EduPunk - all sold out?
Posted by: doug in EduPunk, Emerging Technologies and Practices, Teaching and Learning, learning communities, generalThere’s lots of fun still to be had with the EduPunk meme that has been rocking the Edu-Blogosphere recently.
Myself, I’m looking forward to the development of EduPunk subgenres. As educators, should we head more in the NewWave.Edu direction? or get really experimental with Post-Edu Art-Punk?
I think my favorite EduPunk sub-genre will be PopPunkEdu. Perhaps that’s because, in many ways, EduPunk is already old-school. Where the excitement is, for me at least, is taking the “scrappy, DIY spirit” of EduPunk (as described by Leslie Brooks and Stephen Downes) and then scaling it up.
Just as pop punkers created albums that were “a cross between Abba and the Sex Pistols” (Wikipedia), EduPunkers (whether they identify as such or not) are taking their creative energy, their focus on effective pedagogy, and their insistence on authentic learning, and blending it all together to crank out some amazing work that is both DIY and, well, quite listenable.
Lafayette College’s SoapBox is totally Ramones. If that’s the case, Blogs at PSU must be pretty much Green Day. And I have to hope that the Collaborative Sites Platform will one day be at least somewhat Sublime.
It would be a shame if the larger discussion about EduPunk gets caught up in an EduPunk vs. Blackboard rant, or if the EduPunk philosophy gets characterized as something only accessible to first wave faculty.
Is that selling out? Maybe. But if the result is that we can help more instructors enthusiastically dive in and and create “hands-on learning that starts with the learner’s interests” (Leslie Brooks), then I’m all for it.
For more on EduPunk, see EduPunk on del.icio.us.
Entries (RSS)
June 5th, 2008 at 4:19 pm
No surprise we’re on the same wavelength. Since writing my post, I’ve been reading a bit more and the whole “co-optation” bent surprises me. If D2blackMoo makes a tool that fits…
June 6th, 2008 at 9:54 am
Yeah. As I scanned through the EduPunkO’sphere this morning I ended up wondering why the conversations weren’t a bit more … fun…