Learning Through Digital Media
Experiments in Technology and Pedagogy
Edited by Trebor Scholz
Learning Through Digital Media is now available!
This publication is the product of a collaboration that started in the fall of 2010 when a total of eighty New School faculty, librarians, students and staff came together to think about teaching and learning with digital media. These conversations inspired this collection of essays, which will be disseminated as printed book, free book for various eReaders and a media-rich website where essays will be added and removed over time.
Released under a Creative Commons license and published by the Institute for Distributed Creativity in the Politics of Digital Culture Book Series, the essays selected for this rigorously peer-reviewed publication were assessed by the Series’ Advisory Board, the editor and a network of peers on MediaCommons.
The open peer review process took place on MediaCommons, an all-electronic scholarly publishing network focused on the field of Media Studies developed in partnership with the Institute for the Future of the Book and the NYU Libraries. Varying from informal feedback to in-depth critical reflections, we received 155 comments by dozens of reviewers. The authors started the review process by commenting on each other’s texts, followed by invited scholars, and finally, an intensive social media campaign helped to solicit comments from the public at large.
This publication is part of the lead-up to Mobility Shifts, an International Summit about the Future of Learning (The New School, October 2011).
[Note: The essay drafts have now been removed from public visibility at the editor's request, but the drafts and comments remain available to students and researchers interested in the process through which the publication came into being. For access to those drafts, please email MediaCommons at editors AT mediacommons DOT futureofthebook DOT org.]
Recent Comments in this Document
November 2, 2011 at 1:54 pm
Hi, Katherine. You may want to contact the editor directly about this question, though I’d love to have that discussion take place here! –K.
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November 2, 2011 at 12:39 pm
Could you say a little more about why the open review essays were removed? I’m disappointed not to find the process archived here — for the purposes of future discussions of open review modes. I assume the reasons for doing this were substantive and strong or the essays would not have been removed.
Thanks,
Katherine
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April 2, 2011 at 8:42 am
I agree completely, Michael; alas, this was the editor’s choice. Perhaps with enough support from other authors we might be able to make the drafts public again…?
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March 25, 2011 at 3:04 pm
It is too bad that all of the chapters are no longer online, as the process is so much part of the product. You should consider making them back available.
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February 21, 2011 at 3:22 pm
[...] An alternative to a learning site like iLearn might look something like Jon Ippolito’s “The Pool,” which I blogged about a couple of weeks ago. In this system, students help one another [...]
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February 12, 2011 at 11:08 am
[...] technology and producing it. I came across a cool article by Jeffrey MCClurken called “Learning through Digital Media: Teaching and Learning with Omeka: Discomfort, Play and Creating Publ…,” which questions the common notion that digital natives somehow intuitively get digital media. [...]
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February 8, 2011 at 7:54 pm
I was also one of the “What is this for?” people on Wave. I tried it in a number of creative/collaborative ways, and it just got… muddled. We thought a simple wiki, forum, or listserve might work just as well. In theory, Wave promised to serve all of these functions in one handy application, but it was a bit overwhelming and the learning curve was steep.
Of course now after reading your article, I realize Wave would have been the perfect platform for similar ideas I’d had for tech-incorporating pedagogy! As a Teaching Assistant, I’m trying to think of ways to, well, assist. My supervising professor is a bit of a technophobe and my students are digital natives – a collaborative note-taking and discussion forum is exactly the kind of thing I’d hoped to create.
I wonder though how effective this project would be on a larger scale (our survey class has 90 students) and without the technology accessible to every student. I wouldn’t want to create a situation where lazy students could simply piggyback on the hard work of other students (any more than they do already!)
Either way, very informative and enlightening article! Maybe now I can start to look for other avenues of creating a similar environment…
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February 8, 2011 at 7:43 pm
[...] article, “When Teaching Becomes an Interaction Design Task: Networking the classroom with collaborative blo… had many positive aspects and my general impression is that Zer-Aviv understands the debates [...]
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February 8, 2011 at 6:23 pm
The interesting thing too is that YouTube’s actual police force is compiled in three ways. The first, there computer system is able to play almost instantly the media which you have uploaded and run it against auditory/video matches/etc. to police whether copyright infringement has occurred, second it has actual people filtering and monitoring un/flagged content and comments, and finally the mob like factor of the audience is objectionable because it can, referable to its social biases, flag/object to videos they don’t like. For example, there was several years back a series of anti-semitism carried out by Islamic online groups through YouTube — they would flag news Jewish news videos/hand operated camera videos that had been uploaded depicting the aftermath of a terrorist bombing. The monitors would take the video off, even when it expressly didn’t show any inappropriate content. Either CNN or BBC had mentioned it briefly, but the determining factor on WHO polices YouTube the most (the mob) was never fully brought up.
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February 8, 2011 at 6:09 pm
This is interesting because the activism present within a YouTube Paradigm likely reflects the same capitalist activism seen in day to day, “reality,” life.
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