Our collective intelligence
Posted by: Dennis Harter in 21st century learner, Curriculum, ProD, Web 2.0Will Richardson, Karl Fisch, and Anne Smith presented outside of Philadelphia on the Read/Write web in a session called, “21st Century Education: 20/20 Vision for Schools”. In preparing for that, they put out a plea to edu-bloggers to chime in with tips, sites, or encouragement for the educators in seeing the direction that we believe education needs to go.
They have a wiki for this which is quickly developing into a fine example of the power of our Web to tap into the collective intelligence/knowledge of people - in this case the edu-bloggers.
As Will suggests in his blog, our contributions prove the very point we try to make about the power of the current and future web.
In essence, we want them to walk away understanding the power of connections that can reach far beyond the classroom.
Today, Justin, Kim, and I were de-briefing after a UStream presentation with the FLNW guys and Justin mentioned how important that online community is for the unconverted in helping them to see that lots of people out there are “getting it” and on board. That online community’s participation - whether through a blog comment, a wiki contribution, or a live chat presence - give credibility to the very tools that we extoll in our presentations. That presence does more for getting teacher buy-in than anything we could say. It’s like seeing the impact of learning happening right before their eyes.
So get on that wiki and add! Prove that the collaborative power of this technology can tap into the intelligence of the many.
I am already adding that single page to my Delicious - it’s going to grow into a fine resource.
Thanks to all of you us.

photo by jurvetson, found on Flickr Creative Commons
Technorati Tags: collectiveintelligence web2.0
Tags: alwayslearning, collectiveintelligence, education, medagogy, ustream, web2.0, wiki, willrichardson


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January 17th, 2008 at 4:37 pm
[...] Richardson followed up his request for contributions to his wiki page mentioned in my last post with a thank you and an expression of appreciation for the power of people getting together to [...]
February 13th, 2008 at 10:45 pm
First let me welcome you to Ustream, and also say we are thrilled that the educational community has accepted Ustream for the remarkable education tool that it was originally designed to be. If anyone has questions about ustream and how to stream your event, feel free to contact us at support@ustream.tv, ustreamtech@yahoo.com or stop by the Ustream Users Community Forum http://www.ustream.tv/channel/ustream-users-community-forum, for tips and techniques