Landing : Athabascau University

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  • Lately I've been thinking a lot about how to encourage social software systems (including all the soft and hard human processes, systems and technologies that surround the software) to thrive. Let's imagine, for simplicity's sake, that this site's...
  • Jon Dron voted on the poll March 14, 2010 - 12:29am
    Comments
    • Diana Campbell April 17, 2010 - 11:34am

      still very much lurking at this point in time!

    • Tanya Elias July 6, 2010 - 12:06pm

      Hi Glenn,

      Having been at this blogging thing for less than a week, I'm also interested in finding out what needs it best serves.  As of now, I'm thinking it may just well be the place where reporting on events, journalling, sharing ideas and meeting others all converge (at least that has been my experience this week).

    • Caroline Park July 6, 2010 - 1:42pm

      I also started blogging about two weeks ago. On my blog I am talking about using the Landing as well as whatever else pops into my head, both professional and social. I have it closed to those I follow only but really doubt that anyone is reading it. The fact is I enjoy writing it regardless.

      I also have a small group working (3 AU faculty) on a project together on the Landing and a private group of one, me, working on a course development project. I lke the bookmarks and am bookmarking to my profile and my private group.

      I came across Tanya the other day and enjoy her insights.

  • Jon Dron published a blog post More on ownership, structures and behaviours - some examples March 13, 2010 - 5:21pm
    I've received some personal correspondence about the article I posted recently on ownership, structures and behaviours asking for a bit more detail on a few points so, rather than answer it privately, I thought I'd share my thoughts a bit further....
    Comments
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  • Jon Dron published a blog post You are not a gadget : Jaron Lanier March 11, 2010 - 7:59pm
    I've had great respect for Jaron Lanier for many years. He's one of a select band of creative thinkers that effortlessly cross many disciplinary boundaries and that, consequently, see new and enlightening connections between things that change how...
  • Jon Dron published a blog post Technology-enhanced learning March 7, 2010 - 4:11pm
    Over the past year I have become more and more interested in the nature of technologies and precisely what we mean by the various terms we use to describe the kind of things I'm mostly involved in: technology-enhanced learning, learning...
  • Jon Dron voted on the poll March 5, 2010 - 11:15am
    Comments
  • Jon Dron commented on the blog Ownership, structures and behaviours March 3, 2010 - 5:42pm
    Comments
    • Glenn Groulx March 3, 2010 - 2:50pm

      hello Jon,

      AU Landing is a great central spot for students to blog, share ideas, and form connections with one another and their instructors. It is intended as a learning space, and I for one do not blog to socialize with others. I blog as an autonomous learner, which means that I am pleased when someone responds back and offers feedback, but the absence of comments does not de-motivate me.

      I give my posts freely for others to review, comment on, or ignore. I post primarily to meet my own needs, and enjoy making a contribution in some small way to learning in others. I suppose posting contributes to the formation of ideas, to the advancing of social capital, in some respects.

      It is my intuition that blogging cannot entirely thrive unless it is freed from the constraints of cohort-based blogging, in which a class blog (and thus the instructor's control over that blog)dominates the blogging structure.

      image

      In this eco-system, students interact via the group blog, and managed by the instructor.  Every student has their own blog, and they are expected to post ideas, and comment on the posts of other students, but the activity is directed by the instructor. This eco-system encourages the students to use a tentative, wait-and-see strategy. They are more concerned with showing weakness, making mistakes, being singled out, than in being creative. This is a conservative system, in which the students are risk-aversive, so that blogging is done in a shallow, detached manner. Students do not own these posts, because they are mostly completed according to the instructor's cues. Students are more concerned about meeting deadlines and getting grades and mirroring the instructor's expectations, than in using the blogging tool and building their own ideas.

      My own blogging began to thrive almost from teh first week once I engaged in dialogue with another learner, JoAnn Meiers-Hammond, and I did not begin to "own" my ideas as an independent thinker really until my first independent seminar. I really did not deliberately start engaging other learners from other courses I was not enrolled in till I took my second independent course. I blogged as an independent student, working on my own ideas, and contributing to the conversations of others. I did not discuss course-related topics; instead, I offered resources, I shared my experiences, and I responded to posts of a non-course-related nature, and broadened the discussions for these students to include other ideas not covered in the course. I acted as an informal mentor for other learners.

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    • Jon Dron March 3, 2010 - 5:42pm

      Hi Glenn

      Thanks for the comment!

      I think the point that this system is part of several others is a very good one. We cannot consider any computer system like this separately from the contexts and processes that surround it and determine its use. In that sense, how it is marketed and its role in the institutional context are just as important when we are thinking about design as how it is programmed, how we shape the interface, what functions we allow it to perform. To an extent this is true of any multi-user computer system but, where there is such a strong contribution to the shape and form of the environment from its users, if we shape what they do via external stimuli then it is very similar in effect to hard coding such things into the system. And then there are the knock-on effects that follow from the system's interaction design, that tend to polarise such tendencies through social navigation processes, magnifying small tendencies until they become large effects.

      I think there's a place for both the managed and the unmanaged elements. While I generally dislike the use of grades and deadlines as motivators, I accept that they have their place in this kind of environment because of the nature of the overall system and I'm happy to accommodate them. What we somehow need to avoid is allowing those stalinist tendencies to lead the system into stagnation, and therein lies the problem.  People like you, who see the benefits and reap the rewards of the system are one of the ways we can drive a richer melange. Imaginative approaches to encouraging use of the system for its own sake, not (just) for marks are another. Similarly, encouraging a range of different uses and supporting different needs can help avoid the polarisation of the system. And system design which actively limits rampant rich-get-richer effects is also important.

      What I believe that we need to cultivate and valorise is diversity, while at the same time avoiding confusion and chaos. It's a bit of a tightrope!

      J