Peeragogy Monthly Wrap: 2020-04 to 2020-09
Introduction
30 October 2020 – CHICAGOLAND – Hello again, dear reader, and happy Friday!
It is with a bounce in my keyboard click that I greet you with this fresh wrap-up of our peeragogical activities from April to September! We have made supercalifragilisticexpialidocious progress on our paper, course, software, podcast, and more!! :-)
Project Action Review
For the shortform version of what we’ve done over the past six months, peep this PAR, or Project Action Review (formerly “Peeragogy Action Review” and “Paragogy Action Review”).
1. Review the intention: what do/did we expect to learn or make together?
2. Establish what is happening: what and how are we learning?
3. What are some different perspectives on what’s happening?
4. What did we learn or change?
5. What should we change going forward?
Course
Following our engaging first semester of the Course in early 2020 (read our March wrap for details) led by Joe Corneli, we completed semester two in April and May. Charlotte Pierce and myself, Charlie Danoff, co-organized and participants included Vitor Bruno and Hermano Cintra out of Brazil. One of the highlights was a powerful presentation Hermano did on digital collaboration in open-source communities (download the slides). You can find details about the sessions and some videos on the syllabus.
Additionally in August we submitted a second proposal to Tufts University to teach a course that was not accepted, but that’s okay. We will continue to refine the course and plan to offer it again!
Paper
We finished multiple drafts of our paper we are planning to submit for a special issue of the Futures Journal. We are looking at how pattern languages that have been helpful for architecture and software development can help people better anticipate the future. We have a draft of the paper available for public comment, please take a look and let us know what you think!
Software
Led by Stephan Kreutzer, the technical side of the project has released some exciting new software to help humans improve their peer learning and peer production! One tool for this specific wrap generates the beautiful PDF and EPUB versions of this wrap you may be currently reading! Another tool still under development offers a place for us to enter our Project Action Reviews in a simple manner so that they can be easily stored, organized, and used for future learning adventures!
Podcast
The Peeragogy Podcast has been launched, with the first two episodes live-streamed to YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn. On September 26th Intro to Peeragogy and October 1st Wikipedia vs. Misinformation. Recordings remain on those platforms, and the universe can subscribe to the audio version via all major podcast apps like Apple, Google, Stitcher, SoundCloud, Spotify, Podverse and others. Our intent is to explore the research and cool tools we have developed since the inception of the project in 2012, and to make our design patterns, software, and best practices accessible to a broader audience.
The power of check-ins and clear communication
And now we have a special feature from one of our very talented peeragogues.
Joe Corneli (LONDON), 26 August 2020
I read about the power of check-ins and clear communication in “Don’t Hold My Head Down” by Lucy-Anne Holmes (Unbound, 2019).
“‘It is nice to meet you,’ he started, but then he screwed his face up […] ‘But you’re so fast. You’re like
Texte: Copyright (C) 2018-2020 Creative Commons Zero 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication
Bildmaterialien: Copyright (C) 2018-2020 Creative Commons Zero 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication
Korrektorat: Stephan Kreutzer
Satz: Stephan Kreutzer
Tag der Veröffentlichung: 30.08.2021
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