Andrew Sullivan on blogging

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Mon, 20 Oct 2008 02:17:13 GMT

Andrew Sullivan writes in the November Atlantic Monthly about how blogging has changed journalism:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200811/andrew-sullivan-why-i-blog

Blogging as a well-known journalist is a different experience, of course, from that of most citizen bloggers, but he has some interesting points about the way blogs have changed the way we create and consume knowledge. Excerpts below:

"It is accountable in immediate and unavoidable ways to readers and other bloggers...its borders are extremely porous and its truth inherently transitory. The consequences of this for the act of writing are still sinking in."

[Concerning logs -- e.g., ship logs -- in general] "As you read a log, you have the curious sense of moving backward in time as you move forward in pages—the opposite of a book. As you piece together a narrative that was never intended as one, it seems—and is—more truthful. Logs, in this sense, were a form of human self-correction. They amended for hindsight, for the ways in which human beings order and tidy and construct the story of their lives as they look back on them. Logs require a letting-go of narrative because they do not allow for a knowledge of the ending. So they have plot as well as dramatic irony—the reader will know the ending before the writer did."

"This is writing with emotion not just under but always breaking through the surface. It renders a writer and a reader not just connected but linked in a visceral, personal way. The only term that really describes this is friendship."

"If I were to do an inventory of the material that appears on my blog, I’d estimate that a good third of it is reader-­generated, and a good third of my time is spent absorbing readers’ views, comments, and tips. Readers tell me of breaking stories, new perspectives, and counterarguments to prevailing assumptions. .... Not all of it is mere information. Much of it is also opinion and scholarship, a knowledge base that exceeds the research department of any newspaper."

"[W]riting in this new form is a collective enterprise as much as it is an individual one..."

"There are times, in fact, when a blogger feels less like a writer than an online disc jockey, mixing samples of tunes and generating new melodies through mashups while also making his own music."

"[B]logging suffers from the same flaws as postmodernism: a failure to provide stable truth or a permanent perspective. A traditional writer is valued by readers precisely because they trust him to have thought long and hard about a subject, given it time to evolve in his head, and composed a piece of writing that is worth their time to read at length and to ponder. Bloggers don’t do this and cannot do this—and that limits them far more than it does traditional long-form writing."

"To use an obvious analogy, jazz entered our civilization much later than composed, formal music. But it hasn’t replaced it; and no jazz musician would ever claim that it could. Jazz merely demands a different way of playing and listening, just as blogging requires a different mode of writing and reading. Jazz and blogging are intimate, improvisational, and individual—but also inherently collective. And the audience talks over both... The reason they talk while listening, and comment or link while reading, is that they understand that this is a kind of music that needs to be engaged rather than merely absorbed. To listen to jazz as one would listen to an aria is to miss the point. Reading at a monitor, at a desk, or on an iPhone provokes a querulous, impatient, distracted attitude, a demand for instant, usable information, that is simply not conducive to opening a novel or a favorite magazine on the couch. Reading on paper evokes a more relaxed and meditative response. The message dictates the medium. And each medium has its place—as long as one is not mistaken for the other."

Posted in ,  | no comments

Only law-abiding citizens follow laws, so why bother?

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Tue, 09 Sep 2008 13:31:36 GMT

"When you outlaw guns in a certain area, the only people who follow that are law-abiding citizens, and everybody else ignores it," said the superintendent of schools in Harrold, Texas, where school employees are now allowed to carry concealed weapons.  (Education Week, Sept. 3)

Posted in  | no comments

"Technology and NCLB"

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Fri, 07 Mar 2008 16:08:17 GMT

On Wednesday at the MACUL conference, I participated in a panel discussion that was streamed on SchoolTube.com. Since the sound was such that it was impossible for anyone standing nearby to hear, and since my estimate for the number of people watching the stream is in the low single digits, I'm posting the text of my prepared remarks here.  (Yes, you, dear reader, could single-handedly be doubling my audience.)

The question to the panel was, "Particularly as it relates to technology, how has No Child Left Behind impacted our schools and what are your thoughts on its future? "

----

In the past fifteen years or so, I've studied a lot of technology-based educational programs, and I've had a hand in designing quite a few.  Every few years something new has come along that has promised to change the way teachers teach and the way learners learn: back in the early 1990s everyone was going to learn computer programming through LOGO, then the early World Wide Web was going to change the way kids think about research, then there were discussion boards, handhelds, science simulations, presentation software -- remember hypercard? -- and so on.  Most of these haven't entirely disappeared, but rather than starting a revolution, they've settled into a niche, or they have been more or less co-opted into the normal routines of life in school.  Now we have "Web 2.0," a term which already has started to move from "wired" to "tired," but as skeptical as I've become, there's one aspect of Web 2.0 that I think actually deserves MORE attention.  And that's democracy.  When I say Web 2.0 democracy, I don't mean online voting or candidate websites or Moveon.org.  I'm talking about the expanded ability for everyone to speak and be heard, and the potential for everyone's ideas to be taken seriously.

There's reason to be skeptical about the hype on this topic, too: Just a couple weeks ago, Chris Wilson wrote an article in Slate arguing that two of the sites often held up as examples of the new information democracy -- Wikipedia and Digg -- are actually controlled disproportionately by a tiny percentage of contributors.  Ok, so we haven't exactly figured out Web 2.0 democracy. But there has been a huge qualitative change in the past few years: young people now take it for granted that they can be part of the world's information space, and if there's not a true democracy right now, at least there's a sense of leveling the playing field: make a great video with a $200 camcorder, and a million people might watch it on YouTube. Write a provocative and intelligent blog, and you could attract more readers than your local newspaper.

What does this have to do with NCLB? Our children are growing up in a world where outside of school they have the tools to have a voice, and even more importantly, the expectation that they can have a say.  NCLB represents the opposite: what matters is the standard-makers' ideas, and the students' task is to learn those.  Certainly, we want our children to engage with the vast knowledge that we share and value as a society.  However, to paraphrase Deborah Meier, we need to practice the HABITS of democracy, which is different than simply acquiring knowledge ABOUT democracy and all the things that go with it.  And those habits include the hard work of engaging with other people's ideas -- in other words, democratic discourse.

Since democratic discourse depends on the ability of ordinary people to speak and to be taken seriously, the rise of blogging and other web 2.0 practices has the *potential* to increase the quality and quantity of democratic discourse.  However, it won't happen automatically, and if we want people to acquire the habits of "citizenship 2.0," we had better start practicing democracy it at *every* level of schooling.

My group at the University of Michigan, Interactive Communications & Simulations, has been quietly developing and running programs that, seen from this angle, are profoundly tied to the key practices at the core of democratic communities. Sometimes, in order to highlight the challenges of these practices, we have created "pretend" communities or even intentionally dysfunctional ones, but at the core the issue has always been, "how do we listen to other people's voices, and what do we do with those points of view?"  Put another way, we've always strived to create spaces where democratic discourse can happen, even though sometimes those spaces are AROUND the activity rather than WITHIN it.

NCLB, it seems to me, is inherently antithetical to these ideas, especially the idea of listening seriously to students' and teachers' points of view.  And it's not just the top-down nature of the standards or the time that must be devoted to test preparation.  It's the fact that it gives each level of power an excellent excuse not to listen to those below: "You must do this for NCLB, so there's no point in discussing the matter."  And of course, that trickles all the way down.  Not that there weren't plenty of structures in place before NCLB that had the same effect, but now everyone has a bigger stick.

So the basic tenets of NCLB are not really new, even if the scale and scope is.  But as young people learn to use the web more and more as a medium of expression and discourse, the gap between school and popular culture will only increase, and it's young people's hearts and minds that are going to increasingly be left behind.

Posted in  | no comments

Cyberactivism presentation

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Thu, 28 Feb 2008 15:31:53 GMT

Here are the slides from the presentation Gary Weisserman and I did at the 9th Annual Communication and Social Action Conference:

Posted in ,  | no comments

Where Do The Children Play student videos online!

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Fri, 26 Oct 2007 19:43:34 GMT

Michigan Television's outreach site for the Where Do The Children Play project is up, and the student videos are online.  Check it out!

200710261539

Posted in ,  | no comments

GEC students at Peace Jam

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Mon, 15 Oct 2007 13:54:36 GMT

Four students from Genesee Early College attended Peace Jam's "slam" in Kalamazoo on Saturday. 

IMG_2699.JPGIMG_2701.JPG
We had to go through hoops just to get in....

IMG_2704.JPGIMG_2705.JPGIMG_2708.JPG
High school and college students from schools and clubs in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio spent the day in workshops and activities around the theme of "water," while teachers and club leaders attended a curriculum training.

We also learned that the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi will be the featured guest at the capstone gathering in April.  Peace out!

Posted in  | no comments

Give 1 Get 1

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Tue, 25 Sep 2007 21:11:29 GMT

Until now, if you wanted to get your hands (or your kids' hands) on one of the laptops being made for the "One Laptop Per Child" program, you basically had to be the government of a developing country. But for one week in November, individuals in the U.S. can buy one through the Give 1 Get 1 program: For $399 you buy 2 laptops, one for yourself, and one that is donated to a child in a developing nation. (The donation part is even tax deductible.) The laptop itself looks, well, really great, so it's a good bet they will sell out in far less than a week.

Posted in ,  | no comments

Ariel Community Academy

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Mon, 17 Sep 2007 15:26:53 GMT

Interesting school in Chicago, supported by the Ariel mutual funds group, where K-8 students get to invest and manage real money as they study finance and economics:

From their
brochure:

"...Each first-grade class entering the Academy receives a grant of $20,000. As students progress through each grade, they assume increasing responsibility for managing the portfolio. In middle school, the Junior Board of Directors is established to discuss investment performance and make investment decisions on behalf of their class. Upon graduation, the original $20,000 is given to the incoming first-grade class. Any profits accumulated in the account are split in half. One half is given back to the school as a class gift, while the other half is divided among the students as cash or matched contributions to a 529 college savings plan..."



Here's a quick overview, and there's also an article in Time Magazine about the school.

Posted in  | no comments

The Global Program Comic

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Thu, 08 Mar 2007 21:49:06 GMT

Global Program Comic

... by popular request.

Posted in ,  | 1 comment

"A sense of wonderment in every student"

Posted by: Jeff Kupperman Fri, 16 Feb 2007 02:09:44 GMT

Excerpt from tonight's Michigan Student Caucus online chat with SEHS Dean Susanne Chandler:

Q: As a way to improve education in America, Bill and Melinda Gates have spent millions of dollars on creating new types of alternative schools. Some of these focus on science and technology while others focus on giving students specific skill sets. What are your thoughts on implementing alternative or non-traditional types of schools to improve education in Michigan?

A: Yes, I am also following Bill and Melinda Gates in their quest to improve us all (and thank goodness for it). I'm a public school advocate, but within that arena, I'm all for alternative and non-traditional types of education. Frankly, the kinds of education we provide in almost every arena is WAY TOO institutional. For me, it resembles prison. Learning should be fun. That doesn't mean it shouldn't be hard work, but it should also be fun - challenging; sparking curiosity; make kids eyes open wide in wonderment. We're so locked-stepped with standards, it's depressing. What I wouldn't give to open a non-traditional school built on the concept of creating a sense of wonderment in every student.

Posted in ,  | no comments

Older Posts

Older posts: 1 2