- Nov 2022
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oer.pressbooks.pub oer.pressbooks.pub
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partnerships, networking, and revenue generation such as donations, memberships, pay what you want, and crowdfunding
I have thought long about the same issue and beyond. The triple (wiki, Hypothesis, donations) could be a working way to search for OER, form a social group processing them, and optionally support the creators.
I imagine that as follows: a person wants to learn about X. They can head to the wiki site about X and look into its Hypothesis annotations, where relevant OER with their preferred donation method can be linked. Also, study groups interested in the respective resource or topic can list virtual or live meetups there. The date of the meetups could be listed in a format that Hypothesis could search and display on a calendar.
Wiki is integral as it categorizes knowledge, is comprehensive, and strives to address biases. Hypothesis stitches websites together for the benefit of the site owners and the collective wisdom that emerges from the discussions. Donations support the creators so they can dedicate their time to creating high-quality resources.
Main inspirations:
Deschooling Society - Learning Webs
Tags
- annotations
- crowdfunding
- global
- web monetization
- roam
- prompt
- collaborative
- OER
- local
- monetization
- support
- meetup
- Learning Webs
- wiki
- Deschooling
- authors
- creators
- processing
- schoolhouse
- Ivan Illych
- pay what you want
- calendar
- hypothe
- learning
- virtual
- discussion
- portfolio
- schoolhouse.world
- social
- donations
Annotators
URL
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- Mar 2021
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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His first book, Deschooling Society, published in 1971, was a groundbreaking critique of compulsory mass education. He argued the oppressive structure of the school system could not be reformed. It must be dismantled in order to free humanity from the crippling effects of the institutionalization of all of life. He went on to critique modern mass medicine. In the pre-Internet age, Illich was highly influential among intellectuals and academics. He became known worldwide for his progressive polemics about how human culture could be preserved and expand, activity expressive of truly human values, in the face of multiple thundering forces of de-humanization.
A fairly reasonable summary of his thinking?
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- Jul 2016
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medium.com medium.com
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Postcolonial
In some ways, it’s quite remarkable that one of the key figures of post-development was also the one who called for “deschooling society”. As is obvious from observing humanitarian and philanthropic work is that “development” participates in neocolonialism, despite (or often because of) the best of intentions. MOOCs are closer to development than to postdevelopment. Even cMOOCs.
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medium.com medium.com
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relearning why we want kids in schools in the first place
Post-Illich?
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- Jun 2016
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hackeducation.com hackeducation.com
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I have questions about this history of schooling as Mitra (and others) tell it, about colonialism and neo-colonialism.
Paging Ivan Illich.
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