Friday, February 22, 2008

A worry about this technology



One of the problems of technology is that it functions as a multiplier of human abilities, which tends to make the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. I worry sometimes that this sort of technology will tend to discriminate against those who are, for whatever reason, more private, who simply do not want to give their opinions, to be asked to expose themselves, etc. We live in an increasingly exhibitionistic culture, and I wonder if we fail to respect people who are intelligent and able, but simply desire to be guarded and reticent.


Does anybody else worry about this?


My ideas for Wikis and Blogs -- how I might use this technology, Part I

At this point, all such plans are pretty hypothetical, for I think I need to do more experimentation and give this matter a lot more thought – more on that later.

Let me try to answer the questions in order…

(1) Right now, I suppose, if I use blogs or wikis, I shall use the services which we have used. However, I think there is a need for a wiki server as part of the MSU IT system. Perhaps I need to bring this up in a meeting. I am more interested in wikis than blogs, but I think both can be useful. But again, I am very much thinking this through. As I said during the conference call, I see using this technology as providing a space where students construct, early on, a framework for what they will study, by bringing up questions, concerns and issues which they then connect to issues pertinent to the subject under consideration, such as Roman history. This can become an ongoing project. I may experiment with this soon in the class I am teaching in my Senior Humanities Seminar. More to come on that.

(2) My very hypothetical notion is to create a wiki format which looks like a Talmud in progress. The core would be a central question, and radiating outward would be wikis devoted to the first layer of pertinent issues, and radiating outward from that would be more wiki pages devoted to specific concerns about these issues. This would be non-hierarchical. It would be also tied to the discussion group. Here is something of a problems – posting to a discussion group is a LOT less technologically challenging than posting to a blog or wiki, and right now, considering the difficulties I have had, I am not sure how comfortable I would be using wikis in a 35 person Gen. Ed. Class. Think of all the time it might take me, not only to moderate, but to deal with all the problems students might have implementing this technology. This seems something of a show-stopper for the moment, for I cannot ask students to call the help desk for help on their wiki. This is a real problem we need to address – right now, can we use this technology in a regular Gen. Ed. Class – which is mostly what I teach? Perhaps what I can do is to make discussion thread have a moderator, who will then make the wiki. Here is a visualization









I have a wiki on netcipia.net which my colleague Prudence Jones as started, with little student participation so far. Here is the text of what I have written.




I have been thinking about what a noted educator, Ken Bain, has been telling us about what we need to do so that students will better engage the material. The key for this engagement is _NOT_ to simply present a list of goals to be achieved. A better solution is to start with a problem or issue students can relate to, and then find ways to tie this concern to the course. I want to do a better job of this the next time I teach Roman civilization -- and you can help me. Please!!

And we can start with a very simple question, which we can then tie into the study of Roman history.

And the question is this -- what aspects of the political life of the United States REALLY MAKES YOU MAD? Please, let us all know!






Again, as I noted, there has been no student input as of yet. More to come.....




Saturday, February 9, 2008

Why I support Obama

Why I support Obama:


I begin with a confession – I have had a difficult time making myself vote, for it was hard for me to like any of the candidates and their parties. It bothered me how very sound candidates like Richardson could make hardly a stir, and I wished candidates would tackle the hard issues harder, with less fear of the polls.

Yet I now support Obama – and I feel I must justify myself.



I support Obama, in the end, not only because I believe is he is the better bet, but because he is the superior dream. The worst case scenario for both candidates is roughly equal, although I think Clinton has more downside potential, due both to her own limitations and the inescapable baggage she hauls with her. And because of those limitations and that baggage, the upside potential of Clinton is hard to locate. But Obama is quite another case – as widely noted, he represents the imaginative possibility of significant positive change, not only to citizens of the US, but to diverse billions across the world. I think his election will make those billions, who also need better dreams, think anew about their beliefs concerning the US. Note how I said ‘imaginative possibility’ – and imagination is an important, even necessary factor at this time, for a hope you cannot imagine cannot move. In regards to Clinton, I strongly suspect it is far easier to imagine great disaster than great success from her. She probably deserves better, but that is how it is, and most of us really know it. But I can imagine greatness coming from Obama. It may be fantasy, but, since the downsides of both candidates are pretty equal, why not take a chance on fantasy? Especially when Obama’s election, without question, will signal the possibility of a new direction in politics. It’s been a long time since we and the world could imagine a new direction, not just the lesser of two evils.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

More on Wikis




I just realized you could use HTML Coding here!


I have been working more on my own 'wikiverse', Wikis are another way of doing web pages, it seems to me, with some advantages. Teachers in poorer school systems should learn about them.


I also was thinking that the old-fashioned list format for presenting hyperlinks often would be much
better if the relationships could be better shown graphically. Here is a mock-up of a wiki on
Shelly's poem Ozymandias. See how the links surround the central point. And such links are not hard to make
with image mapping.

The adventure continues...