Wednesday, 14 November 2007
Dinosaurs, Doctors and Collective Autonomy
An interesting juxtaposition came my way this week.
On one side was the post by Don Ledingham on the prospects of achieving a ‘doctoral profession’ in Scottish teaching; on the other was an article in The Australian, Murdoch’s national paper in his native country, entitled, ‘In pursuit of a dinosaur’. The latter asks whether the very notion of the PhD is outmoded, a ‘dinosaur from a previous age of elite education’? Interestingly, the author’s answer is, “Yes, but so what?” Good answer.
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
Denied the Right to Teach
Many of those I spoke to at the ASLA Conference in Adelaide over the past few days mentioned that their greatest frustration in the classroom or school library is the culture of arbitrary censorship that prevails amongst so many education network administrators. It is a theme that I and many others have returned to again and again, and a recent open letter from Doug Johnson goes over the well-worn ground yet again. As Doug states, this is a fundamental question of intellectual freedom, but one
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
The Bedroom as Classroom
The bedroom of the average connected young person today is a much more powerful learning environment than most classrooms in most schools.
Think about it.
In the comfort of their bedrooms, connected learners can access all the information they wish, freed, mostly, from the petty and pointless restrictions that are be placed in their way by most classroom connections. They can communicate and collaborate freely with their friends, near and far, when they choose, in the way they choose, using
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
iPod Touch & iPhone: their significance for education
With the official launch of the iPhone in the UK this week (9th November), it is interesting to look at the significance of the iPhone and the iPod touch to education worldwide.
The iPhone will, certainly, raise the bar in mobile phone design (notwithstanding Apple’s control freakery in relation to connectivity and contracts for the device), just as the iPod has done for MP3 players over the past six years. While no iPod-killer has yet appeared on the scene, there can be no doubt that the