Exploring Our Digital Identities

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Image CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 Ed Yourdo Ed Yourdon (1944-2016) Exploring our digital identities Catherine Cronin, NUI Galway @catherinecronin #eportfoliohub16 23 March 2016

Transcript of Exploring Our Digital Identities

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Image CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 Ed YourdonEd Yourdon (1944-2016)

Exploring our digital identitiesCatherine Cronin, NUI Galway

@catherinecronin#eportfoliohub16 23 March 2016

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3 #hashtags

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#DIGPED

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#DIGILIT

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#REFUGEES

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Image: CC BY-NC 2.0 Roo Reynolds

Networked Publics

danah [email protected]

space constructed through

networked technologies

the imagined collective which emerges

(people + tech + practice)

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Participatory Culture:low barriers to

artistic expression & civic engagement

strong support for creating & sharing

informal mentorship

members believe their contributions matter

social connection

Henry [email protected]

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multimodalmultimedia ✓ voice / choicenetworked ✓ topic / contentsocial ✓ genre / tonepurposeful ✓ space / placecollaborative ✓ time / durationagentic

Participatory Cultureliteracy practices

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“I don’t think education is about centralized instruction anymore; rather, it is the process [of] establishing oneself as a node in a broad network of distributed creativity.”

@Joi Ito (2011)

Slide: CC-BY-SA catherinecronin Image: CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 yobink

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Networked participatory scholarship is the emergent practice of scholars’ use of participatory technologies and online social networks to share, reflect upon, critique, improve, validate, and further their scholarship...

In courses organized as networks… course activity takes place in distributed online fora. This type of online course breaks away from the norm of 20th century university scholarship by positioning knowledge around social connections rather than around content, enabling scholars to re-envision teaching instruction, their role as teachers, and the ways that knowledge is acquired.”

Veletsianos & Kimmons (2012)@veletsianos

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networkededucators

networkedstudents

Physical Spaces

Bounded Online Spaces

Open Online Spaces

Higher Education

Image: CC BY-SA 2.0 Catherine Cronin, built on original Networked Teacher image by Alec Couros

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Image CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 maistora

we wear many different hats…

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personal professional

private public

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WHO YOU SHARE with

context collapse

WHO YOU SHARE as

digital identity

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about.me/catherinecronin

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Learners need to practice and experiment with different ways of enacting their identities, and adopt subject positions through different social technologies and media.

These opportunities can only be supported by academic staff who are themselves engaged in digital practices and questioning their own relationship with knowledge.

- Keri Facer & Neil Selwyn

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Image: CC BY-SA 2.0 William Murphy

“We have to build our half of the bridge…” Colm McCann

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Thank you!Catherine Cronin

@catherinecroninslideshare.net/cicronin

about.me/catherinecronin

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Referencesboyd, danah (2010) Social network sites as networked publics: Affordances, dynamics, and implications, In Papacharissi, Z. (ed.), Self: Identity, Community, and Culture on Social Network Sites, Routledge, New York.

Digital Pedagogy Lab www.digitalpedagogylab.com/ @digpedlab

Facer, Keri & Selwyn, Neil (2010). Social networking: Key messages from the research. In R. Sharpe, H. Beetham & S. de Freitas (Eds.) Rethinking Learning For A Digital Age.

Ito, Joi (2011, December 5) In an open-source society, innovating by the seat of our pants. The New York Times.

Jenkins, Henry (2006) Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: Media Education for the 21st Century. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Chicago.

Miller, Danny (2013). Future Identities report. Foresight Project, DR2.

Stewart, Bonnie (2016) Academic Twitter: The intersection of orality and literacy in scholarship? Slideshare.

Veletsianos, George & Kimmons, Royce (2012) Networked participatory scholarship: Emergent techno-cultural pressures toward open and digital scholarship in online networks. Computers & Education, 58(2), pp. 766–774.

White, David, et al (2014) Evaluating digital services: A visitors and residents approach. Jisc infoKit.