Weekend Reading, 9/9/2011

Social media and online identity, mind control, self-control, and figuring out what an education is for. All of that is on tap this week. Enjoy. Feel free to comment on the links or just to let me know what sort of pieces you’d most like to see in these weekly round-ups. Have a great weekend.

“Rethinking Privacy and Publicity on Social Media,” Part 1 and Part 2, by Nathan Jurgenson at Cyborgology: Engaging posts on the creative dance between what is revealed and simultaneously concealed on social networks. Jurgenson’s dissertation research on self-documentation and social media yields compelling insights and analysis; you can keep up with his work at Cyborgology.

“Brainwave Controllers” from The Economist’s Technology Quarterly: “The idea of moving objects with the power of the mind has fascinated mankind for millennia.” Overview of non-invasive brain-computer interface technology and its various uses, current and potential.

“Focusing on Focus” and “The Will Power Circuit” by Jonah Lehrer at The Frontal Cortex: A mini-theme within this week’s selection: the science of willpower. Standard Lehrer pieces: Describe a series of interesting neurological experiments and what they tell us about focus and self-control.

“The Sugary Secret of Self-Control” by Steven Pinker in the NY Times: Theme continued in a review by Steven Pinker of Roy Baumeister and John Tierney’s Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength, a look at the science of self-control and how it can be trained.

“Who Are You and What Are You Doing Here” by Mark Edumdson in the Oxford American: Longish essay aimed at incoming college freshman. Edmundson addresses some of the problems with higher ed, but unlike many who do so, he does not resort to carelessly disparaging either faculty or students. Also, it seemed to me, he manages to encourage without being didactic or preachy. Draws on Freud and Emerson.

Theory and the “Real” World

There is wisdom tucked in this passage from Donna Haraway’s Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, better known for its Cyborg Manifesto:

So, I think my problem and ‘our’ problem is how to have simultaneously an account of radical historical contingency for all knowledge claims and knowing subjects, a critical practice for recognizing our own ‘semiotic technologies’ for making meanings, and a no-nonsense commitment to faithful accounts of a ‘real’ world, one that can be partially shared and friendly to earth-wide projects of finite freedom, adequate material abundance, modest meaning in suffering, and limited happiness.

You can read the chapter from which that quotation is drawn here.

Technology in the Classroom: How To Do It Right

Matt Ritchell raises a series of crucial questions regarding technology in the classroom in his NY Times piece this weekend, “In Classroom of Future, Stagnant Scores.” More precisely, Ritchell raises questions regarding the seemingly uncritical push to deploy technology in the classroom regardless of costs and ambivalent results. In fact, he hits almost every topic of concern I would think to mention if I were writing a similar article, including the influence of those who do stand to unambiguously prosper from the implementation of technology in the classroom, those who make and sell the technology.

If you’re interested in technology and education, I encourage you to read the article. Here are a few excerpts. You’ll notice, I think, that even the endorsements come off as rather suspect:

“This is such a dynamic class,” Ms. Furman says of her 21st-century classroom. “I really hope it works.” Hope and enthusiasm are soaring here. But not test scores.

“The data is pretty weak. It’s very difficult when we’re pressed to come up with convincing data,” said Tom Vander Ark, the former executive director for education at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and an investor in educational technology companies. When it comes to showing results, he said, “We better put up or shut up.”

Critics counter that, absent clear proof, schools are being motivated by a blind faith in technology and an overemphasis on digital skills — like using PowerPoint and multimedia tools — at the expense of math, reading and writing fundamentals. They say the technology advocates have it backward when they press to upgrade first and ask questions later.

“My gut is telling me we’ve had growth,” said David K. Schauer, the superintendent here. “But we have to have some measure that is valid, and we don’t have that.” It gives him pause. “We’ve jumped on bandwagons for different eras without knowing fully what we’re doing. This might just be the new bandwagon,” he said. “I hope not.”

“Rather than being a cure-all or silver bullet, one-to-one laptop programs may simply amplify what’s already occurring — for better or worse,” wrote Bryan Goodwin … Good teachers, he said, can make good use of computers, while bad teachers won’t, and they and their students could wind up becoming distracted by the technology.

“In places where we’ve had a large implementing of technology and scores are flat, I see that as great,” she said. “Test scores are the same, but look at all the other things students are doing: learning to use the Internet to research, learning to organize their work, learning to use professional writing tools, learning to collaborate with others.”

“Even if he doesn’t get it right, it’s getting him to think quicker,” says the teacher, Ms. Asta. She leans down next to him: “Six plus one is seven. Click here.”

Clearly, the push for technology is to the benefit of one group: technology companies.

I’m not suggesting technology in the classroom is useless, although it can sometimes be worse than useless. What we ought to take issue with is the blind embrace of technology for technology’s sake. Technologies such as laptops and Smartboards are deployed as if their mere presence in the classroom augmented the educational value of what goes on inside. This is not education, it is superstition; the tool becomes a talisman. Or, worse yet, under the assumption that the medium is essentially neutral, old task are assigned on new technologies to little, or possibly counterproductive, effect. This is naive at best.

What students need to learn with regard to technology is not how to use countless (often inane) tools like Powerpoint. Rather technology in education should be introduced in order to teach the students how to engage with technology critically and intelligently, and, ultimately, toward human ends.

Teach the history of technology, teach the sociology of new media, teach media theory, teach philosophy and ethics of technology, teach students how to program and code.

Help students become meta-critically savvy about their tools.

Teach students to become critics of texts and applications — Twelfth Night and Twitter.

Use technology to transcend the curricular divide between the sciences and the humanities.

Teach them not only the possibilities opened up by new technologies, but also their limitations.

Do not parade new technologies before students like so many idols sent to deliver us from our darkness who must be unfailingly acquiesced and mollified.

Don’t merely teach students to do what a new tool enables them to do, help them to question whether we ought do what the tool enables or whether we ought to do with the tool other than its makers considered.

The problem with all of this, of course, is that we must first teach the teachers and administrators.

Weekend Reading, 9/2/2011

As you may have noticed, posting has been light this week, and by light I mean non-existent. The fall semester has commenced and I’m already swamped. I’ll try to keep up the posting, but in the mean time here are some items to keep you busy. Three weeks in row!

Cornel University’s Chatbots on Youtube: This is just interesting. Cornell University researcher has two chatbots talk to each other and they have an intriguing conversation. I’ll let you decide what to make of it. (Update: I forgot to include a link to Kevin Kelly’s exchange with the programmers and his observations on his blog.)

Collaborative Learning for the Digital Age by Cathy N. Davidson in The Chronicle: In defense of online, technologically mediated education. Some good points, but I’m not quite convinced with the tenor of the whole. Would love to hear your thoughts.

When Cursive Cried Wolf by Elissa Lerner at The Book Bench: On the reemergence of handwriting as a creative niche and its benefits.

The Haimish Line by David Brooks in The NY Times: Wisdom regarding the simple, happy life with a Yiddish twist.

A Walk to Remember to Remember by Jesse Miller at Full Stop: This is a lovely reflection on the virtues of walking in a digital age. If you’re only going to read one of these, make it this one.

Making Sense Out of Life: Early Modern and Digital Reading Practices

When I wrote the About page for this blog I cited an article by Alan Jacobs from several years ago in which he likened blogs to commonplace books. Commonplace books, especially popular during the sixteenth century when printing first began to yield an avalanche of relatively affordable books, served as a means of ordering and making sense out of the massive amounts of information confronting early modern readers. As is frequently noted, the dismay and disorientation they experienced is not altogether unlike the angst that sometimes accompanies our recent and ongoing digital explosion of available information. And so, taking a cue from Jacobs, I intended for this blog to be something akin to a commonplace book.

As it turned out, the analogy was mostly suggestive. Much that I write here does not quite fit the commonplace genre. Nonetheless, something of the spirit, if not the law, persists. The commonplace genre would find a nearer kin in Tumblr than in traditional blogs.

In a 2000 essay reprinted in The Case for Books (2009), historian of the book Robert Darnton also reflects on commonplace books and the scholarly attention they attracted. The attention was not misplaced.  Commonplace books offered a window into the reading practices and mental landscape of their users; and for an era in which they were widely kept, they could offer a glimpse at the mental landscape of whole segments of society as well.  In the spirit of the commonplace book, here are some excerpts from Darnton’s essay with a few reflections.

Describing the practice of commonplacing:

“It involved a special way of taking in the printed word. Unlike modern readers, who follow the flow of a narrative from beginning to end (unless they are digital natives and click through texts on machines), early modern Englishmen read in fits and starts and jumped from book to book.  They broke texts into fragments and assembled them into new patterns by transcribing them in different sections of their notebooks.

Then they reread the copies and rearranged the patterns while adding more excerpts. Reading and writing were therefore inseparable activities. They belonged to a continuous effort to make sense of things, for the world was full of signs: you could read your way through it; and by keeping an account of your readings, you made a book of your own, one stamped with your own personality.”

What is only a parenthetical aside in Darnton’s opening paragraphs was for me a key insight. Darnton’s description of commonplacing could easily be applied to the forms of reading practiced with digital texts, all the way down to the personalization. What is missing, of course, and this is no small thing, is the public or social dimension.

On what commonplace books reveal:

“By selecting and arranging snippets from a limitless stock of literature, early modern Englishmen gave free play to a semi-conscious process of ordering experience. The elective affinities that bound their selections into patterns reveal an epistemology at work below the surface.”

That last sentence could easily function as a research paradigm for analysis of social media. Map the “elective affinities” of what Facebook or Twitter or Google+ users link and post and the emergent patterns will be suggestive of underlying epistemologies. Although here again the social dimension complicates the matter considerably. The “elective affinities” on display in social networking sites are performative in a way that private commonplacing was not, thus injecting a layer of distorting self-reflexivity.  But, then, that performative dimension is interesting on its own terms.

Commonplacing as reading for action:

“But they read in the same way — segmentally, by concentrating on small chunks of text and jumping from book to book, rather than sequentially, as readers did a century later, when the rise of the novel encouraged the habit of perusing books from cover to cover. Segmental reading compelled its practitioners to read actively, to exercise critical judgment, and to impose their own pattern on their reading matter. It was also adapted to ‘reading for action,’ an appropriate mode for men like Drake, Harvey, [etc.] and other contemporaries, who consulted books in order to get their bearings in perilous times, not to pursue knowledge for its own sake or to amuse themselves.”

Again the resemblance between early modern reading practices as described by Darnton and digital reading practices is uncanny. The rise of sustained, linear reading is often attributed to the appearance of printing. Darnton, however, would have us connect sustained, cover-to-cover reading with the later rise of the novel. In this case, the age of the novel stands as an interlude between early modern and digital forms of reading which are more similar to one another than either is to reading as practiced in the age of the novel.

The idea of “reading for action” is also compelling as it suggests the agonistic character of both early modern English politics and early 21st century American politics. I suspect that a good deal of online reading today is done in the spirit of loading a gun. At least this is often the ethos of the political blogosphere.

Nonetheless, Darnton would have us see that this form of reading, at least in its early modern manifestation, had its merits in what it required from the reader as an active agent.

Finally, on reading and the attempt to make sense of out of experience:

“… we may pay closer attention to reading as an element in what used to be called the history of mentalities — that is, world views and ways of thinking. All the keepers of commonplace books, from Drake to Madan, read their way through life, picking up fragments of experience and fitting them into patterns. The underlying affinities that held those patterns together represented an attempt to get a grip on life, to make sense of it, not by elaborating theories but by imposing form on matter.”

Early modern Britons and those of us who are living through the digital revolution (an admittedly overplayed phrase) share a certain harried and anxious disposition. It was, after all, the early modern poet John Donne, who wrote of his age, “Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone.” Early moderns deployed the commonplace book as a means of collecting some of the pieces and putting them together once more. If we follow the analogy, and this is always a precarious move, it would suggest that the impulses at work in contemporary digital commonplacing practices — which have not only written information, but lived experience as the field from which fragments are culled — are deeply conservative. They would amount to an effort to impose order on the chaotic flux of live.