital media to more easily link home, school, community and peer contexts of learning; sup-port peer and intergenerational connections based on shared interests; and create more connections with non-dominant youth, drawing from capacities of diverse communities.
assuming learners have access to the web, and resources to connect
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connectedlearning.tv connectedlearning.tv
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Connected learning is a model of learning and social change that is not defined by a specific technology, tool, or technique. Instead, connected learning is defined by a commitment to social equity and progressive learning, and seeks to mold the uptake of new technologies and techniques based on these commitments.
a model of learning and social change. as well a set of design principles?
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www.macfound.org www.macfound.org
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connect in- and out-of-school learning
break down divide between intellectual work of school and organic inquiry of students
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Connected Learning, has emerged as a powerful way to connect fragmented spheres of a young person’s life—interests, academic and work opportunities, and peer culture.
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theconversation.com theconversation.com
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Bennett Merriman, young entrepreneur and director of a workforce management company, told a recent higher education conference that connectivity in our work place is important. He recommended that students should spend time developing their networks throughout their studies.
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- Aug 2015
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www.irrodl.org www.irrodl.org
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learning is the act of recognizing patterns shaped by complex networks
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Knowledge is, on this theory, literally the set of connections formed by actions and experience.
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the learning is the network
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Learning is considered a “. . . knowledge creation process . . . not only knowledge consumption.”
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The capacity to know is more critical than what is actually known
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- Jul 2015
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dmlcentral.net dmlcentral.net
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Connected learning boils down to risk taking in the end. To quote colleague Jade Davis from her recent DML blog post, “I think the biggest risk in connected learning is Not Trying.”
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davidtjones.wordpress.com davidtjones.wordpress.com
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The “connected learning” term seems to derive from this infographic on connected learning and the folk who developed it. Their “What is Connected Learning” provides more of an overview, including principles (see the following table) and a research synthesis report.
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- May 2015
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dmlcentral.net dmlcentral.net
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as researchers and policy makers look to build more sustainable futures, they would be wise to design creative ways to support parents even as they pour more resources into supporting students. We instinctively understand that our public institutions (i.e., schools), policy initiatives, and the spread of media technologies must be a valuable resource for students. But, how can these institutions, policies and technologies become an asset for parents?
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