• Aji

    March 24th, 2009

    I recently came accross your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I dont know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.Miriam< HREF="http://www.craigslistposter.info" REL="nofollow">http://www.craigslistposter.info<>

  • Daniel Hickey

    March 24th, 2009

    Dang. You write gud!!!!!Seriously, you have teased out some really important aspects of open source and the gift economy that are very promising. Interestingly, the only corporate interests that seem able to make money do so using a very narrow view of learning. The big three publishers create textbooks that are sufficiently attractive and readable so that more students can eventually recognize the least wrong of four association on a test that may well have been developed by the same publisher. Meanwhile legions of innovators building really useful stuff can’t get it into schools because the computer lab is in constant use for computer-based test prep so the kids can get a few more of those same items right on the test.

  • faris

    March 24th, 2009

    awesome stuff. awesome.

  • Empathetics

    March 24th, 2009

    Really like this post Jenna, especially the idea of shifting the question that precedes our entry into the classroom as educators, reframing it as one of whether we’re contributing to knowledge building rather than just success in school (whatever that’s worth). One thing that sticks out to me from the Open Source community is the ability to take little pieces of functionality and combine a number of them to produce something entirely new, while maintaining the existing functionalities of those appropriated components. Educationally, this might look like using an effective icebreaker, or movie, a good worksheet or game, even just appropriating an educational objective but totally reformulating the strategies to achieve it are interesting ways that we can be thinking about sharing and repurposing in the ed context. I think this is a big way that the Project NML’s Learning Library is thinking. I’d love to hear other examples as you gestate this OSS/education idea!

  • TSmith

    March 30th, 2009

    Jenna,I read about spreadable education practices and see the concept as something that actually needs a different “growing space” than schools provide. As Seymour Papert wrote so many times, school have a great way of deforming and absorbing great ideas until they disappear. In my experience, the notion of an idea that spreads happens sometimes when a teacher volunteers to try a project that my class is doing, and it has also happened with classroom blogs – they have spread from my class to the rest of my grade level and now are making headway into lower grades. The projects differ substantially from the blogs, obviously one being a series of situations and events into which a teacher feels he or she can enter, and the other being a structure that can bring students’ creativity and expression to life for a larger audience. The way it has worked, some projects have grown into communities of practice over time, and the groups learning the world of blogging have also found themselves as new comers in a community of practice. Back to your development of SEP’s – what kinds of examples have you pondered? – By the way, my Pepperdine cadre will be out to MIT next week and will be visiting with Henry Jenkins and others. — Terry (smithtk)

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