NECC07 – Participate from afar

NECC (National Education Computing Conference) 2007 begins today. This has been one of the conferences I have attended consistently over the years. It is what I consider a K-12 educational practitioners conference and a great place for me to keep up on issues and practices. It also has possibly the best vendors area of any conference I have ever attended. The vendor area used to be where I searched for new hardware and software. With Web 2.0 apps and practices the vendor area is probably less important now than it used to be, but I still like to look.

If you don’t or can’t attend, you can follow many things that happen at this conference remotely. The ISTE NECC link provides access to many information sources (podcasts and some live video). Blogs are also a great way to learn what was presented in sessions and typically embedded in the blog entries are links to reosurces provided by the presenters. When I began blogging in 2002, my first series of posts were from the conference that year. It is actually interesting for me to review the posts from the June of each year since then to reread my comments on the conference.

Using blogs to follow conferences has become an organized process. David Warlick created a site called Hitchhikr to organize blog posts from many different educational conferences. I see there are now 1494 posts and the conferences intro keynote is not until this evening. NECC participants have recently been asked to tag posts (necc07). You can easily locate posts with this tag using an aggregator such as Technorati. I have created a watchlist for necc07 and I can watch as the posts role in (now mine among them).

BTW – I checked and it took about 5 minutes for this post to surface through Technorati and my watchlist so you can almost follow events in real time.

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Small Pieces and the Big Picture

I came from work early today so I could mow the lawn. We are leaving for NECC tomorrow (5 AM for me) and I wanted to make sure the the house looked occupied for the next week. I like mowing the lawn. It is a time to put one foot in front of the other and to think.

The first topic to consider was what books I would take with me so my airport time would not be wasted. I worked on this topic for most of the back yard. There is a book with a nude woman on the cover (The Decency Wars) my youngest daughter gave me. I am not sure what this book is about, but reading it on the plane would make me self conscious. People would probably stare at the cover and wonder about what kind of person I am. There is Mensa Brain Bafflers my son-in-law gave me for Christmas. Way too tough for me and no need to make myself frustrated. I think I will bring one political book and one educational technology book.

Books On Desk

My wife and I have different approaches to professional development. She reads blogs and I read books. It is not that I object to blogs. I just don’t buy the small pieces approach to big issues. I want to understand someone’s entire model as it relates to some issue and compare it to me own. There are so many issues (e.g., blogs) that sound great when viewed from one perspective (e.g., active involvement), but the issue has many facets (e.g., safety, bullying, assessment) that must be considered in combination. A thought here and there leaves too many loose ends. So many things work as a system with pieces that interact. The more pieces of the system I can consider simultaneously, the better feel I get for whether I agree or disagree. A book author typically organizes and interrelates more ideas for me to consider.

(Time for the front yard).

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Read/Write by Age

A post on 21st Century Learning alerted me to some data reported in BusinessWeek concerning who is doing what online.

Chart of Data

I have pulled out the data for read and write activity (read is the higher value). The data are for blogs, web pages, and video. Social networking which some might suggest involves both read and write functions was another category with higher values. Age differences (I realize the numbers are small) show expected pattern and probably somewhat of an interaction (greater difference for production over consumption with increasing age). The raw data were generated by Forrester Research – I will have to see if a more complete account of the survey is available.

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Second Life Resource

Some educators are becoming interested in the educational potential of Second Life. Part of the process of determining what one thinks probably includes spending some time experiencing the environment for yourself.

Getting started should be easier (or may be I am impatient or don’t understand the gamer mentality of learning from the environment). New participants are immediately entered into a “training setting” that results in familiarity with the basics. It was not obvious to me what to do next.

My strategy in such situations is predictably old school. I buy a book. I bought the official guide or something like that and did learn some general information, but not the practical knowledge I expected.

I came across an online (or downloadable) resource that is at least the equivalent of the resource I purchased – The Unofficial Complete Fool’s Guide to Second Life. Sounds like it was written for me, but you may find it useful as well.

Book Cover

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Now they are picking on Tom Friedman

I think it is important to place education within some kind of context. How else are educators to understand what might be important goals for what they are to accomplish with students? Some want to tell us that we educators are dealing with students who come into our classrooms different because of the context within which they live and we no longer understand. Some want to tell us that we must prepare students to function in a world very different from the world we may consciously experience and with which we have had little experience in our own training. One of the reasons I discuss topics within this blog that are not about education is that these topics concern issues I am learning about that are providing this new “context” for me.

One of the authors I have read extensively is NY Times columnist Thomas Friedman and I have made reference to some of his books on several occasions. Within the past couple of days, I have had several experiences in which Friedman’s perspective on the world and I would argue what implications for education might be have been challenged.

The first “experience” came to my email box in what appears to be an ad for a book. I have no idea how this kind of thing happens. Does someone out there know I read books by Friedman and think I would be interested in a book that takes a somewhat different (less optimistic from the ad) approach? Perhaps this was some kind of general mailing and you received the same email. Anyway, the email contained a link to a promotional video that is kind of interesting (New critical analysis (video promoting a book) of Friedman’s perspective in The World is Flat).

The second came to my awareness as I have been searching the educational blogs to find someone who might pick up on “The Cult of the Amateur” because of the stance this book takes in opposition to open source, blogs as information sources, wikipedia, etc. It took a week or so, but the reaction I expected has begun to surface (e.g., Weblogg-ed). It is the comments that are associated with this post that I found interesting:

I find it particularly ironic that you raise the issue of Keen’s lack of expertise visa vis education. What do Tom Friedman, Daniel Pink, Don Tapscott, Malcolm Gladwell or David Weinberger know abouteducation?

Yet, many educators slavishly hang on to every word they utter.It’s fine to integrate different perspectives into our work, but thereare much more powerful ideas available within the education community that should be guiding our thinking.


I think I have read every author in the list provided above. So, I am offering this post to give those with a different view some attention. For the record, I don’t think Friedman is too optimistic. I do think he makes it clear that there are many in the world who would relish the opportunity to do the jobs (both low and high end) that we take for granted and that corporations (and we as their customers) see this as a way to bring competitive products and practices to the market. Friedman scares me enough and so did what I was able to observe during my brief visit to China.

I do think that education is the way that this reality must be addressed and preparing students to compete at the high end is a necessity. No, schools (K-12 and higher ed) should not be run like businesses and no, business leaders may not understand what educators are trying to accomplish. I also understand that someone who writes about business, global competition, etc. is neither a businessman nor an educator. So, I read Friedman to suggest that the development of creativity, critical thinking, problem-solving must be merged with the mastery of basic skills and that schools, parents, and students must step it up a notch or so. I can agree with that. I guess I prefer Friedman’s perspective to that pushed by the present administration. Politicians are not educators either, but funding may depend on what politicians happen to think (or perhaps what the pollsters tell them to think). It is an interesting mix of ideas.

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1000 Posts

I just noticed that I have reached the 1000 post mark. Time to do something special.

Here is a summer rerun. A reminder from post #1 – June, 2002.

The Beginning

iv. to teach them this techne, should they desire to learn [it], without fee and written covenant, and to give a share both of rules and of lectures, and of all the rest of learning, to my sons and to the [sons]of him who has taught me and to the pupils who have both make a written contract and sworn by a medical convention but by no other. (from the Hippocratic oath – translated)

http://www.indiana.edu/~ancmed/oath.htm

On to the second 1000.

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Cult of the Amateur – One more time

I have to make one more comment about this book and then I will give it up.

I have been listening to Friedman’s “The World is Flat” (again) for the past few days. Today, the topic happened to be open source software. In attempting to provide both pros and cons, Friedman describes a discussion with a Microsoft executive. In attempting to argue that open source development can be detrimental to the industry, the executive suggested that open source developers recreate what already exists, but do not put time into research and development required to move the industry forward. This argument also is advanced in the “Cult of the Amateur” .

When I read, I am immediately taken in by the author’s arguments. When I read multiple books on similar topics, I can feel like I am being bounced about like a ping pong ball. Most often, this is because competing positions end up focused on different strengths and weaknesses. It is not about being right or wrong. So, open source (amateur programmers, authors, etc.) projects tend to recycle work already done and in the process take revenue away from the individuals and companies generating the original products. When money gets tight, R&D is one of the first things to go.

First, do I believe this position is true. Do bloggers mostly comment about the work of commercial sources? I suppose – I am commenting about the work of two book authors. Of course, I would guess my comments would increase rather than decrease someone else’s willingness to buy these books. I have hardly provided enough information to replace a reading of the original sources. I suppose Open Office is a reworking and for some a replacement of Word. Is Linux a reworking of Windows? Apache may be the best example ending up as a replacement for several commercial server packages.

I think there are examples that work in the opposite direction. Mosaic (and then Netscape) were imitated by Microsoft in creating IE.

Are companies interested in innovation? I think companies are interested in innovation to the extent that innovation provides a competitive advantage. What bothers me more and more is that there seems to be less and less competition and fewer and fewer “players”. There are fewer textbook companies, companies developing computer operating systems, independent newspapers, major Internet destinations, etc. Companies drive out or assimilate the competition. It is difficult to accept that this is for the benefit of the consumer. Open source developers offer one source of competition.

If the options are open source approaches reducing revenue for developers and a limited number of dominant corporations minimizing competition and controlling the market, I think I come down on the side of open source.

One final point. I don’t see big companies as the only source of innovation. Researchers (and students) in colleges and universities contribute in a cost effective fashion to innovation. Mosaic and Google search came out of higher education and not corporate culture. University-based researchers have a different set of incentives than industry-supported researchers (when these organizations maintain independence) and this is a productive hedge for society.

Aha – I finally found a post related to Keen’s book – Weblogg-Ed – read some of the comments.

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