Tuesday, January 15, 2008

wRappin' it up...

I've enjoyed the learning challenges posed by our 2.0 exercise. A repeated, or follow-up, exercise would benefit from a smoother process, perhaps created using the feedback of a beta testing team. It's been exhilarating to hear the buzz of group learning, but it's been sobering to witness episodes of even well-intentioned coercion. We have not quite met the challenge of radical trust implicit in self-directed learning.

The journey to learn 30 things is a long haul, perhaps too long. I believe 23 Things are preferable to 30 Things. I think a course of 10 Things, with time to synthesize and extrapolate, is even better. We have missed opportunities for thematic dialogue and construction of meaning, especially across the generational spectrum.

Beyond the tools and techniques (the Things), there are concepts raised that bear rumination. There is, for example, an existential toll exacted by multiple creations of self--all those profiles, usernames, passwords. All those identities spinning centrifugally from one's core entail cost and energy. It would be profitable to incorporate some discussion about these concepts into the program, if only to better explain to the public the human cost and benefit of using 2.0 tools.

Our 2.0 exercise has helped to underscore for me the importance of approaching technological education in a holistic manner. It is not the technology, or even the technologically proficient, that directs our course of enlightenment. It is the force of our institutional principles - access, equity, inquiry, and dialogue - that turn the keys of our professional development and our community service.

Peace out.

3 comments:

Cindy Hart said...

Congrats! You completed 30 things, collaborated with peers and evolved as a lifelong learner. Well done!

Diane Wetterlin said...

I'm very glad you finished and I must tell you (again) that I truly love your command of the language and your use of words! Thank you - you always make me think!

Matthew R said...

You have an easy way of striking at the heart of this learning program. I too would have preferred a more meditative stroll through the different exercises and a dialogue with my colleagues both in-house and at other libraries.

The times of joy brought on by 2.0 were not my solitary blog posts but the conversations had away from the computer about the implications of these tools and the library setting. That these talks were limited in a supposedly collaborative environment of online social connectivity is a disappointing missed opportunity.

And yes I completely sympathize with the toll of creating so many profiles for so many sites. Stretched thin it is easy to understand a step back from so many new tools and a concentration on the ones that work now.