What do I think? You Choose.

06.18.10 Posted in Media, Moxley, Social Media, education, elearning by Shelley

After reading The Future of Thinking: Learning Institutions in a Digital Age and “The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age,” I was left feeling extremely optimistic and extremely frustrated. There were so many things to like about these reports, yet I found myself raging against many of the points the authors made. The [...]


On Why I [heart] Henry Jenkins

06.14.10 Posted in Moxley, Social Media, conferences by Shelley

Last week I attended Games, Learning, and Society 6.0, a small conference about learning and games. One of the highlights was the Henry Jenkins keynote (and definitely the David Wiley keynote, which I’ll talk about in another post). In his white paper, Jenkins talks about the new skills required in our emerging participatory culture. Some [...]


A Matter of Perspective

06.02.10 Posted in Moxley, Reading, Social Media, collaboration, education by Shelley

In “Why Heather Can Write,” Henry Jenkins (2006) writes, “Gee’s focus is on the support system that emerges around the individual learner, while Pierre Levy’s focus is on the ways that each learner contribues to the larger collective intelligence; but both are describing parts of the same experience…” (p. 192). This seems to be the [...]


A Small Step for Kindle

06.02.10 Posted in Reading, education, kindle by Shelley

You know I can’t resist even the smallest piece of Kindle news since I adore my Kindle so much. So imagine my excitement this morning when I visited my local newspaper’s website and found this article (which, incidentally, has noting to do with the image I chose. This newsweek article is from a couple of [...]


Is Connectivism a Theory for Learning?

05.27.10 Posted in Moxley, Social Media by Shelley

I really enjoyed (virtually) meeting George Siemens yesterday. He has a unique and relevant point of view that is direly needed in Higher Ed. right now. I see tremendous value in knowledge networks and concur that it is the responsibility of educators to help students create networks that can support them in their learning environments. [...]


Digital Illiteracy

03.24.10 Posted in Media, Social Media, education, literacy by Shelley

It is really unlike me to write two posts in one day, but I’ve been thinking about an embarrassing moment for a colleague and how it is actually a lesson about digital literacy. So, at the risk of embarrassing him or her further, I am going to share the story. Today on the ITForum listserv, [...]