Sunday, November 6, 2011
html by hand
Now might be a good time to expand on my mission with this blog. As I alluded to earlier, I've been into social media since before it was a buzzword. I was a myspace baby, and poured my 14-year-old soul onto the pages of my (long since deleted) deadjournal. I collected blogs and networks like bad habits through high school. I incubated with facebook through its infancy, and now that it's spitting pre-teen hissy fits about its privacy I've been praying for any new site with a profile page and a hacksaw to come along and cut the cord.
It's been a messy departure, though. Google+ didn't quite catch on, though it introduced some very competitive features... think easy ways to be selective about which friends you share content with with circles, group video chat with hangouts, and, remarkably, a brief and reasonable privacy policy. facebook's done well to incorporate some of these features in its recent permutations-- more on that later.
So we've seen the way we interact with the web evolve as those interactions have become more analogous to our real-life interactions. It seemed natural that education would soon follow as a facet of social media. I have read about and had the unfortunate opportunity of participating in online ed, so when I first checked out P2PU I was a bit skeptical. What caught my eye about it, though, was its philosophy of being a free and open community which assumes that everyone has something to learn and everyone has something to contribute. What follows from this philosophy and the power of the internet is a large and willing learning-focused community.
Even more interesting in my opinion is the method of assessment: upon the completion of classes, tasks, and challenges, badges are awarded to signify competency. Though this form of assessment may fall short of accreditation for purely academic puposes, it is an interesting approach to learning which might lend credence to non-work or academic-based "experience" that individuals might want to claim on resumes or in applications to higher education. If given a chance, this might go far as a viable way of crediting people for their skills... and if not, it might at least keep some enterprising citizens of the web engaged in their education.
That's where I'm entering the picture. Twenty-something, freshly (and fortunately) in the workforce, not quite willing to let go of my self-development in favor of my salary yet. I've begun taking classes and challenges at P2PU to supplement my daily article-reading and self study pursuits, and I've found this to be a good way for me to keep myself focused. I'll be posting intermittently about my assignments (some assignments require you to post about them; one assignment was to create a blog, hence the aforementioned "kick-in-the-ass"), as well as my take on the direction of social media and the world wide interwebs. As I post more and get my website back together, I'll be migrating this blog over there, so stay tuned! For now, enjoy my hand-written html code, which was painstakingly scrawled out per the Webcraft 101 challenge course I'm winding through on P2PU.
Labels:
bad handwriting,
deadjournal,
facebook,
google+,
p2pu,
social media
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3 comments:
Hi Not Rachel: I hope you enjoy P2PU and completing the School of Webcraft Challenges. While Badges might not get you a job right now, they are certainly becoming popular within the Open Education and Open Web communities. If you want to read about Mozilla, P2PU and other Open Web endeavors, check out my blog at http://www.zythepsary.com :) Happy Learning
Hey Rachel! You should be proud, you are the first blog I have ever read!
Lisa
Hi Rachel,
your blog is really interesting to read so I just wanted to say:"Compliments!"
I am one of those persons who is not able to express myself so well on a blog and my impatience makes me ignore the blogs that are longer than 2 sentences, anyway, your point of view is quite interesting to me, although I could disagree with what you say about Google+. In my opinion G+ is a social network, except it's nothing like FB which doesn't mean it's less functional.
Have fun with P2PU and good luck!:)
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