September 2009 Archives

"... we're in the midst of a literacy revolution the likes of which we haven't seen since Greek civilization."
-- Andrea Lunsford, in Wired article "Clive Thompson on the New Literacy"

Preface
The web log, or blog, opens up new possibilities for teaching and learning by cultivating social communities of education. The power of blogging as a pedagogical practice is rooted in the recognition that meaning is made and knowledge created in social interaction. As Dewey put it in Democracy and Education:

"Schools require for their full efficiency more opportunity for conjoint activities in which those instructed take part, so that they may acquire a social sense of their own powers and of the materials and applications used" (Democracy and Education, 37).
As a sophisticated yet simple publishing platform, the blog offers a powerful opportunity for conjoint activities of learning.  By opening a rich, diverse and broadly accessible site of dialogical engagement, a blog is able to cultivate dynamic social contexts of communication in which a symbiotic relationship between teaching and learning becomes possible.

The Pedagogy of Blogging
This presentation is illustrates the power of blogging as a pedagogical practice by focusing first on what a blog is, second, on the dynamic structure of a blog, and third, on how this dynamic structure can be leveraged to cultivate robust learning communities. 

In the context of ethics education, this presentation seeks to articulate how blogging allows faculty not merely to deliver content to students about ethical theory and practice, but also to perform the virtues of inter-human ethical interaction with students in light of the theories and practices under consideration.

Blogging thus allows us to perform the ethics we teach.


The Virtues of Blogging
Some Examples/Possibilities
The Ethics, from the Rock blog seeks to engage in public deliberation concerning pressing ethical questions with students, faculty, alumni and the broader local and global community:

Diversity of Expression 

Other Resources

CpL PSU Live.jpgOne of the most rewarding aspects of my Teaching and Learning with Technology Faculty Fellowship has been the recognition my efforts in this area are beginning to gain.

Last week, my work over the summer was featured on PSU Live, Penn State's Official News Source, with a very nice article written by Mary Janzen highlighting the fellowship and specifically the development of the Digital Dialogue podcast.

Over the course of the summer, the Digital Dialogue Podcast (iTunes link) has received a lot of publicity and recognition from the institutions with which my guests on the podcast are associated.

Boston College highlighted my discussion with Marina McCoy about the importance of attentive listening for the cultivation of dialogue on their main web portal.

Digital Dialogue episode seven with Leigh Johnson on Humanism was recognized by the Dean's Office at Rhodes College where Leigh is Assistant Professor of Philosophy.  A post on the Dean's Blog emphasizes her appearance on the podcast as one of the ways Leigh makes "philosophy a living, breathing discipline."

After the discussion Shannon Sullivan and I had on the Digital Dialogue episode eight on Noelle McAfee's book, Democracy and the Political Unconscious, the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, where Noelle serves as a faculty member, added the episode to their podcast feed of interviews related to the Institute.  They also added it to their Facebook page. Noelle herself highlighted it on her blog: GonePublic: Philosophy, Politics, & Public Life.

Ongoing Connections
Below is a running feed tagged as links related to the Socratic Politics in Digital Dialogue project:

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