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Title: New technologies and


1
New technologies and troublesome knowledge how
Web 2.0 is transforming HE
  • Ray Land, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow

2
  • Web 2.0
  • "an attitude rather than a technology".
  • Tim OReilly
  • Tom Anderson, founder of MySpace, an arts
    graduate (film criticism)

3
  • Theres something going on
  • And you dont know what it is
  • Do you,
  • Mr Jones?
  • Bob Dylan

4
  • more than 60m blogs on the internet
  • 175,000 new blogs are created every day (two
  • every second).
  • dominant languages are Chinese, Japanese
  • and English
  • there are 1.6m blog posts a day.
  • MySpace the busiest website in the world
  • (115m registered users)
  • YouTube grows in value more than 100m a
  • month
  • Source Technorati 2006

5
  • 62 of content created by users under age 21
    is
  • generated by someone they know
  • 57 of teenagers create content for the
    Internet
  • 73 of students use the internet more than the
    library
  • teenagers average four hours a day on
    television,
  • the web and SMS

6
  • Web 2.0
  • User-generated content
  • (social software the read/write web)
  • 2 Speed of access and delivery

7
  • Print culture and digital textuality
  • Web 2.0, the re-writable web
  • A shift in the nature of knowledge
  • The challenge to authority
  • Implications for pedagogy
  • Textuality and temporality
  • Fast and slow time

8

Putting web 2.0 to work new pedagogies for new
learning spaces
Dr Siân Bayne, University of Edinburgh Dr Akiko
Hemmi, University of Edinburgh Prof Ray Land,
University of Strathclyde Funded by Higher
Education Academy UK
9
text stability individual private
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image mutability collective public
14
  • The VLE increasingly seen as
  • Web 1.0, as an ordering strategy
  • (Land Bayne 2006)

15
web as application architecture of
participation user-owned data rich, interactive
interfaces no walled gardens
16
Taken from Dempsey, L.The (Digital) Library
Environment Ten Years After http//www.ariadne.a
c.uk/issue46/dempsey/
17
Collective
  • Wikipedia
  • Digg
  • Katrinalist.net
  • People Finder Project
  • Open Wetware

18
The Great Northern War - Wikipedia
Great Northern War From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia Jump to navigation, search This is
an article about the 18th century war. For wars
with similar names see Northern Seven Years' War
(15631570), Northern Wars (16551661) and the
Flagstaff War (18451846) in New Zealand
Great Northern War From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia Jump to navigation, search This is
an article about the 18th century war. For wars
with similar names see Northern Seven Years' War
(15631570), Northern Wars (16551661) and the
Flagstaff War (18451846) in New Zealand
Great Northern War Great Northern War
Part of Russo-Swedish Wars Part of Russo-Swedish Wars

Combatants Combatants
SwedenOttoman Empire (1710-1714) RussiaDenmark-NorwayPolandSaxonylater alsoPrussiaHannover(England, the Netherlands)
Commanders Commanders
Karl XII of SwedenAhmed III Peter the GreatAugust IIFrederik VI of Denmark
Date February 1700 - 1721
Location Europe
Result Russian victory
Date February 1700 - 1721
Location Europe
Result Russian victory
  • Between 1560 and 1660, Sweden created a Baltic
    empire centered on the Gulf of Finland and
    comprising the provinces of Karelia, Ingria,
    Estonia, and Livonia. During the Thirty Years'
    War Sweden gained tracts in Germany as well,
    including Western Pomerania, Wismar, the Duchy of
    Bremen, and Verden. At the same period Sweden
    conquered Danish and some Norwegian provinces
    north of the Sound (1645 1660). These victories
    may be ascribed to a good training of the army,
    which was far more professional than most
    continental armies, and could maintain much
    higher rates of fire due to constant training
    with their firearms. However, Sweden was unable
    to support and maintain her army when the war was
    prolonged and the costs of warfare could not be
    passed to occupied countries.
  • In 1617 Sweden's gains in the Treaty of Stolbovo
    had deprived Russia of direct access to the
    Baltic Sea, and internal strife during much of
    the first half of the 1600s meant that they were
    never in a position to challenge Sweden for these
    gains. Russian fortunes reversed during the later
    half of the 17th century, notably with the rise
    to power of Peter the Great, who looked to
    address the earlier losses and re-establish a
    Baltic presence. In the late 1690s, the
    adventurer Johann Patkul managed to ally Russia
    with Denmark and Saxony and in 1700 the three
    powers attacked.

                                                
        Battle of Poltava as painted by Denis
Martens the Younger in 1726 The Great Northern
War was the war fought between a coalition of
Russia, Denmark-Norway, and Saxony-Poland (from
1715 also Prussia and Hanover) on one side and
Sweden with some help from the Ottoman Empire on
the other side from 1700 to 1721. It started by a
coordinated attack on Sweden by the coalition in
1700, and ended in 1721 with the conclusion of
the Treaty of Nystad, and the Stockholm treaties.
A result of the war was the end of the Swedish
Empire. Russia supplanted Sweden as the dominant
Power on the Baltic Sea and became a major player
in European politics.
                                                
        Battle of Poltava as painted by Denis
Martens the Younger in 1726 The Great Northern
War was the war fought between a coalition of
Russia, Denmark-Norway, and Saxony-Poland (from
1715 also Prussia and Hanover) on one side and
Sweden with some help from the Ottoman Empire on
the other side from 1700 to 1721. It started by a
coordinated attack on Sweden by the coalition in
1700, and ended in 1721 with the conclusion of
the Treaty of Nystad, and the Stockholm treaties.
A result of the war was the end of the Swedish
Empire. Russia supplanted Sweden as the dominant
Power on the Baltic Sea and became a major player
in European politics.
Contents hide 1 Background 2 Swedish victories 3 Russian victories 4 The Fall of Stralsund 5 Conclusion 6 References 7 See also 8 External links
Contents hide 1 Background 2 Swedish victories 3 Russian victories 4 The Fall of Stralsund 5 Conclusion 6 References 7 See also 8 External links
edit Background
edit Background
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  • penntags

Taken from Dempsey, L.The (Digital) Library
Environment Ten Years After http//www.ariadne.a
c.uk/issue46/dempsey/
24
Personal
  • me media
  • Time Life magazine You
  • YouTube
  • MySpace
  • FaceBook
  • Flickr

25
  • If you're not on MySpace, you don't exist
  • the collectivity fad
  • Digital Maoism (Lanier)
  • the hive mind (Kelly)

26
These sections of the web break away from the
page metaphor. Rather than following the notion
of the web as book, they are predicated on
microcontent. Blogs are about posts, not pages.
Wikis are streams of conversation, revision,
amendment, and truncation. Alexander, 2006
27
  • open text loss of closure and fixity of printed
    page a shift in epistemology
  • shift in medium implies shift in reading mode,
    from literacy to multiliteracy, technoliteracy,
    visual sophistication, multimodality (Kress)

28
the body of the book the body of knowledge
makes it stable and graspable volatility and
instability of digital text infinitely
editable, instantly distributable, methods for
imposing fixity and authorial control (pdf, page
scanning, restricted access) work against rather
than with the mode of digitality
29
Shifts in epistemology how Web 2.0 is
transforming HE
  • process over artefact
  • consensus over authority
  • exploration over argument
  • open text / the rigour of no completion
  • convenience speed over quality
  • permanent state of new ideas /emergence
  • knowledge network/ access over possession
  • public/private continuum

30
authority
  • gatekeeping mark posters exploration of how
    digitisation shifts history as a discipline
    breaking down boundaries if all historical
    resources are googled, if all history work is
    instantly publishable, how does that affect who
    counts as an historian? or a journalist? what is
    the role of the university, of the discipline?

31
institutional control
  • textual instability as a reflection of
    instability in the universitys idea of itself
    (Barnett)
  • media implicated in the universitys inability to
    claim universality in its pursuit of Truth

32
  • supercomplexity
  • we now live in a world of radical contestation
    and challengeability, a world of uncertainty and
    unpredictability. In such a world, all such
    notionsas truth, fairness, accessibility and
    knowledgecome in for scrutiny. In such a process
    of continuing reflexivity, fundamental concepts
    do not dissolve but, on the contrary, become
    systematically elaborated

33
  • In this process of infinite elaboration,
    concepts are broken open and subjected to
    multiple interpretations and these
    interpretations may, and often do, conflict. As a
    result, we no longer have stable ways even of
    describing the world that we are in the world
    becomes multiple worlds. (Barnett 2005 p.789)

34
  • The risks of Web 2.0
  • The DEFRA wiki

35
Second Life
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textualities and temporalities
  • fast and slow time (Eriksen)

38
The age demanded an image Of its accelerated
grimace, Something for the modern stage Ezra
Pound 1920
39
  • rise of digital information technologies located
    firmly within the neo-liberal ideology of
    globalisation, and seen as caught inexorably
    within a logic of fast time, increasing
    acceleration and exponential growth of
    information.

40
Web 2.0 practices seem caught in an awkward
tension, if not disjunction. The pedagogical
claims made for them seem to be located within,
and to require the integrative and deliberative
logic of, what Eriksen characterises as slow
time.
Slow and fast time (Eriksen)
41
Slow and fast time (Eriksen)
As digital phenomena, however, they increasingly
serve to constitute fast time, can only
accelerate in their future modus operandi, and
reinforce the dromocratic principle that fast
time drives out and occupies the place of slow
time.
42
Our history is the history of acceleration
Virilio, 200051
  • the defining characteristic of early
    twenty-first century society, and an increasing
    source of its hazards, is its relentless
    acceleration and compression of time.

Faster, smaller, cheaper this NASA slogan
could shortly become the watchword of
globalisation itself (Virilio 200066).
Speed is power itselfVirilio 199915
43
the tyranny of the moment - effects of speed
(Eriksen 2001)
  • speed is an addictive drug
  • speed leads to simplification
  • speed creates assembly line (Taylorist) effects
  • speed leads to a loss of precision
  • speed demands space (filling in all the available
    gaps in the lives of others)
  • speed is contagious when experienced in one
    domain the desire for speed tends to spread to
    new domains.
  • gains and losses equal each other out so that
    increased speed does not necessarily even lead to
    greater efficiency.

44
our experience of time in the media conditions of
the internet (Lee Liebenau 2000).
  • Duration (shortening attention spans)
  • Temporal location (internet always on)
  • Sequence (loss of continuity)
  • Deadlines (positioned differently in a task,
    temporal shifts)
  • Cycles (Constantly renegotiated, simultaneuously
    operating)
  • Rhythms (condensing and dispersal of working
    effort new patterns of busy-ness)
  • Presence / absence, co-presence

45
  • death of geography
  • loss of political space
  • advent of universal real time
  • loss of slow time
  • presentified history
  • single gaze of the cyclops
  • erosion of liberty

46
Distanciation (Giddens)
  • The structuring of timespace distanciation
    relies on such social relations as
    presence-availability the organization of
    presence, absence proximity and availability, and
    the degree of copresent activities in relation to
    tele-present activities.

47
  • Notion that students in the digital age are
    never away but permanently networked

48
Questions for learning
  • How do these texts and technologies change the
    way academic knowledge is produced and
    distributed?
  • What forms of technoliteracy are required to
    work in these spaces?
  • How can assessment regimes be re-crafted for
    these volatile spaces?
  • What digital pedagogies will work best in these
    environments?

49
Strangeness as the new universal
  • The new universal is precisely the capacity to
    cope, to prosper and to delight in a world in
    which there are no universals.
  • Barnett, 2005

contestability and challengeability uncertainty
and unpredictability teaching from knowledge to
being
50
Troublesome knowledge
  • These new ways of working, new modes of
    reasoning, new kinds of practice, constitute a
    form of troublesome knowledge (Perkins 1999)
    that arises in the acquisition of threshold
    concepts (Meyer and Land 2006). Web 2.0 to some
    extent represents a liminal state.

51
Impact on physical campus
52
CybraryCity2
53
dark side psychological profiling
  • what we can learn aboutsomeone's psychology from
    their metadata.
  • recent discussion on AoIRpointed to research on
    'What your choice of mp3s says about you'.

54
Blogs as source of socio-demographic data
  • Hello everyone,gt recently I was surfing Russian
    facebook-clone vkontakte.ru and gt decided
    tocount statistics of political preferences. I
    don't consider my gt results togt be valid, so
    I've decided to ask about any thoughts, articles
    etc. gt on thegt validity of blogs as a source of
    socio-demographic data (age, gender,gt location,
    political and religious preferences etc.). While
    I think gt thatgt other interests such as music,
    reading, films etc. are quite gt reliable Igt
    can't say the same about socio-demographic data.
    What do you think?gt Thanks in advance.gt Best
    wishes,gt Alexander xxxxxxxx.gt MA studentgt
    Faculty of Sociologygt Moscow School of Social
    and Economic Sciences (MSSES)gt
    http//www.msses.ru/English/index.html

55
  • ray.land_at_strath.ac.uk
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