Fashion Institute of Technology photographer Jessica Wynne‘s “Don Not Erase” project documents the beautiful chalkboards of mathematicians, which will be collected in a book from Princeton University Press in 2020 (Christmas 2020 will be a lot simpler for me as a result).
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Tag: pedagogy
A brilliant, simple exercise to teach privacy fundamentals
Kate Klonick, an assistant professor at St John’s Law School, teaches an Information Privacy course for second- and third-year law students; she devised a wonderful and simply exercise to teach her students about “anonymous speech, reasonable expectation of privacy, third party doctrine, and privacy by obscurity” over the spring break.
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How to use science fiction to teach tech ethics
Science fiction writer/lawyer Casey Fiesler is a maven in the field of tech ethics education (she maintains the amazing spreadsheet of tech-ethics syllabi); she uses science fiction stories as a jumping-off point for her own classroom discussions of ethics in technology.
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EFF’s Security Education Companion: essential materials for people helping their communities practice good information security
EFF has just launched its new Announcing the Security Education Companion, a beautifully organized, clearly written set of materials to help “people who would like to help their communities learn about digital security but are new to the art of security training.”
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German free school teaches without grades, timetables or lesson plans
The Evangelical School Berlin Centre is a private “free” school — that is, it costs money to go there, but the tuition is on a means-tested sliding scale, and the students enjoy enormous educational freedom — that has drawn attention thanks to the exceptional performance of its graduating students.
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How a mathematician teaches “Little Brother” to a first-year seminar
Derek Bruff teaches a first-year college writing seminar in mathematics, an unusual kind of course that covers a lot of ground, and uses a novel as some of its instructional material — specifically, my novel Little Brother.
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A conversation about privacy and trust in open education
For Open Education Week, Jonathan Worth convened a conversation about privacy and trust in open education called Speaking Openly in which educators and scholars recorded a series of videos responding to one another’s thoughts on the subject.
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Designing curriculum for people doing stuff, not people passing tests
Joi Ito, director of the MIT Media Lab, posts a personal essay called “Reading the dictionary,” which describes the traditional school curriculum as equivalent to asking students to read the dictionary or an encyclopedia from cover to cover. He contrasts this with his own style of learning, “interest-driven learning” (“code for ‘short attention span’ or ‘not a good long term planner'”) and ruminates on what a curriculum designed for people like him would look like.
Personally, I find the dictionary, the encyclopedia and videos online as excellent resources when I need to learn something. I find the need to learn things every day in the course of pursuing interests, preparing for meetings and interacting with exciting people. I’m extremely motivated to learn and I learn a lot.
I love the videos of professors, amateurs and instructors putting their courseware online. They are a great resource for interest driven learners like me. However, I wonder whether we should be structuring the future of learning as online universities where you are asked to do the equivalent of reading the encyclopedia from cover to cover online. Shouldn’t we be looking at the Internet as an amazing network enabling “The Power of Pull” and be empowering kids to learn through building things together rather than assessing their ability to complete courses and produce the right “answers”?
This is really similar to my own approach to learning, and Joi’s description chimes with me and recalls the best learning experiences of my own life.