Reclaim Open Learning Symposium
Note: The event is free and open to the public. Click to read the original published by DML Research Hub. This event is sponsored and organized by the Digital Media and Learning Research Hub, University of California Humanities Research Institute, located at UC Irvine and is co-sponsored by the MIT Media Lab and CALit2.
A Live recording of the panel discussion here.
Please feel free to follow the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #ReclaimOpen. Certain portions of the Reclaim Open Learning Symposium will be streaming live via the DML Research Hub's YouTube Channel. Please click on the "streaming live" links below for more info. All times listed below are Pacific Time.
September 26, 2013
5:00 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Welcome to Calit2 by G.P.Li and to the symposium by David Theo Goldberg
Opening Keynote Event - Conversation with John Seely Brown and Amin Saberi, moderated by Anya Kamenetz
Scientist, artist and strategist, for two decades the head of Xerox PARC, one of the country’s most innovative places, JSB is hailed as one of the premier minds bent to the work of understanding how learning evolves in a connected age. He’ll be talking with Amin Saberi, a professor of management science, computational and mathematical engineering at Stanford, and now the CEO of NovoEd, a MOOC startup offering courses from some of the world’s top business schools with the novel inclusion of small group, real-world collaborative project-based learning. Some questions we’ll take on: where are we in the MOOC hype cycle, and does it matter? What are the relative strengths and weaknesses of online and offline interaction for learning?
7:30 PM (CALit2 Atrium)
Gathering - Reclaim Open Learning Reception
We invite you to join us in celebrating the opening of the Reclaim Open Learning Symposium following the Conversation with John Seely Brown and Amin Saberi
September 27, 2013
9:00 AM - 10:00 AM (CALit2 Atrium)
Reclaim Open Learning Demos + Continental Breakfast
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Reclaiming Open Learning--A Stake in the Ground
John Seely Brown, Nishant Shah, and Philipp Schmidt (Moderator)
What values are we articulating? Why does open learning matter? What is it “good for”? What are the stakes?
11:00 AM - 3:00 PM (CALit2, Room 3008)
Working Group - Reclaim Open Learning: The COURSE
Howard Rheingold
We will work all day to create a distributed multimedia open course on Reclaiming Open Learning, hacking together a syllabus, activities, assignments, competencies, and more across platforms.
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Connected Learning, Digital Arts and Humanities
Susie Ferrell, Jade Ulrich, Martha Burtis, Alan Levine, Jonathan Worth, and Liz Losh (Moderator)
Why is art important in an online learning world sometimes dominated by STEM? how does the media production of learners get facilitated and managed in distributed networks and large-scale?
12:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Break for Lunch
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
The Warm Body Effect
Josie Fraser, Freeman Murray and Anya Kamenetz (Moderator)
Space, place, and collocation -- what do physical presence, local communities and live social interaction mean for learners connected by the web? What power relationships and hierarchies are implied/facilitated by openness?
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Contexts & Outcomes
Howard Rheingold, Anya Kamenetz, and Mimi Ito (Moderator)
What are the broader social and economic contexts in which open learning is happening? How do questions of value and quality get negotiated? How do we define success?
4:00 PM - 4:30 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Presentation from 'Reclaim Open Learning: The COURSE'
Howard Rheingold
The working group will present their course.
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM (CALit2 Auditorium + streaming live)
Closing Remarks
David Theo Goldberg
Winners
DigiLit Leicester www.digilitleic.com | Josie Fraser (Leicester City Council), Lucy Atkins (Leicester City Council), Richard Hall (De Montfort University)
This distributed course has a local aim: increasing the ability of local teachers in Leicester to use connected learning methods to support teaching and transform learning.
Digital Storytelling 106 (DS106) ds106.us | Jim Groom, Martha Buris, Alan Levine, University of Mary Washington, United States
Based on the principle “a domain of one’s own,” Groom’s course connects registered students and open participants in an ever-evolving online community where they submit, complete and collaborate on assignments in writing, mash-ups, design, video, audio, and other media. DS106 lives online as a livestreaming radio station, a sub-reddit, a G+ group, a Twitter feed, and more.
FemTechNet femtechnet.blogspot.com | Susanna Ferrell, Jade Ulrich Scripps College, United States
FemTechNet bills itself as the first “distributed online collaborative course.” In their beta outing, students applied feminist texts to labor, digital art, and archives, drawing connections between the dichotomies of software/hardware and feminism/masculinity. They edited Wikipedia, created sculptures and images and held dialogues with others of diverse backgrounds. The course is expanding globally.
Jaaga Study jaaga.in/study | Archana Prasad, Freeman Murray, India
Jaaga is a multidisciplinary creative hub in Bangalore, India. They are piloting informal learning programs leveraging MOOC resources with volunteer facilitators in a face to face community setting, with the goal of creating market-ready computer programmers.
Photography BA Hons and Phonar-Ed www.phonar.covmedia.co.uk | Jonathan Worth, Matt Johnston, Shaun Hides, Jonathan Shaw, Coventry University, UK; David Kernohan, JISC, UK
These free and open photography classes are available in app form and deal directly with the nature of the photographer as publisher. Classroom-based but leveraging various online communities, they are expanding to a full master’s and bachelor’s program.