Friday, November 14, 2008

Building the plane while it's flying

One of the courses I currently teach, titled Justice and Peace, involves a semester project in which students create a small (imaginary) business based on the themes covered in class. Those themes include building community, dignity of work and workers, ending poverty, environmental ethics, solidarity, and so on. The students have been assigned actual counties in the United States which have been identified as impoverished. The task is to create a business that not only could operate in an economic structure based on capitalism, but also meet the needs of communities which are not benefiting from that economic structure. And they need to do this in a just manner. This project is by no means my brainchild. It is an adaptation of projects I have assigned in the past, which were adaptations of projects my colleagues have done, which were adaptations of...well, you get the picture.

So, in keeping with the process of adaptation, I want to incorporate the use of network tools and other technologies in the project. Here's a general overview of my students' "to do list" for the project:
  • research the culture and needs of the assigned communities
  • decide on the product/service they want to provide
  • determine power structure of their company within itself and in relationship to the community
  • design a single digital portfolio that provides an overview of the business and how it places the human being and the common good at the focus of the economic activity
  • Design a "pitch" and deliver it to a "group of investors" (made up of other teachers, staff, and students)
We have perused the websites of companies like Annie's Homegrown, Ben and Jerry's and others to become familiar with businesses that have the common good in mind. The students have investigated communities through census documents, county profiles and chambers of commerce. The challenge is to effectively use network technology for these and other facets of the project.

It's mid-November and the project has, of course, already been assigned. But it's never too late improve something like this. It's like building a plane while it's flying. Besides, I'll be assigning it to a fresh crop of students next semester.

I'm wondering what works for others out there who are experimenting with network learning.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Change abounds!

It's the classroom, stupid.

About a year or so ago, a good friend expressed how he wants to change the classroom. By that I think he meant every classroom. Though he doesn't physically work in a classroom, he works to create the hardware to aid that change in the educational realm.

A couple of hours ago, eyes were opened to that manifested change, or at least how it can be made possible. Will Richardson, who maintains Weblogg-ed, spoke to a group of educators who have a progressive approach to using technology in the classroom. His message centered around network literacy and how networks can be used effectively in education. He practices what he preaches. That is, for educators (or anyone else interested understanding network literacy) his stuff is well worth checking out.