Category: EduPunk

I see a dead trend

Actually, it’s not dead.  It’s alive and kicking.  Mike talks about it here.  We do not like to be offended.  We do not like to be different.  Ken talks about being different here.  Yeah, but no.

I suppose we should be grown ups, as Ken suggests.  I suppose we should protect the children, as Mike suggests ironically.  But why is being offended so negative?  It’s a part of life!  And why is being youthful so negative?

Edupunk has been described as being anti-authoritarian, as DIY education (pejoratively) and people have taken offence and told us all to grow up.  We need maturity to be teachers, to be in authority.  But what people see as immaturity, particularly in education, I see as  a joy in learning.  It’s the excitement of the new and the unknown that gets us, gets our blood boiling and spurs us on to greater achievements.

So too our offendedosity (and that is a real word).  It allows us to see other perspectives.  That’s important.  Very very important.

If we protect ourselves from offence, from being different and from new words, I think we well end up poorer, less enriched, no different, zombies in a huge melted pot of sameness.  I like edupunk (now that is a real word, it’s in Wikipedia (and that’s another new word (and how many levels of parenthetical asides can I achieve?)))!

I’d like to see a reverse of this trend to attempt to get sameness.  There used to be a song.  Actually, there used to be many songs.  But the song I’m thinking of was a call to difference, a call to be ourselves.  That song?  Australia, don’t become America![1]  I fear we are headed in that direction, the direction of easy offence, of sameness.  Reactions to this trend, our anti-trend, need to be heard more.  We need more edupunks and more offence, if only to keep people thinking.

And look on the bright side.  At least I didn’t call anyone a Nazi!

  1. But I can never remember who sang it []

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Welcome to EduPunkLand

I’m currently preparing my lecture on Communication for first year Business Informatics students, and we touch upon Semiotics. Now, that’s not an area that I have done a lot of research and reading or even contemplate much, except each semester when I prepare this lecture.

But I was thinking today, as I was going over our brief introduction to semiotics and clarifying, yet again, the concepts and it struck me that the use of EduPunk is used pragmatically, simply to signify that we stand outside ‘traditional’ conceptions of teaching and learning, or learning and teaching, however you order it.

EduPunk-y based on bionicteaching's hands_sun (http://www.flickr.com/photos/bionicteaching/2537045281/)

EduPunk-y based on bionicteaching's hands_sun (http://www.flickr.com/photos/bionicteaching/2537045281/)

I’m not sure if I’d class myself EduPunk or that others would recognise me as EduPunk, but my work with students borders on, if not resides, in EduPunkLand. I use blogs and wikis and delicious and CiteULike and a plethora of other newer technologies as well as some of the older technologies[1]. I push boundaries of teaching and learning in my own practice. I recognise great ideas in the work of others, ideas that look fresh and new and exciting. I sense renewed excitement in the craft of teaching in the ideas emanating from self-confessed EduPunks and the meddlers around the edges of EduPunkLand. I’ve seen people visit EduPunkLand and shake their heads at the mess we create for ourselves and others who wonder at our daring.

But the further we push learning technologies into EduPunkLand and the more we consider how these technologies change our practice, the more we see what EduPunk signifies. And it’s not traditional ‘punk’. And it’s like traditional punk, but not.

It’s new, it’s fresh, it’s exciting.  It’s living in EduPunkLand!

But, having just gone searching for an image to insert in this post, I was reminded of Punky Brewster, because my daughter used to have a jumper that had four different squares of colour on it, it was her Punky Brewster jumper.  This connection has obviously been lurking in my mind because the four corners of colour influenced the WikiEducator logo I designed.  The more I think about it, the more I think that EduPunks are punk in the Punky Brewster feeling-abandoned-looking-for-a-home type way rather than the Punk Rock in-your-face-Sex-Pistols-anti-establishment way.  By that I mean that all of us mavericks in educational technology seem to have stepped out, been abandoned by the hierarchy and looking for connections and a ‘place’ to call our own.

  1. Can I include PowerPoint in the ‘older technologies’? []

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EduPunks or Meddlers

I came across Erica McWilliam’s Unlearning how to teach[1] the other day and just reading the abstract stirred my interest.  The phrase meddler-in-the-middle launched itself at me like a beacon (not bacon) in the dark[2].  Meddler in the middle is (obviously) between sage on the stage and guide on the side.  It struck me as a parallel to what EduPunk seems to be, although EduPunk also seems to not so much as defy definition, but challenge (pre)conceptions.

But what resonates about Erica’s piece is (among a number of things) the sense that the meddler gets the changes occurring around us:

The message from social commentators on workplace and social futures is that many of our young people will be employed in digitally enhanced environments where there are few transportable blueprints for project design and management.[3]

This seems blatantly obvious to me and probably many others, but the application of this to teaching and to ‘unlearning’ how to teach[4], is perhaps where it links with EduPunk comes in, particularly when we consider the whole slew of new learning technology that is out there.  I guess EduPunk is about looking for alternative and more flexible blueprints, perhaps not even blueprints but more purpleprints[5].  But it points to ‘profound implications’ of ‘de-routinisation of present and future work’[6].  This is definitely EduPunk, although phrased in a way that many people will accept[7].

my workspace

There is also a link to the idea of ‘students as co-creators’ which influenced my original move into using wiksi for engaging with students:

Rather than teachers delivering an information product to be ‘consumed’ and fed back by the student, co-creating value would see the teacher and student mutually involved in assembling and dis-assembling cultural products. As co-creators, both would add value to the capacity- building work being done through the invitation to ‘meddle’ and to make errors[8].

This co-creation idea is similar to the ‘remixing’ that is just about everywhere on the web[9].  When students co-create with us, there is more potential to move beyond static notions of knowledge, static ideas, static thought process. Erica refers to Bauman’s ‘liquid-modern social world’[10] which aptly describes the ideas behind both meddlers and edupunks.  The liquidity or fluidity of things around us mean that nothing is as it appears nor as we would have it be.  This is the power of edupunk, meddlers, contructivism, constructionism and a range of other pedagogical frames that are arising.  I think it is time we realised that the ‘stable social world’ is a furphy, and got on with the processes of learning and teaching.

Our teaching and learning habits are useful but they can also be deadly. They are useful when the conditions in which they work are predictable and stable. They are deadly if and when the bottom falls out of the stable social world in and for which we learn[11].

EduPunk is as much a reaction to shifts in our social fabric and technologies as is the idea of being a meddler.  For those of us uncomfortable with the label of ‘edupunk’, perhaps ‘meddler’ is more easy to use and less antagonistic to our peers and colleagues[12].  But, whichever way you look at it, as EduPunk or Meddler, both have the capacity to shift our perceptions and help us acclimatise to the ‘brave new world’ in which we live.  To quote Erica, yet again: To learn is to be confused, uncertain and to fail frequently ((McWilliam, p268)). These are the marks of both EduPunks and meddlers.

  1. McWilliam, Erica (2008) ‘Unlearning how to teach’, Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 45:3, 263 — 269 []
  2. Although, bacon … yum []
  3. McWilliam, p263 []
  4. personally, I hate the word ‘unlearn’, it kind of reminds me of ‘de-programming’ or ‘re-programming’, but I can’t quite put my finger on the cognitive dissonance it creates, but I digress []
  5. If a blueprint is a plan, then we need something less planny and more open to negotiation, hence purpleprints or any other colour print, you pick, I’m sticking with purple! []
  6. McWilliam, p264 []
  7. Given that there seems to be two camps – both for and against as well as another camp who has never heard of EduPunk before, it seems that acceptance is an ‘issue’. []
  8. McWilliam, p266 []
  9. indeed, the web is a remix and anyone who says otherwise is probably a traditional publisher []
  10. Bauman, Z. (2004). Zigmunt Bauman: Liquid sociality. In N. Gane (Ed.), The future of social theory (pp. 17–46). London: Continuum. []
  11. McWilliam, p263 []
  12. Not that antogonism isnt a good thing, but inclusivity is a goal of education and a more inclusive label would, perhaps, be more beneficial in the long run, not that we can’t call ourselves EduPunks, but I think we need to remember our audience and pre-empt their reactions to negatively perceived labels and this is now a sentence that I should not have let run away with itself. []

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The Wiki Way … is the EduPunk Way?

I’ve been seeing a bit of talk around about EduPunk, and I’m always loath to jump onto the latest meme[1], but I think this time, the name is actually what’s been missing from what I (and Luke) have been doing with the Wiki course.  I’m not completely sure about the name, it resonates with some people, but l feel hesitant at taking that particular label.

Part of what I wanted to achieve using the wiki when I got the GEL Fellowship was to get away from the coprotisation[2] of education.  I’d only been using BlackPlank[3] for two years, but it really got me that its design was not really user centred.  Nothing I wanted to do could be done.  There are still things that I want from an LMS that aren’t there, particularly given that I had just come from an institution that had an in-house designed LMS that did do what I thought was great for communicating with students.  And it was so simple I called it a minimalist design in my PhD.  But BlackPlank seems to be maximalist — it wants to be everything to everyone.

I will admit to squeeing over the demonstration of BlackPlank 8 the other day — the gradebook finally looks usable from my perspective and it doesn’t change much from the student’s perspective[4].  But before this turns into a rant against the established LMS in our institution, I’ll get it back to a rant against the establishment in general.

EduPunk.  Whatever the label may be, that’s what I am.  I can’t be otherwise while using a wiki and getting students to create their text book for a course.  I’m wondering if I should include the theme of EduPunk somewhere in the paper that Luke and I are (re)writing, given that it’s already been rejected from one journal for not being ‘scientific’ enough.  Part of me wants to say ‘to heck with the established journal publication route’ but that won’t give me tenure[5].

sun behind opera house

Why do we talk so much about student empowerment, student engagement, student centred learning only to be enmeshed in a standardised system with monolithic be-everything-to-everyone-tools?  I get the feeling that the term EduPunk is a response to that dichotomy and an attempt to bring coherence back to our lived experiences as learners and teachers, because that’s what we do!

Just like the sun, peeking out from behind the Opera House, EduPunk seems to lighten things in a tantalising way — not quite fully shining on the establishment, but hinting at possibilities.

  1. That’s what LiveJournal is for []
  2. I really must stop mispelling that word []
  3. Maybe I should say Blackboard, but board … plank … there’s an analogy in there somewhere []
  4. I don’t actually remember asking to see what students see, I was so excited seeing something that was usable  particularly for my large classes of 300+ []
  5. I must remember to make or find a list of open journals — and publish only there from here on it — to heck with the established route []

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