1 / 57

Social Network Innovation in the Internet’s Global Coffeehouses: Learning Layers, Design Seeking and Scaling, Pandora

Social Network Innovation in the Internet’s Global Coffeehouses: Learning Layers, Design Seeking and Scaling, Pandora . John Cook. Designing for Digital Learners (D4DL) Research Group, UWE Bristol, UK Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/johnnigelcook Version 26 February 2014. Overview.

tryna
Télécharger la présentation

Social Network Innovation in the Internet’s Global Coffeehouses: Learning Layers, Design Seeking and Scaling, Pandora

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Network Innovation in the Internet’s Global Coffeehouses: Learning Layers, Design Seeking and Scaling, Pandora John Cook Designing for Digital Learners (D4DL) Research Group, UWE Bristol, UK Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/johnnigelcook Version 26 February 2014

  2. Overview • Caffeine induced fast forward through John’s timeline ‘76 onwards • Bad press for ‘new’ technology and tools • The disruptive power of social networking from 1600s to now • Design Based Research • Learning Layers • Design Seeking and Scaling framework • Pandora • Challenges

  3. 1. Caffeine induced fast forward through John’s timeline ‘76 onwards

  4. A cautionary tale! Formal vs informal learning 1976 onwards Health Warning!Formal learning on Computing Science degree did this to me 

  5. Post Punk era was all about informal learning. In 1980 I join Angels One 5 as self taught bass player Post Punk era was all about informal learning – 5 years later I join Angels One 5

  6. By 1983 informal learning guides me into wearing THAT shirt!

  7. But mixing the formal and informal can cause an identity crisis! 7 years later & informal learning!

  8. Reintegrated John? 2008

  9. Play 5 aside football Rugby union fan Parent LIFE Management Research PhD students Kids Self taught bass player Teaching I have set up a false dichotomy. Formal learning and/or learning in informal contexts, it’s complicated! John

  10. Pre-UWE R&D timeline … FP7 & LLL Projects ubiquitous learning(2007 - on) Blended Learning Consultants LTRI (2005-12) & LMLG (2006 - on) Institutional Impact: ‘Evidence’ to BIS Manager RLO CETL(2005-08) OU PhD TEL & Creativity(1998) 2000 2005 2008 2010 • Cooperative Problem-Seeking Dialogues in Learning: http://tinyurl.com/q9qbjvz

  11. Selected research outputs London Mobile Learning Group First monograph (2010) on mobile learning. Being used in teaching in such institutions as University Hull, University Leeds, University Stockholm, and University of California, Berkeley. LMLG semi-open research (2006 - on) Workshop Research Methods in Informal and Mobile Learning * User Generated Contexts 2000 2005 2008 2010 * http://www.milrm.wle.org.uk/

  12. 2. Bad press for ‘new’ technology and tools People thought the first printing press was an instrument of the devil that would spawn unauthorised versions of the bible. David Crystal (Guardian, 2008), author of ‘Txtng: the gr8db8’ (Crystal, 2008) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printing_press

  13. The telephone created fears of a breakdown in family life, with people no longer speaking directly to one another. http://www.solarnavigator.net/inventors/inventor_images/alexander_graham_bell_1876_speaking_into_telephone.jpg

  14. http://blog.lib.umn.edu/mors0106/architecture/Television.jpg And radio and television raised concerns about brain-washing. http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~postr/MRT/Tour1.htm

  15. Mobile phones can damage your health? txt spk is responsible for bad spelling and moral decay? As always there is more to it than meets the eye …

  16. 3. The disruptive power of social networking from 1600s to now A 1668 illustration showing a contemporary London coffee house. Photo: Lordprice Collection / Alamy

  17. Social networks stand accused of being so called ‘weapons of mass distraction’ or worse

  18. Please turn off your mobiles? • After you have seem this! • http://gnli.christianpost.com/video/when-the-speaker-asking-the-audience-to-turn-off-their-cell-phones-something-unbelievable-happened-27694

  19. In fact in England in the late 1600s, very similar concerns were raised about coffee houses! As well as complaining that Christians had abandoned their traditional beer in favour of a foreign drink, critics worried that coffeehouses were keeping people from productive work. 1677, Anthony Wood, an Oxford academic: “Why doth solid and serious learning decline, and few or none follow it now in the University?” he asked. “Answer: Because of Coffea Houses, where they spend all their time” (from Standage, 2013).

  20. Social network innovation in the Internet’s global coffeehouse social networking within companies could increase the productivity of “knowledge workers” by 20 to 25 percent

  21. Cluetrain “The book and website both challenge what the manifesto calls outmoded, 20th-century thinking about business in light of the emergence of the Web, clearly listing "95 theses", as a reference to Martin Luther's manifesto which heralded the start of the Protestant Reformation.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cluetrain_Manifesto, accessed, 26/09/13

  22. Modern fears about the dangers of social networking are overdone • “The lesson of the coffeehouse is that modern fears about the dangers of social networking are overdone. This kind of media, in fact, has a long history: Martin Luther’s use of pamphlets in the Reformation casts new light on the role of social media in the Arab Spring.” • Standage, T. (2013). Social Networking in the 1600s. New York Times (online), June 22, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/23/opinion/sunday/social-networking-in-the-1600s.html?pagewanted=all&_r=3&, accessed 30/08/13

  23. Internet fuelled coffeehouses

  24. 4. Design Based Research “… a genre of research in which the iterative development of solutions to practical and complex educational problems also provides the context for empirical investigation, which yields theoretical understanding that can inform the work of others … [although potentially powerful] the simultaneous pursuit of theory building and practical innovation is extremely ambitious” McKenney, S. & Reeves, T. (2012). Conducting Educational Design Research. New York: Routledge. NOT Same as Research-based design …

  25. Design Based Research Tom Reeves keynote: “How many educational revolutions have we heard of?” DBR = "Impact on real world problems." “… in the era of iPhone ... we want frictionless solutions ... but people and institutions can feel messy ... they introduce uncontrolled variability.” “You know DBR has rigor and discipline, but it must also have impact.” http://dbrxroads.coe.uga.edu/index.php/homepage

  26. DBR Example: Augmented Context for Development “… context as a core construct that enables collaborative, location-based, mobile device mediated problem solving where learners generate their own ‘temporal context for development’ within the wider frame of Augmented Contexts for Development (ACD).” Cook, J (2010).Mobile Phones as Mediating Tools Within Augmented Contexts for Development, IJMBL. Link to paper http://goo.gl/NFWnSZ Used in mLeManproject as basis for Mobile Augmented Reality – with Carl Smith, Claire Bradley 2000 2005 2008 2010

  27. 5. Learning Layers: Scaling informal learning Project Coordination Technology Research Scaling Partners Regional Application Clusters Health Care – Leeds Construction & Building – Bremen Technology Partners http://learning-layers.eu/

  28. How we organize http://learning-layers.eu/

  29. Internet fuelled coffeehouses are very much alive in Layers

  30. 6. Design Seeking and Scaling framework Cook, J., Bannan, B. and Santos, P. (2013). Seeking and Scaling Model for Designing Technology that Supports Personal and Professional Learning Networks. Workshop on Collaborative Technologies for Working and Learning (ECSCW meets EC-TEL), 21 September, Cyprus. Available from: http://tinyurl.com/la6y927

  31. What do we know about scaling? • Rogers(2003) “Diffusion of Innovations” seminal work from 60s • May be too linear • Can we abstract out of a perfect study and scale as Kampylis, et al. (2013) claim? • According to Forge et al. (2013, p. 8) design libraries encourage common shared intellectual capital as a general basis for innovation and scaling • Forge et al. (2013, p. 8) also note in support of their argument that • Apple the largest company in the world by market capitalization in May 2012 (they can scale) • Relies on design concepts for its leading position • Currently using its British designers and previously its German designers • Design matters!

  32. 7. Pandora! … all about interacting with people …

  33. Semantic Web Service • Double espresso for Internet powered coffee houses? • Claims to be putting more intelligence, more meaning into the web • Web of collective knowledge systems, which are able to provide useful information based on human contributions and which get better as more people participate • The socio-semantic web may be seen as a middle way between the top-down monolithic taxonomy approach like the Yahoo! Directory and the more recent collaborative tagging (folksonomy) approaches

  34. Social Semantic Information Spaces Layers EGs: Ach So! – Mobile video recording app & Help Seeking tool Layers Social Semantic Server http://www.w3.org/2008/09/msnws/papers/sioc.html / http://odl.learning-layers.eu/ach-so-mobile-video-recording-app/

  35. Help Seeking Tool • Can you solve it? No, but I know a woman who can! • Personal Learning Networks (PLN): Curating, managing and promoting a PLN develops critical, creative, 21st century skills and socio-emotional capabilities. • Cook and Pachler(2012) • Santos, Cook, Treasure-Jones, Kerr & Colley (2014) http://odl.learning-layers.eu/seeking-support-prototype/

  36. Healthcare context

  37. Construction context

  38. Human resources, logistics, resource/energy efficiency context http://www.clusterland.at/index_ENG_HTML.php

  39. Layers Social Semantic Server (SSS) and Help Seeking tool in Healthcare sector • SSS can generate meta-data to relate people and data, people and people, data and data! • Goal of the following exercise is to explore integration of Help Seeking tool’s socio-cultural-historical approach (Vygotsky) with SSS 41

  40. So, we have 3 people: Patricia, Mark and Natasha. They all search for and read an article called “Registration guidelines on diabetes” which is downloaded from the Intranet onto their respective PLEs (blue lines below) Mark Registration guidelines on diabetes Natasha Patricia From this the SSS will begin a service known as user event service (or looking at what people are doing and finding patterns) in this instance, the pattern is 3 people have all downloaded the same document meaning they have shown an interest.

  41. From SSS perspective we draw a (Green) connection between the 3 people, since they all downloaded & (we assume) have read the same article. Mark Registration guidelines on diabetes Natasha Patricia

  42. Well, Patricia asks Mark (who she has previously tagged in her PLE, a ‘more capable peer’) a question about booking interpreters for a patient via her contacts Mark Registration guidelines on diabetes Booking interpreters for a patient Natasha Patricia For the SSS this is part of the meaning making system, since they both have looked at the “Registration guidelines on diabetes” document the SSS user event service draws in a relationship between those two sets of data (purple lines).

  43. Now the SSS pushes a service called “Recommendation Service” (Linking to good stuff, which is part of the guidance service group), because it has seen that Patricia and Mark both are in this discussion Mark Registration guidelines on diabetes Booking interpreters for a patient Natasha Patricia it assumes that Natasha probably would like to be in the discussion too (because of the similarity of the three persons)! So SSS suggests to Natasha that she joins the discussion (red line), the SSS is therefore scaffolding a collaborative ‘temporal context for development’.

  44. And there we go, Natasha discovers a discussion that she also finds useful • Thanks to the SSS’s hi-level services “recommendation” (guidance service group). • The services & connections provided/made by SSS in this example are: • User event service (finding a pattern) • Recommendation service • Connection between the 3 people (green) • Relationship between those two sets of data (purple lines) • Suggests for person to join a discussion (red line) • In Vygotskian terms we have in play two key concepts • More Capable Peer • Temporal Context for Development • … and there is lots of mediation going with signs and tools

  45. 8. Challenges • How to design Help Seeking tools for health sector? • Scale to other sectors • There are certain assumptions built in the Social Semantic Server (based on artefact-actor networks and Piagetian schemas) that still need resolving with our socio-cultural-historical approach (Vygotsky) of Help Seeking • Investigate further notion of context formation • How do we construct and process context? • Fear of learning, technology, problem solving, creativity • How we can integrate different contexts? For example learning in formal and non-formal contexts • Re-examine Augmented Contexts for Development (Cook, 2010) and User Generated Contexts (Cook, 2014) in the light of neuroscience

  46. “hippocampus can process and store contextual information reliably and independently without the potentially detrimental interference from … [unpleasant] salient event” Assitant Prof Attila Losonczy, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26249509

  47. 8. Challenges • Are we closer to solving puzzle of how the hippocampus can successfully encode the context, while ignoring the impact of the ongoing negative stimulus? • Provides one mechanism for parallel-processing in the brain • Here temporally overlapping inputs are disentangled and sorted into separate pipelines for further processing and context formation • It appears we may separate the construction of context from our feelings about the context • Storing context separately allows objective processing of context • Big ethical considerations • Refine Design Seeking and Scaling framework • Need to improve community engagement around ODL • Form partnerships for spin outs for Help Seeking tool • Balance my coffee intake …

More Related