Harnessing the Power of Social Networks in Teaching & Learning

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A keynote presentation given at the University of Delaware for the Summer Faculty Institute. More information about the event can be found here: http://www.udel.edu/udaily/2009/may/sfi051309.html The source slides for the presentation are available for download in Keynote format. Please contact alec.couros@uregina.ca for the link. See full video of the presentation here: http://educationaltechnology.ca/couros/1611

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Harnessing the Power of Social Networks in Teaching & Learning

Dr. Alec Couros2009 Summer Faculty Instituteat the University of Delaware

June 5, 2009

Who is this guy?

Open Courses

Knowledge

Knowledge & Computing

Objectivism

Group growth

(Schwier)(Leinonen)

Individual growth

Cognitivism

Constructivism

Social Learning

Shifts in Edtech

• what is k?

• how is k acquired?

• how do we know what

we know?

• why do we know what

we know?

• what do humans know?

• who controls k?

• how is k controlled?

Key Questions

open source software

open contentopen access publication

open accreditation

open education

open access courses open teaching

free software

open educational resources

Forms of Openness

Influences

Available Tools

how we view learning - institutional & informal

open content, access, publication, accreditation

Accessible Knowledge

Social Reading

Toward Web 3.0

Social Networks

• redefine communities, friends, citizenship, identity, presence, privacy, publics, geography.

• enable learning, communication, sharing, connections, collaboration, community.

• networks formed around shared interests & objects.

Social Networks

Human Network

Netbooks - 1:1

Microblogging

Nearly Now

Personal Learning Networks

Daily Connections

My Blog, My Hub

Photo Sharing

Video Sharing

Musical Connections

Spontaneous PD

Social Network Services

Slide Decks

Copyleft

Media Literacy

• Accessing, analyzing, evaluating, and creating messages in a variety of forms.

• Enable skillful creators, consumers, and disseminators of media.

• Facilitate an understanding of strengths, weaknesses, and influences of media forms.

Media Literacy

Each technology creates a new environment.

The old environment becomes content for

the new environment.

The effects of mediacome from their form

not their content.

Spread of Media

Viral Videos

Sociality

Disruptive Forms

Surveillance Society

In Practice

Grade Five - Choir on Youtube

Grade Seven/Eight - Classroom Studio

High School Math - Scribe Posts

University History - Twitter

Virtual Office Hours

Mindsets, Skills, Perspectives

lightbulbvs.

ipod

Understanding Media

Impact of Learning Environment

Small Tools, Loosely Joined

Open Invitations

Distributed Conversations

Sharing by Default

Expert Visits

Private Public

Closed Open

Support

Professional Learning

New Roles for Educators

Digital IdentitiesCommunity as Curriculum

Outreach

sustained community

transformative experiences

move toward openness

gained technical skills

media literacies

empathy toward new literacies

greater community

Benefits

“I was able to go out and learn throughout the entire week, the entire year, and I’m still learning with everyone.”

“The best part of the course is that it’s not ending. With the connections we’ve built,

it never has to end.”

“The course ... has been the most profound pd experience I’ve ever had. It forced me to critique & review my

practice. I never knew how important social networks were. Now, I couldn’t be a teacher without being

connected. It’s drastically changed my view of education.”

web: couros.catwitter: courosagoogle: couros

alec.couros@uregina.ca

Don’t limit a child to your own learning, for he was born

in another time. ~Tagore

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