Intellagirl Tulley of Indiana University gave a really interesting keynote address this afternoon where she presented a framework for thinking about how to make our Second Life educational projects more effective. She borrowed a structure from the Clay Shirky book Here Comes Everybody called “Promise / Tool / Bargain”:
- The Promise: that is what mkes us want to use a particular system
- The Tool: what tool is being used to make that happen
- The Bargain: I will do this part, and you will do your part and together we’ll fulfill the promise
According to Intellagirl, in Second Life, we run into problems when one part of this learning structure breaks down. “Innovation fails when the bargain breaks down.” So we need to be attentive to what we are promising, the limitations of the tool, and whether or not the students buy-in to the bargain.
My favorite Intellagirl quote:
“Why are you
recreating your real life campus in SL and expecting people to just
show up? What are you promising? Why would I show up at a recreation
ofa brick-and-mortar building when I could just visit the real thing?”
Great stuff!
[conf] Metanomics’ Beyers Sellers explains “Why Johnny Can’t Rez” at SLCC / SLEDcc ’08
Beyers Sellers, Professor at Johnson School at Cornell University and host of the popular Metanomics talk show in SL, gave a really neat keynote address on “Why Johnny Can’t Rez.” Beyers addressed the difficult issue of how to convince……