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Mind, Heart, and Hands: Lifelong Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age. Jon Udell OCWC 2009 April 2009. John Leek’s newest book. John Leeke online, demonstrating his revolutionary technique for interior storm windows. Themes of John’s work (and mine). Narration of work - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Mind, Heart, and Hands:Lifelong Teaching and Learning
in the Digital Age
Jon UdellOCWC
April 2009
John Leek’s newest book
John Leeke online, demonstrating his revolutionary technique for interior storm windows
Narration of work
Online apprenticeship
Video for knowledge sharing
Themes of John’s work (and mine)
The once (and future?) model for education
In the pre-industrial era, education and work were:
Observable
Connected
In the post-industrial era, they are:
Not observable
Not connected
Walter Lewin’s Physics 8.02
Now teaching is observable and connected.
Good!
How can we observe learning and work?
How can we connect with learners and workers?
What is it like to be:
A physicist?
An engineer?
A nurse?
And what about work?But what about learning?
What is it like to be:
A physics student?
A engineering student?
A nursing student?
Observable education: Theory
“What if course portals, typically little more than gateways to course activities and materials, became instead course catalysts: open, dynamic representations of ‘engagement streams’ that demonstrate and encourage deep learning?” Gardner Campbell
Observable education: Practice
Jim Groom
Posted by: JennyTagged: American Studies 312
Observable work: Joe Gregorio
Theory Practice
Observable work: Jon Galloway
Hopefully it’s helpful to you, but I know that there are folks out there with some real skill at diagnosing application performance issues, and there are better debugging tools available, too. How would you go about diagnosing something like this?
Troubleshooting an Intermittent .NET High CPU problem
Observable work: Chris Gemignani
Task: Recreate a New York Times infographic using Excel
New York Times version Excel version
Looking over the master’s shoulder
(mistakes included!)
Why do software people work observably? (1)
We created, and are comfortable with, the technologies of observable work:
Web publishing
Blogging
Microblogging
Digital video
Publish/subscribe networks
Why do software people work observably? (2)
Our work processes, and products, are fully digital:
Design discussion
Source code
Documentation
Tests
The actual software itself
Why do software people work observably? (3)
We practice, and value:
Feedback
Iterative refinement
Testable outcomes
Why don’t (most) academics work observably?
Work processes and products only recently network-observable
Medieval publishing, peer review, reward systems
“I wouldn't want to publish a half-baked idea”
Exception to the rule: Jean-Claude Bradley
Why don’t (most) professionals work observably?
Work processes and products only recently network-observable
No culture of publication, narration
“I’m too busy to blog”
Exception to the rule: John Halamka
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