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Social Media is the New School Newspaper

January 21, 2018
#course, #gameweek, #ivoice

A principal recently asked me why project-based learning should involve the Web. It’s a good question.

In education, an “artifact” is not something old, but something new: a tangible object created by students during a lesson. It’s evidence of learning. A term paper, a book report in the form of a poster, and a baking soda volcano are all considered artifacts of the learning process.

When I heard this piece of education jargon, I thought of the term “metadata.” Metadata is data that describes data. The label on the tab of a manila folder in a filing cabinet tells us what is in the file. A timestamp embedded into a digital photograph describes the photograph. A hashtag inserted into a Tweet classifies that Tweet. These are all metadata.

Metadata is knowledge sorting the knowledge within.

In my book, The Interactive Voice, I describe social media as human metadata. The moment I post either text or imagery to my Facebook page, or to my Twitter handle, or under my byline, that knowledge comes up under an online search about me.

“Human metadata” is a more local, accessible way to think about art and creativity and also a more elevated, expansive way to think about what we say and do every day. Our online writing and photography are both plain old data as well as the artifacts of our lives.

What do we save when the house is on fire? We save the photo album, the memory box, the love letters and Christmas cards, and not just for sentimental reasons, but because they are our histories.

Metadata is also awareness.

I just wrote about how I call my courses “meta-courses” because I want students to become aware of my teaching process and develop their own.

Another helpful example of something “meta” occurs when an actor “breaks the fourth wall.” A character in a play or film suddenly looks at the audience, reminding the audience that they are watching a play or film. The acknowledgement takes them out of the momentum of the artifice.

In the play Hamlet, when the character Hamlet meets a troupe of actors and asks for a play within the play, he removes us from the reality of Shakespeare’s world and we become aware.

That awareness within art correlates with the awareness that makes humans unique. We live wrapped up in the momentum of our days, but also observe and manage our lives when we stop to reflect and plan. Consciousness gives us alone the title of homo sapiens or “wise humans.”

When we turn a moment into a paragraph or a photograph, we stand apart from life and grow more conscious of it. When teachers ask students to create artifacts, students have the chance to reflect on their thought and learning processes, just as they do with metadata and social media in my courses. When the Internet inspires people to create imagery and writing about their lives, people gain a greater awareness in the same way.

Media and social media are additional layers of consciousness in our lives. That’s why we need them in our schools.

In project-based learning, if small, rotating groups of students were placed in charge of documenting the process—creating social media artifacts of project artifacts—it would not only prepare them for editing their own multimedia metadata but force them to use and manage that metadata as another layer of consciousness, learning, and reflection.

Here is a preliminary sketch I drew up for the principal of how artifacts and metadata would flow within the academy (I’ve since replaced the original tailored proposal with a more generic version):

Academy Flowchart

 

#artifact #consciousness #curriculum #interactivity #metadata #socialmedia
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Robert Kalm
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Newer Post Twitter Is Dead; Long Live Twitter
Older Post The Good Student Changes the Good Course
The Web is full of #quotes. Programmers designed t The Web is full of #quotes. Programmers designed the Internet to interconnect ideas and their #sources better. Hyperlinks, search results, and #memes are all forms of quotation. Many quotes are misattributed or incorrect but are also more easily investigated and exposed online. Wikiquote is as essential as Wikipedia.

The endlessly quotable Ralph Waldo Emerson once admitted he “hated” quotes in his journal but regularly praised them too. Like writing, quotation can #default to what is easy or work to find and share fresh insight. Asking for a favorite quote pushes people into the spotlight; it’s the same as asking how often they open a book.

We all have answers though, even those of us who can neither read nor write. A mother’s maxim, a Springsteen #lyric, that one verse we had to rehearse, a favorite movie line, and yes, even a politician’s refrain, can all find residence in our heads through the lesson of repetition or the spark of #recognition.

Actions may speak louder than words, but actions without words behind them are chaos. Sentences underlie more of our behavior than we realize and give us the power to progress and create when used well. The first step is identifying the words you recall. You cannot write until you’ve #read.

Sit for a moment and #transcribe the jokes and songs and #passages from shows and speeches and novels that come to mind. The #words may mean more than you anticipate. The task may take longer than you have.

What quotations have #significance for you?

#citation #excerpt #thesis #beat #bio #author #credibility #feedback #knowledge #statement #tweet #writing #web #workshop #ivshop #506iv
“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the #past.” The #epitaph carved on Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald’s grave is the last sentence of “The Great Gatsby.” Whenever I come across the #line, I have to go back and reread that entire last page, which always reaffirms the book’s significance. It’s an #elegy for much more than the author.

When I ask students for favorite quotes, #verses, punchlines, and lyrics during #Tweetweek, I want to stress the impact creative writing and word choices have on our lives.

The ideas that outlast us are arguably our greatest contributions to one another. Nothing has more hope for longevity than the #phrases, passages, and narratives we put into practice and pass down successfully to the next generation. They are all epitaphs.

They are #hyperlinks to lives lived, theses developed, actions taken, and creations that persevere—in spite of the ceaseless current.

#word #prose #quotation #excerpt #invitation #thesis #novel #life #experience #knowledge #writing #communication #web #workshop #ivshop #506iv

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
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prof_kalm Robert Kalm @prof_kalm ·
5 May 2020

“His choices on Star Wars were a combination of the unfamiliar and the handmade to create a cosmos that looked both other-worldly and lived-in.” My annual post on the most interactive film of all time. #StarWars #Maythe4th

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