135 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2015
    1. Shedroff (2009) argued that in current design practice, the main focus should be on creating environments that encourage relationships with individuals, experiences that connect on an emotional and value level

      I agree. I have tried to "escape" the LMS only to recreate it. I can use open-source tools and variety of networks but if students see them as completion channels and not communication channels all I get is a stream of assignments handed in.

    2. The challenge includes not only the validation of the information but also the generation of ideas and thoughts that the organized institutional social setting of the past might readily provide,

      I agree we have handed over text-construction to the crowd. Coiro et al argued that this is self-directed text construction but I think it is more social. Our networks influence what we read just as much as what we click.

  2. Jun 2015
    1. actic of creating autonomous space as a form of resistance’

      do we create the autonomous space, or do we take advantage of unchartered or hidden space - make it our own?

    2. Occupy revitalises hope in the power of ideas through the power of doing,

      not just an idea but a doing

    3. the central issue of ‘the idea of the university’, the meaning and purpose of higher education, is reinvented at the level of curriculum development as a democratic, horizontal pedagogical process

      Is this different from self-directed learning?

    4. ‘education’ cannot be separated from ‘life’ in institutions, and that thinking about education cannot be separat ed from the spaces and times in which we produce knowledge – which, in this formulation, are potentially everywhere and always.

      Embodied cognition?

    5. Given the extent to which the language of man a gerialism has overwhelmed the discourse of higher education, this is no mean achievement

      A kind of re-balancing? Appropriate this space to create something beyond managerialism?

    6. living knowledge

      ‘the theoretical and practical knowledge of social life in the community’ (Lefebvre 1969: 155)

    7. a moral code: ‘social ethics’ rather than ‘business ethics’ (161), grounded in what Merrifield describes as the Other of abstract labour, ‘the nature and capacities of concrete people’ (21).

      hmm....saturated? Is the LMS a teaching landscape? Is the open web another?

    8. patial learning landscapes within which teaching is set: at the geographical level of the classroom , the campus and beyond; but also as a horizontal space within which collaborations can multiply. And, in a learning environment that is saturated with digitalised educational technologies how are students made aware of the politics of machinic production.

      hmm....saturated? Is the LMS a teaching landscape? Is the open web another?

    9. time is no longer simply a measure of work, but a rhythm which corresponds to the ‘beat or pulse of human life’ (Ne ary and Rikowski 2000). Living labour.
    10. use value is converted into exchange value in a process dominated by both the violence of abstraction and resistance to abstraction,

      two sides of a coin that create the problem? In trying to solve it, perpetuates it? I have no idea what this means...yet seems important to understand it

    11. The supreme good is time - space: this is what ensures the survival of being, the energy that being contains and has at its disposal’

      Discuss?

    12. tudent research and research - like activity at all levels of undergraduate programmes, for the production of new knowledge and not simply as a pedagogical device

      I love this! teaching people how to inquire early

    13. t is therefore likely that any really promising occupation of the curriculum, which app ropriated it to communalise, defetishise and decommodify education, would constitute a direct threat to the logics of capital and give rise to political struggle.

      I have difficulty with this type of language.

    14. less metaphorically – the alienation and exhaustion that come from the intensification, exploitation and ab straction of academic labour.

      Is this part of the 'why' rage should be situated?

      In the UK we have: "We have rather lost control over the form, structure and function of academic knowledge; the determination of the times and spaces in which we teach and learn; the relationships between educational philosophies and the material environments of teaching; and relationships between students and teachers."

      If this is so in this sweeping kind of way, then may be I need to become more of an activist...

    15. “occupy” our classrooms, “occupy” the curriculum, and then collect stories about what we have done (Bigelow 2011)

      It’s your classroom; occupy it with some important and creative lessons! Amen to that! and yet becoming harder to do with LMS requirements

      but authors suggest caution:

      "As Judith Butler advised, while acting out can give a buzz of empowerment, ‘it’s really important to be able to situate one’s rage and destitution in the context of a social movement’ (Bella 2011)"

      I am not sure I have ever situated my rage in the context of a social movement. Should I? Why?

    16. So what might it mean to ‘occupy’ a curriculum?

      Well, people what might it mean?

    17. ‘We are always in occupation’

      We understand what is occupying a space and then adapt what is there for alternative purposes. It is how knowledge grows.

    18. It can only exist when enacted within particular social relations and material environments , spaces and times

      This reminds my of Jim Groom's idea of content being the residue of relationships that exist in space time...

      The Really Open University love that!

    19. a confirmation of the unde fined and indefinable multiplicity of things, and gets lost in classifications, descriptions, and segmentations’, curricula may be regarded as violent abstractions in their own right

      I love the evocative words...and I do not really understand them... is it as simple as a curriculum can be a violent abstraction if it is fixed and 'unoccupied'?

    20. t may be said of a natural space modified in order to serve the needs and possibilities of a group that it has been appropriated by that group. Property in the sense of possession is at best a necessary precondition, and most often merely an epiphenomenon, of “appropriative” activity, the highest expression of which is the work of art

      Discuss please? Their lips move but I cannot hear what they are saying

    21. attempts to occupy the university curriculum, not as a programme of education but as the production of critical knowledge, may also constitute ‘a new pedagogy of space and time’. We will describe this occupation of

      rightly so. university as sites of critical knowledge production

    22. will remain a permanent crisis unless it is understood in a more holistic materialist way.

      This seems to imply an asserted need for embodied ( I prefer it to materialist) understanding?

    23. Occupy points to the centrality of space and time as practical concepts through which it is possible to reconfigure revolutionary activity. By dealing with the concept (Occupy) at this fundamen tal level of space and time through a critical engagement with Henri Lefebvre’s notion of ‘a

      Henri Lefebvre's notion of a new pedagogy of space & time > open spaces for further revolutionary transformation.

    24. ‘reconfigure the common experience of the sensible’ and ‘create a new landscape of the visible , sayable and doable’

      And does this landscape now include the virtual? How?

    25. They also asserted that because it was primarily an idea or collectivised sense of agency, it could never be ‘evicted’ from social relations.

      I love the idea that you cannot evict an idea :)

    26. The logics and languages of Occupy resonate with these projects, being experimental, emerge nt, focused on journeys rather than destinations, valorising the critical attitude, positioned outside of hegemonic discourses and practices, and radically hopeful (Cote et al . 2007: 14)

      Sounds familiar?

    27. primary function of both formal and informal education is to produce docile neoliberal consumer - citizen subjects,

      I am having difficulty with the overly generalised propaganda. This depersonalised the activity of education. Some educators might produce such beings but not all?

    28. the Occupy movement is explicitly pedagogical

      I never thought about this before. The very existence of something in space and time can be pedagogical? They know they will not succeed but they will teach?

    29. does Occupy open new possibilities for reclaiming higher education from capitalist logics; for creating new forms of teaching, learning and critical inquiry that enable the production of autonomous subjectivities and liber ating relationships within, but more importantly beyond, formally ‘occupied’ territories and environments?

      How can we enable the production of autonomous subjectivities and liberating relationships within and beyond formally ‘occupied’ territories and environments? Is this not what the open education movement is trying to do?

    30. Do the core principles and diverse practices of Occupy, as well as its weaknesses and contradictions, suggest a new ‘pedagogy of space and time’ (Lefebvre 2008: 354) that can inform the increasing struggles against all forms o f dehumanisation in contemporary society, including, but not solely, those which have their origins in the violence of capitalist abstraction?

      Okay 'the violence of capitalist abstraction' somebody give me something beyond surface meaning?

    31. critical pract ical reflexivity is more than simply intellectual or theoretical knowledge production; that it is embodied, affective, intersubjective and collective;

      Critical Practical Reflexivity has a certain ring to it

    32. a critique of the politics of space and time into the institutions and idea of education itself.

      What does this mean?

    33. as educators who are seeking to ‘occupy’ spaces of higher educat ion inside and outside of the institutions in which we work.

      I have been interested in Occupy for a while. What an interesting use of an explicit metaphorical mapping. Occupy as a non-physical activity

    34. ‘deviant or diverted spaces, though initially subordinate, show distinct evidence of a true prod uctive capacity’ (2008: 383), and in doing so reveal the breaking points of everyday life

      Connections to third space and heteropias?

    35. groups take up residence in spaces whose pre - existing form, having been designed for some other purpose, is inappropriate to the needs of their would - be communal life

      This paper is not about online spaces, but resonates strongly with connected learning spaces?

    36. Our purpose is to re - appropriate (‘detonate’), ‘occupy’, these moments of space - time through ‘a new pedagogy of space and time’, which can be characterised as the production of critical knowledge in everyday life.

      This reminds me of Hakim Bey's Temporary Autonomous Zone, but from a different angle. Instead of occupying it centers on removing authority from. http://hermetic.com/bey/taz3.html

  3. May 2015
    1. "We do this as educators who are seeking to ‘occupy’ spaces of higher education inside and outside of the institutions in which we work."

      I have been interested in Occupy for a while. What an interesting use of an explicit metaphorical mapping. Occupy as a non-physical activity

    2. 'deviant or diverted spaces, though initially subordinate, show distinct evidence of a true productive capacity' (2008: 383), and in doing so reveal the breaking points of everyday life.

      Connections to third space and heteropias?

    3. "a critique of the politics of space and time into the institutions and idea of education itself."

      What does this mean?

    4. "Critical practical reflexivity adheres to our space-time formulation in that theory and practice are considered as immanent to each other"

      How is this different from praxis?

    5. 'education’ cannot be separated from ‘life’ in institutions, and that thinking about education cannot be separated from the spaces and times in which we produce knowledge – which, in this formulation, are potentially everywhere and always'

      Embodied cognition?

    6. "critical practical reflexivity is more than simply intellectual or theoretical knowledge production; that it is embodied, affective, intersubjective and collective"

      Critical Practical Reflexivity has a certain ring to it

    7. "the Occupy movement is explicitly pedagogical."

      I never thought about this before. The very existence of something in space and time can be pedagogical? They know they will not succeed but they will teach?

    8. "Do the core principles and diverse practices of Occupy, as well as its weaknesses and contradictions, suggest a new ‘pedagogy of space and time’ (Lefebvre 2008: 354) that can inform the increasing struggles against all forms of dehumanisation in contemporary society, including, but not solely, those which have their origins in the violence of capitalist abstraction?"

      Okay 'the violence of capitalist abstraction' somebody give me something beyond surface meaning?

    9. does Occupy open new possibilities for reclaiming higher education from capitalist logics; for creating new forms of teaching, learning and critical inquiry that enable the production of autonomous subjectivities and liberating relationships within, but more importantly beyond, formally ‘occupied’ territories and environments?

      How can we enable the production of autonomous subjectivities and liberating relationships within and beyond formally ‘occupied’ territories and environments? Is this not what the open education movement is trying to do?

    10. Can 'the very act of refusing domination and acting autonomously have a politically transformative power? How is this exemplified in open education?

    11. "primary function of both formal and informal education is to produce docile neoliberal consumer-citizen subjects"

      I am having difficulty with the overly generalised propaganda. This depersonalised the activity of education. Some educators might produce such beings but not all?

    12. "The logics and languages of Occupy resonate with these projects, being experimental, emergent, focused on journeys rather than destinations, valorising the critical attitude, positioned outside of hegemonic discourses and practices, and radically hopeful (Cote et al. 2007: 14)" Sounds familiar?

    13. "Is the Occupy ‘event’, as some prefer to call it, a ‘school’? If so, what type of ‘school’?"

    14. "They also asserted that because it was primarily an idea or collectivised sense of agency, it could never be ‘evicted’ from social relations."

      I love the idea that you cannot evict an idea :)

    15. Are we also trying to ‘reconfigure the common experience of the sensible’ and ‘create a new landscape of the visible, sayable and doable’?

      And does this landscape now include the virtual? How?

    16. "will remain a permanent crisis unless it is understood in a more holistic materialist way"

      This seems to imply an asserted need for embodied ( I prefer it to materialist) understanding?

    17. "It may be said of a natural space modified in order to serve the needs and possibilities of a group that it has been appropriated by that group. Property in the sense of possession is at best a necessary precondition, and most often merely an epiphenomenon, of “appropriative” activity, the highest expression of which is the work of art’ (Lefebvre 2008: 165)."

      Discuss please? Their lips move but I cannot hear what they are saying

    18. "a confirmation of the undefined and indefinable multiplicity of things, and gets lost in classifications, descriptions, and segmentations’, curricula may be regarded as violent abstractions in their own right"

      I love the evocative words...and I do not really understand them... is it as simple as a curriculum can be a violent abstraction if it is fixed and 'unoccupied'?

    19. "It can only exist when enacted within particular social relations and material environments, spaces and times."

      This reminds my of Jim Groom's idea of content being the residue of relationships that exist in space time...

      The Really Open University love that!

    20. "We can escape a notion but not the social relations that create knowledge. These only exist in space"

    21. So what might it mean to ‘occupy’ a curriculum?

      Well, people what might it mean?

    22. "We are always in occupation."

      We understand what is occupying a space and then adapt what is there for alternative purposes. It is how knowledge grows.

    23. “occupy” our classrooms, “occupy” the curriculum, and then collect stories about what we have done (Bigelow 2011).

      It’s your classroom; occupy it with some important and creative lessons! Amen to that! and yet becoming harder to do with LMS requirements

      but authors suggest caution:

      "As Judith Butler advised, while acting out can give a buzz of empowerment, ‘it’s really important to be able to situate one’s rage and destitution in the context of a social movement’ (Bella 2011)"

      I am not sure I have ever situated my rage in the context of a social movement. Should I? Why?

    24. less metaphorically

      "the alienation and exhaustion that come from the intensification, exploitation and abstraction of academic labour"

      Is this part of the 'why' rage should be situated?

      In the UK we have: "We have rather lost control over the form, structure and function of academic knowledge; the determination of the times and spaces in which we teach and learn; the relationships between educational philosophies and the material environments of teaching; and relationships between students and teachers."

      If this is so in this sweeping kind of way, then may be I need to become more of an activist...

    25. a moral code: ‘social ethics’ rather than ‘business ethics’ (161), grounded in what Merrifield describes as the Other of abstract labour, ‘the nature and capacities of concrete people’ (21)

      I like this but do not really understand it.

    26. "It is therefore likely that any really promising occupation of the curriculum, which appropriated it to communalise, defetishise and decommodify education, would constitute a direct threat to the logics of capital and give rise to political struggle"

      "is central to the global project of transforming educational institutions into business machines"

      "the disciplining of knowledge through its channelling into abstract and quantifiable forms"

      I have difficulty with this type of language.

    27. Appropriation is not simply an act of taking space, but is more fundamentally the other of dominated space in practice: a ‘natural space modified to serve the needs and the purposes of a group’

      This resonated with heteropias?

    28. This paper is not about online spaces, but resonates strongly with connected learning spaces?

      "groups take up residence in spaces whose pre- existing form, having been designed for some other purpose, is inappropriate to the needs of their would-be communal life" and reshape it?

    29. 'The supreme good is time-space: this is what ensures the survival of being, the energy that being contains and has at its disposal’

      Discuss?

    30. "use value is converted into exchange value in a process dominated by both the violence of abstraction and resistance to abstraction"

      two sides of a coin that create the problem? In trying to solve it, perpetuates it? I have no idea what this means...yet seems important to understand it

    31. "the time they take to connect humanly, to feel the groove of insurrection resonances around the world and around them’ (Merrifield 2011: 76)"

    32. "time is no longer simply a measure of work, but a rhythm which corresponds to the ‘beat or pulse of human life’ (Neary and Rikowski 2000). Living labour."

      Like my lived time book vs clock time.

    33. "Our next step is to have ‘good conversations’ (Gunn 1989) with those living the life of Occupy in its various articulations, and with ourselves."

      And this is non-trivial. Having just spend a semester teaching mindful online communication, I can vouch for that :)

      And the authors here are not factoring in text mediated conversation which adds richness to the conversations...

      I searched for Gunn and found him I can find no reference to 'having good conversations' but then it is a crappy pdf I found.

    34. "Occupying the curriculum thus demands that we become open to diverting and reappropriating our selves. Occupy illustrates the kinds of collective, creative struggle that such critical-practical self-reflexivity demands, and challenges those nurturing the spirit of Occupy within higher education to dare harder in appropriating the spaces, times and relations of critical knowledge production in everyday life."

      It always goes back to looking in the mirror

      Image Description

      and wrestling our inner MOOC

    35. "It is not possible to be merely in, or against, or beyond the existing conditions of social life – as Lefebvre points out, ‘no space ever vanishes utterly’."

      Note to self read Lefebvre.

      No space vanishes utterly? is it just a case of what is foregrounded backgrounded for our human purposes?

    36. "the production of such spaces – and times, and relationships, and ways of knowing – is ultimately a political project."

      Darn, will I end up a politician in my old age? Am I already an reluctant activist? :)

    37. Desires to reinvent the contemporary university for human purposes ‘mean nothing without the production of an appropriate space’

      Discuss. Can the space be virtual? They seem to emphasise the need for physical space too. I note that MOOCs that have worked for me have both.

    38. Abstract/concrete labour - unclear to me. Living Labour implies lived experience.

      Knowledge produced and captured as abstract labour - explain?

      Is this about the need to situate learning and teaching? Physical only? Physical and virtual? Only virtual?

    39. SaP and SSC are, in one sense, each attempts to occupy the curriculum.

      What are our attempts to occupy in open education?

    40. "This ‘crisis of the University’ is described by Andy Merrifield in his writing on Henri Lefebvre: ‘Abstract space started to paper over the whole world, turning scholars and intellectuals into abstract labour and turning university work into another abstract space. Suddenly free expression and concrete mental labour – the creation and dissemination of critical ideas – increasingly came under the assault from the same commodification Lefebvre was trying to demystify. Suddenly and somehow, intellectual space – academic and ideational space in universities and on the page – had become another neocolony of capitalism, and scholars at once the perpetrators and victims, colonizers and colonized, warders and inmates’ "

      I need to read and learn about this.

    41. The social science centre

      "students as scholars become revolutionary social beings within open, socially-driven spaces, rather than becoming institutionalised agents’

      Are we doing the same thing in Open Ed?

      not yet an experiment in ‘dissolving higher education into a form of mass intellectuality’ throughout society (Hall 2011) Richard Hall (2011) calls it an act of ‘pedagogic resistance’. ‘academic values, including critical thinking, experimentation, sharing, peer review, co-operation, collaboration, openness, debate and constructive disagreement’

      They are not going to win any blog of the year award. they need help!

      An emerging educational cooperative that aspires to create opportunities for advanced study and research in the social sciences which are both free of charge, and intellectually and politically democratic. Social Science Centre

    42. I love the way they embody polarities. within/aganst dissolve/reconstitute

      "Student as Producer is set firmly ‘within and against’ the idea of the university as a neoliberal institution, but within that context the student remains, resolutely, ‘the student’ (Neary and Hagyard 2011). The limit of Student as Producer is that the student does not exceed its own institutional and idealised form: ‘the idea of the student’ (Neary 2010). In order for the student to become more than themselves, the neoliberal university must be dissolved, and reconstituted as another form of ‘social knowing’ (Neary 2011)."

    43. "the central issue of ‘the idea of the university’, the meaning and purpose of higher education, is reinvented at the level of curriculum development as a democratic, horizontal pedagogical process"

      Is this different from self-directed learning?

    44. don’t want to occupy the territory, we want to be the territory”

    45. "giving them the sense that they are part of creating that future – as subjects/makers rather than objects/victims of history."

      Awww... optimism and self direction in education. I'll have some of that.

      "In what ways does the curriculum point towards the future?"

      Well not when students are blogging in the LMS damn it!

    46. what are the spatial learning landscapes within which teaching is set? geography - classroom, campus, beyond. In an environment 'saturated with digitalised educational technologies' are students made aware of the politics of 'machinic production'"

      hmm....saturated? Is the LMS a teaching landscape? Is the open web another?

    47. "student research and research-like activity at all levels of undergraduate programmes, for the production of new knowledge and not simply as a pedagogical device"

      I love this! teaching people how to inquire early

    48. the modern university is fundamentally dysfunctional, with its two core activities – research and teaching – working against each other (Boyer 1998). Discuss!

    49. "Given the extent to which the language of managerialism has overwhelmed the discourse of higher education, this is no mean achievement."

      A kind of re-balancing? Appropriate this space to create something beyond managerialism?

    50. ‘living knowledge’

      ‘the theoretical and practical knowledge of social life in the community’ (Lefebvre 1969: 155)

    51. Like Occupy, Student as Producer is framed within a broad idealistic framework: to recover ‘the idea of the University’, not as a philosophical discussion but as a course of action, or a curriculum ‘in and against’ (Holloway date), the contemporary university

    52. an anti-curriuculum from the university of utopia

    53. "Just as time inheres in space, use value inheres in exchange value, so to does theory inhere in practice as critical reflexivity or living knowledge, including life itself"

    1. Researchers, educators, policymakers, and other education stakeholders hope and anticipate that openness and open scholarship will generate positive outcomes for education and scholarship. Given the emerging nature of open practices, educators and scholars are finding themselves in a position in which they can shape and/or be shaped by openness. The intention of this paper is (a) to identify the assumptions of the open scholarship movement and (b) to highlight challenges associated with the movement’s aspirations of broadening access to education and knowledge.
    2. Through a critique of technology use in education, an understanding of educational technology narratives and their unfulfilled potential, and an appreciation of the negotiated implementation of technology use, we hope that this paper helps spark a conversation for a more critical, equitable, and effective future for education and open scholarship.

      So for a "more critical, equitable, and effective future for education and open scholarship" we need to critique a) technology use in education, and b) how we understand and talk about it in the education community. (Taken from the Abstract)

    3. Instead, as we see individuals, institutions, and organizations embrace openness, we have observed a parallel lack of critique of open educational practices. We find that such critiques are largely absent from the educational technology field, as members of the field tend to focus on the promises of educational technologies, rarely pausing to critique its assumptions.

      Yes, we need more critique in ed tech and learn from mistakes and things that don't work too! This is exciting.

    4. Still, although we may have an early understanding of why individuals may not engage in open practices, we have not paused to examine potential unintended consequences of embracing activities associated with open scholarship.

      Some people may choose not to participate in open scholarship: important to think why.

    5. we should consider the possibility that scholars engage in open scholarly practices for a variety of reasons that may not be entirely noble (Veletsianos, 2012).
    6. The tendency to connect with similar or like-minded individuals online as offline, what Thelwall (2009) calls homophily, means that social media may not foster diverse spaces for knowledge exchange and negotiation, leading instead to “echo chambers,” a situation in which we share knowledge and perspectives with individuals who already share the same views as ourselves.

      so follow and talk to people who share different views than yours, always look for diversity

    7. Social stratification and exclusion in online environments and networks is possible, especially if scholars do not understand the cultural norms of networked participation.

      and even the cultural norms of a particular group of people...

    8. Friedman however also noted that there is no guarantee that technologies will be used for the benefit of humanity, as he argues that the disempowered live in a flat world,

      flat only from a distance...

  4. Apr 2015
    1. implicit social contracts of active, personal curation and direct citation within academic Twitter.
    2. Though all participants were institutionally-affiliated and well aware of the prestige of academic ranks, journal titles, and institutional brands, these were not interpreted as intersecting meaningfully with capacity to contribute to the networked conversation. In fact, profiles that emphasized institutional status were understood by a number of participants as signaling their lack of interest in participatory engagement.
    3. Participants were most likely to assess accounts as credible and likely to make a contribution if they were followed by users the participant already knew and respected. Professional and personal commonalities were also central to perceptions of others’ capacity to contribute, but less visible in assessments of credibility.
    4. It was capacity for contribution to this larger conversation that counted most in participants’ assessments of others’ influence.
    5. Academia’s complex prestige hierarchy is reliant on gatekeeping and competition. Forms of influence based in open participatory practices are by definition illegible – and even illegitimate – within that system.
    6. In the academy, reputations and influence measures speak to status and standing. They circulate signals of capacity and credibility by boiling down complex indicators: the journals we publish in, the school(s) we’re affiliated with, our citation counts and h-indexes, our last grants, our ranks in the academic hierarchy. These proxies for quality combine prestige, metrics, and recognizability into a mercurial mix that can be circulated and understood across disciplines and ideological lines, but never quite reduced to its component parts.
    7. As more and more academics take to Twitter and other networked platforms to connect and share their work and ideas, a new sphere of influence is opening. And it is beginning to infiltrate academia itself.
  5. Mar 2015
    1. Rather than limit our educational interventions to “engaging” or “developing” youth who are assumed to be in some way deficient, we might instead consider that the lack lies in the stories, identities, activities, and organizational roles that are open and available to them. Put differently, the “problem” may not be that young people are disengaged, but that there are critical disconnects between the social, cultural, and institutional worlds of youth and adults. Too often, young people are given the message that the issues they care about are trivial, lack broader relevance, and/or are beyond their grasp and therefore require officially recognized expertise to address. Very rarely are they invited to participate in activities of consequence that make a real difference in the adult-facing world, even though they may be engaged in meaningful and consequential forms of organizing and production in their digitally networked lives and peer communication.
    2. “connected civics,” where young people can experience civic agency in a way that is embedded in meaningful social relationships, tied to deeply held interests and affinities, and powered by their various modes of creative expression and cultural production. We have dissected the properties of narratives, practices, and infrastructures that constitute “consequential connections” that tie together these more conventionally disconnected spheres. As a dimension of participatory politics, connected civics offers a powerful mode of learning and civic agency because it engages young people through deeply held identities and compelling cultural narratives, is driven by shared practices and purpose, and is grounded in a robust but accessible networked infrastructure. Further, by drawing together interests, agency, and civic opportunity, it infuses each sphere with the power of the other, making civics compelling—sometimes fun—and socially connected, and making social activity and cultural production reach for a higher calling.
    3. “the logic of connective action” that mobilizes through “personal action frames” and distributed social networks and differs from collective action centered on organizationally brokered groups and actions. The narratives and practices of connected civics draw their power from personal investments and interests supported by social media and affinity networks. At the same time, building consequential connections to civic opportunities and agency also involves tying these networks and interests to durable infrastructures and existing institutions, constituting what Bennett and Segerberg have described as hybrid forms that sit between connective and collective action networks.
    4. Whether it involves a campaign orchestrated through a tight-knit affinity network or lightweight circulation of a political meme among peers on a social media site, participatory politics are enabled by the accessibility of media production, circulation, and communication.
    5. By highlighting the role of identity, interest, and affinity across the range of cases we consider here, our aim is not to elide these differences but to offer a concept of learning that is sufficiently expansive to embrace the broad range of activities we are seeing among young people who are connecting the cultural and the political in transformative ways.
    6. We draw from Jim Gee's (2005) term “affinity spaces,” which he uses to describe online places where people interact around a common passion and/or set of commitments, but broaden our focus to civic and political action and wider networks. We use the term affinity network to signal contexts that can span multiple sites and platforms but hold at their center joint interests, activities, and identities.
    7. Importantly, though, among the key learning tasks within connected civics is understanding shared experience and what it takes to “take turns accepting losses in the public sphere” while acknowledging and honoring “the losses that others have accepted” (Allen, 2012, p. 1). This means not mistaking interest for entitlement to be a part of something, but rather recognizing affinity as a point of access through which to pursue thoughtful collaboration.
    8. This view of civic learning as “connected” brings together peer culture, personal interests and identities, and opportunities for young people to be recognized in sites of power in the wider world (Ito et al., 2013). Young people's entry points to connected learning and connected civics can be through their everyday social, creative, and community engagements, or through formal adult-guided programs and learning institutions. What is distinctive about a connected approach to civic learning is that it brings together these spheres in a meaningful and efficacious learning experience. In contrast to more fleeting or institutionally-driven forms of learning, connected learning experiences are tied to deeply felt interests, bonds, passions, and affinities and are as a consequence both highly engaging and personally transformative. Importantly, though, among the key learning tasks within connected civics is understanding
    9. The pivot between the cultural and the political can be enduring or ephemeral. In either case, it can be transformative for the young people involved, and for the issues of public concern they take on through their work and play (Jenkins, Gamber-Thompson, Kligler-Vilenchik, Shresthova, & Zimmerman, forthcoming).
    10. Also highly relevant to our framework is Kligler-Vilenchik's (2013) notion of “mechanisms of translation” that young people deploy to link participatory culture and participatory politics, forming a hybrid mode of engagement she and Shresthova (2012) describe as “participatory culture civics” (Kligler-Vilenchik and Shresthova, 2012).
    11. By stressing these boundaries between expressive and civic culture, our intention is to recognize these existing distinctions in order to find ways to cross and bridge the disconnection between them. We build on how King Beach (1999) has described learning as “consequential transitions.” “Transitions are consequential when they are consciously reflected on, often struggled with, and the eventual outcome changes one's sense of self and social positioning” (p. 114). Also highly relevant to our framework is Kligler-Vilenchik's (
    12. By social justice, we mean efforts geared towards equity, freedom, and sustainability. As articulated within the framework of participatory politics, these activities can involve: production and circulation of information about a matter of public import; carrying out dialogue and feedback related to that issue; investigating topics that are consequential to the community; using that information to hold accountable people in power; and mobilizing others on questions of justice, rights, and equality (Soep, 2014). This normative definition of the civic is unavoidably situated in our own U.S.-inflected progressive traditions, and we feel it is important to recognize and make explicit this cultural and historical specificity.
    13. What counts as “civic” is a normative designation grounded in specific cultural values and institutionalized practices. We use the term to designate activities that include involvement in state apparatuses (what is traditionally deemed “politics”), as well as activities tied to community problem-solving and social justice that do not necessarily lead to or even involve direct governmental action, for example, through so-called “hashtag activism” campaigns inviting peers to share first-person experiences with racial profiling or violence against women. By social justice, we mean efforts geared towards equity, freedom, and sustainability. As articulated within the framework of participatory politics, these activities can involve: production and circulation of information about a matter of public import; carrying out dialogue and feedback related to that issue; investigating topics that are consequential to the community; using that information to hold accountable people in power; and mobilizing others on questions of justice, rights, and equality (Soep,
    14. A young person who is active on Facebook and Instagram, or who organizes a gaming league or fan community, will likely not recognize these activities as relevant to political engagement, or to the activities for which they might earn community service credit at school. And civic educators are much more likely to stress involvement in civic and state institutions than they are to look towards popular culture and youth-centered identities and affinity for evidence of students' political imaginations and actions.
    15. We have observed however, that these questions of learning across settings are actually highly salient for understanding how young people's everyday settings and cultural practices relate to civic and political engagement.
    16. The process of connecting learning across settings is not a simple matter of acquiring generalized knowledge, skills, and frameworks that an individual can “transfer” across diverse settings of life. It turns out that the ability to connect learning across settings rests on a host of other contextual factors, social relationships, and mediating practices (Beach, 1999; Bransford & Schwartz, 2001; Engestrom, 1996). It also hinges on young people's own judgments about the extent to which they even want their civic and political activities to follow them across digital contexts (Weinstein, 2014). Indeed, as a 2012 National Academies report on “deeper learning” concluded: “Over a century of research on transfer has yielded little evidence that teaching can develop general cognitive competencies that are transferable to any new discipline, problem or context, in or out of school” (Pellegrino & Hilton, 2012, p. 8).

      Pellegrino & Hilton's findings are damning. Really?

    17. we need to actively support learning and consequential connections between spaces of youth cultural production, their agency, and their civic and political worlds.
    18. More recent research has interrogated how these dynamics are playing out in contemporary digital environments (boyd, 2014; Ito et al., 2009; Kligler-Vilenchik & Shresthova, 2012). Through remix and other forms of media appropriation, popular culture fans and other consumers can exercise citizenship and create frameworks for activism (Jenkins, Ford, & Green, 2013). Deploying a “logic of connective action,” young people circulate civic content across fluid social networks that don't necessarily require joining hierarchical political institutions (Bennett & Segerberg, 2012). In so doing, they enact forms of citizenship that privilege meaning, identity, and inter-subjectivity as everyday forces that shape political life and opportunity (Bakardijeva, 2009; Dahlgren, 2005). The notion of participatory politics identifies the conditions under which young people's everyday social and cultural engagements can foster forms of civic and political agency that are increasingly accessible due to emerging modes of social connectivity and the spread of digital and networked technology.
    19. Youth ethnographers have described the complex micropolitical dynamics of teen social status negotiations (Eckert, 1989; Milner, 2004; Pascoe, 2007).
    20. Our central question is, how can we support young people's learning and development of deeply personal and culturally resonant forms of civic agency? In order to address this question, we draw from two bodies of theory and research–studies of youth popular culture and sociocultural approaches to learning.
    21. “connected civics” as a form of learning that mobilizes young people's deeply felt interests and identities in the service of achieving the kind of civic voice and influence that is characteristic of participatory politics.
    22. What are the characteristics of the environments that support these connections between social and cultural activities, civic and political practices, and developmental outcomes for young people? And how can we better support these connections and outcomes?
    23. This groundswell of research on participatory politics shows young people linking the experiences of belonging, voice, leadership, and mobilization that they are developing through participatory culture to practices more conventionally thought of as civic and political in nature. Young people are also working in the opposite direction. Those who start off with civic and political commitments bolster those efforts by linking them to participatory culture. The research indicates that these connections between participatory culture and politics don't necessarily form automatically and can be actively brokered by peers and adults, and through organizational infrastructures.
    24. Commentators bemoaning youth apathy worry that digitally-mediated, expression-based forms of civic activity will make young people less likely to take part in institutionalized politics (such as voting), but recent research has indicated the opposite. Involvement in participatory culture—meaning contexts that actively encourage members to make and share creative products and practices that matter to them, supported by informal mentorship (Jenkins, 2006)—can be a gateway to political engagement (Cohen, Kahne, Bowyer, Middaugh, & Rogowski, 2012). Moreover, participatory politics are much more equitably distributed across racial and ethnic groups than conventional measures of political engagement, like voter turnout (Cohen, Kahne et. al.,
    25. We posit three supports that build consequential connections between young people's cultural affinities, their agency in the social world, and their civic engagement: 1. By constructing hybrid narratives, young people mine the cultural contexts they are embedded in and identify with for civic and political themes relevant to issues of public concern. 2. Through shared civic practices, members of affinity networks lower barriers to entry and multiply opportunities for young people to engage in civic and political action. 3. By developing cross-cutting infrastructure, young people–often with adults–institutionalize their efforts in ways that make a loosely affiliated network into something that is socially organized and self-sustaining.
    1. guided instruction may work better for some than minimal guidance.

      This gets back to the false dichotomy of PBL and DI or DI and contructivism. This idea that direct instruction plays no part in networked learning is hogwash. Every youtube tutorial out there is succint (the good one atleast) DI.

      The important point is being able to recognize when you need more guidance and knowing how to find it.

      As teachers we have to be able to quickly adjust our instruction, no matter how open, when we see students need greater guidance.

    2. Angela Duckworth's research on grit. Do I have the characteristics of grit to overcome the negotiation of ambiguities?

      Yeah someone citing Duckworth and not brining up eugenics. While "grit" does take on some racial charge as it is promoted in segregated charter schools and the even more segregated neighborhood schools they leave behind I thought Duckworth got a bad wrap.

    3. Twitter probably facilitates this, if one can juggle the multiple threads to the same topic. Twitter forgets though that cognitive overload is a challenge for some people.

      I also wonder if reading as performance changes the act of meaning making itself.

    1. Coming in with those positive experiences, I'm thus of the opinion that reading in advance helped me to learn and participate better

      I agree. The idea of not reading first seemed silly. It also raises accessibility concerns and can leave out those with dyslexia.