Welcome to the Human Network: Confessions from 7 Years of Networked Learning
1. e to the
We lcom rk:
Hum an N e t wo
C o nf e s s i o n
s f ro m 7
years
of Networ Dean Shareski
k e d Le a rn 21st Century Learning Symposium
ing Lacombe, AB
Sept. 21, 2012
41. The greatest digital divide is
between those who can read
and write with media, and
those who can't.
Elizabeth Daly
cc licensed flickr photo by jayRaz: http://flickr.com/photos/shnakepup/2935979173/ 27
59. “At this age, they get stuck on
Wikipedia being the answer to
everything and they forget that
people can be a really great
resource.”
60.
61. “Books are designed to
contain all the information
required to stop inquiries
within the book’s topic. But
now that our medium can
handle far more ideas and
information, and now that
it is a connective medium
(ideas to ideas, people to
ideas, people to people), our
strategy is changing. And
that is changing the very
shape of knowledge.”
62. “Books are designed to
contain all the information
required to stop inquiries
within the book’s topic. But
now that our medium can
handle far more ideas and
information, and now that
it is a connective medium
(ideas to ideas, people to
ideas, people to people), our
strategy is changing. And
that is changing the very
shape of knowledge.”
63. “Bringing smart people together is an
ancient and effective technique for
developing ideas. The Net also lets
smart people connect and
communicate. But the Net brings people
together in new and occasionally
weird configurations—a weirdness
that is now being reflected in how
expertise works....”
92. Owning a domain name is
about claiming your piece
of the internet. You’re no
longer renting, you’re a
home owner.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/35723943@N00/2379057597/