Participatory Learning

In one of my former lives, I managed a non-profit community radio station and later became President of the National Community Radio Association, a position I held for a couple of years.  Community radio in Canada includes a variety of non-profit stations with a variety of programming themes with the defining feature being the majority of the programming was produced by volunteers.

Participatory radio is magical, where individuals and groups produce programming by and for their own communities, not to make a profit but to share their eclectic cultures and build understandings.  While almost all stations have a full-time staff member or two, their role is to train, support and guide the content producers – the volunteers who invest their time and efforts – and not to produce content.

It strikes me that this is exactly the model we need for learning.  The full-time staffers – teachers – support the learning while engaged, passionate learners create and share their learning content. It’s the passion for the content – much like the radio producers are passionate about their content, that makes students but into the learning.

This will require a huge shift in mindset, as we move away from a hugely centralized and controlled curriculum, and allow students to direct and even create their own curriculum.

Participatory learning anyone?

Technorati tags: technology, education, whipple, learning

Photo Credit: Board, Uploaded to Flickr on June 2, 2007 by Observe The Banana, Creative Commons, Some Rights Reserved

On the Road

I spent the better part of the day yesterday on a seven hour drive from my home in New Brunswick, Canada, down through the (very long) state of Maine to arrive here in New Hampshire for this years Christa McAuliffe Technology Conference.  It’s my first time at this conference, but not my first time in this area.

One of my good (non-teaching) friends lives in the next town over, so I am using this trip to spend some time with him as well.  As I drove over to Nashua this morning, I was thinking about how the web has wired us together.  We keep in contact closely, even though we only see each other a couple of times a year.

Today is pre-conference workshop day.  At his invitation, I am hanging out at Dave Warlick‘s Wiki session.  There are a dozen educators from Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire in the room.  Some are teachers, some are librarians (or “media generalists” as they call themselves here) and some are mentors – there’s even a Principal!

As I pulled into the conference hotel this morning, I was struck by the beauty of the place. Despite it being a dreary autumn day, the hotel is spectacular, fashioned like a castle.

I have two presentations scheduled. Tomorrow on Global Collaborative Projects, Wednesday on using wikispaces for student content.

Should be blast!

Technorati tags: technology, education, whipple, learning, warlick, wiki, nhste, nhcmtc, nhcmtc08