Peeragogy and networked learning

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Presentation as part of the Holmesglen TAFE Lunchtime Sessions (November, 2012)

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PEERAGOGY AND NETWORKED LEARNING

Michael Coghlan26/11/12

Indicate with a tick which of the items below you use in your role as an educator

I would contend that the abundance of content and connections is as fundamental shift in education as any we are likely to encounter, and there has, to date, been little attempt to really place this at the centre of a model of teaching. (Martin Weller – referring to A Pedagogy of Abundance)

PEERAGOGY PARAGOGY=

Stems from a philosophy of abundance (Tim Longhurst)- of content and connections

SUBSCRIBING TO PEOPLE

• “People don’t subscribe to magazines anymore. They subscribe to people” (15 yr old)

• Subscribe:– RSS feeds (websites, blogs, podcasts)– Following people (Twitter)– Friending people (Facebook)

FILTERING AND CURATION

• Clay Shirky: "It's not information overload. It's filter failure.”

http://boingboing.net/2010/01/31/clay-shirky-on-infor.html

DIGITAL CURATION

• Curate via feeds, follows, friends, OR

• Scoopit!, then• Bookmark (Delicious,

Diigo)

NETWORKED LEARNING

• Enormously successful model for professional development

• BUT, does it translate to the ‘normal’ teaching context?

• “...there has, to date, been little attempt to really place this at the centre of a model of teaching.” (Weller)

NETWORKED LEARNING

• Assumes everyone in the network takes on role of educator and student

• Everyone curates and shares content• Collaborative– Shared activities– Co-creation/curation of content– Peer review/assessment

NETWORKED LEARNING IS IMPORTANT:

• Fosters an essential component of digital literacy

• it is becoming a lifelong learning skill

Courtesy of Ruth Geer

NETWORKED LEARNING IS HARD!

• Requires advanced Internet skills• You need to manage multiple accounts• You have to work out who to follow!• Involves sharing and being open with and

about what you know (against the culture/values of many)

DOUBTS/SUSPICION

• Information generated and curated from networks is not from recognised authority/experts

• Not officially sanctioned ie it isn’t in a textbook

• It’s INFORMAL

POSITIVE NEGATIVE

• Current• Digital literacy/lifelong

learning• You have a gang

(network) to help you navigate, curate, and create content

• You’re never alone!

• Tendency to want to know everything

• The information flow never stops

• Can be distracting. (Multitasking is inefficient.)

• Information often comes in byte-sized grabs > lack of discourse of any substance

• Everything you do is tracked and monitored (and probably sold to a third party for some commercial advantage.)

So you need to be smart AND disciplined >>>>>

http://rheingold.com/netsmart/

michaelc@chariot.net.au