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Metaphors of Ed Tech
Metaphors of Ed Tech
Author: Martin Weller
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© Martin Weller
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Martin Weller explores various metaphors, analogies, similes and downright playful ideas around educational technology. Building off the book Metaphors of Ed Tech, it uses metaphor as a way to think about educational technology. Warning: Metaphors may become dangerously over-stretched.
46 Episodes
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I chat to Maren Deepwell about social media, leaving ALT, and starting new careers in a cross over episode between our two podcasts
Links:
Re-inventing Mondays blog post
Hybrid working course
Maren's free monthly newsletter
25 Years of Ed Tech book
25 Years of Ed Tech audiobook project
Social media diaspora post
Social media as disco tracks choice post
Another GO-GN special episode, this time talking with Beck Pitt about plans for the 10th anniversary special event
GO-GN
GO-GN Webinars
I continue the GO-GN special editions with a conversation with Robert Schuwer who was one of the early founders with Fred Mulder.
Robert Schuwer's site
GO-GN
ROER4D
I talk to Bryan Mathers of Visual Thinkery about the work he has done on GO-GN, other projects and those pesky penguins.
Links:
GO-GN
GO-GN resources
ALT
Reclaim Hosting
Fabulous Remixer Machine
25 Years of Ed Tech Remixer
25 Years of Ed Tech book
Ideas for Metaphors of Ed Tech cover
Metaphors of Ed Tech book
Links:
GO-GN
OEGlobal
OEGlobal conference (Krakow)
OEGlobal conference (Cape Town)
OEGlobal conference (Delft)
ROER4D
TU Delft Online Learning Hub
In the first of several episodes celebrating 10 years of GO-GN (Global OER Graduate Network), I talk with Rob Farrow about his wokr on developing co-produced resources with the network and the visual imagery of penguins.
Links:
GO-GN
Research Methods Handbook
Conceptual Frameworks Guide
Open Research Handbook
Conceptualising Research Methodology for Doctoral Researchers in Open Education (with penguins)
I look at two metaphors, firstly how the non-conflict writing in Ted Lasso is a metaphor for a pedagogy of care, and secondly how shedworking and the Wilco album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot offer suggestions for creativity that goes beyond AI.
Links:
Ted Lasso Says Goodbye. It’s About Time.
Good riddance, Ted Lasso: how the ‘nice’ comedy became utterly dreadful television
The radical Ted Lasso lesson for education
Pedagogy of Care – Caring for Teachers
7 Things You Should Know About a Domain of One’s Own
In this episode I look at how the development of a Canadian art identity offers some analogy to higher education coming to understand artificial intelligence.
Links:
The Emily Carr, Mattiusi Iyaituk & Tom Thomson approaches to AI
Tom Thomson, Antimodernism, and the Ideal of Manhood
Tom Thomson wikipedia
Tom Thomson: Design for a Canadian Hero
The Group of Seven wikipedia
An Inquiry into the Success of Tom Thomson's The West Wind
‘Intruders,’ ‘animal roots’ and ‘Mother Earth’: tracking the art complex in the work of Emily Carr
Emily Carr wikipedia
Nuu-chah-nulth people wikipedia
Haida people wikipedia
Emily Carr
Mattiusi Iyaituk
video
My blog
Metaphor of ed tech book
In this episode I explore a number of music related metaphors, including edupunk, the educator as DJ and the pillars of hip-hop.
Links:
The Glass Bees (original Edupunk post)
EDUPUNK or, on becoming a useful idiot.
25 years of edtech: 2008—EDUPUNK!
Jargon watch: Green crude, popcorning, edupunk
Diy U: Edupunks, Edupreneurs, and the Coming Transformation of Higher Education
Open Educator as DJ
Let’s Get Explicit
Hip-Hop Culture
In this episode I examine the lecture from two perspectives. Firstly as the main model that people hold for higher education and how that limits our imagination when it comes to online learning. Secondly, the haunted house novel is used to explore the reasons for continuing with the lecture when students have stopped attending.
Links:
Why do education secretaries hate online learning?
How to responsibly reopen colleges in the fall
Is it live or is it internet? Experimental estimates of the effects of online instruction on student learning
Rethinking university teaching: A conversational framework for the effective use of learning technologies.
Twitter thread on empty lectures
The Haunted Lecture Hall
In this episode I explore two metaphors that relate to open practice. The first are the 19th century riots in West Wales which focused on Toll Gates, and I make the connection to reactions to academic publishing with movements like ICanHazPDF and Sci-Hub. The second metaphor looks at anthropology and how the role of women in hunter gatherer societies was often overlooked by researchers. This is analogous to the types of activity in academic practice which might be overlooked in academic institutions.
Links:
Who’s downloading pirated papers? Everyone
The Rebecca riots: A study in agrarian discontent
Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science?
“Big deal” publishing costs European universities over €1B a year
Man the hunter, woman the gatherer? The impact of gender studies on hunter-gatherer research (a retrospective)
The evolution of hunting
Women the gatherer: Male bias in anthropology
What hunters do for a living, or, how to make out on scarce resources
Has Feminism Changed Archaeology?
Women in evolution, part II: Subsistence and social organization among early hominids
LTHEchat – The Story of a Community of Practice through Twitter
Emotional labor in academia: The case of professors
Pedagogy of care: COVID-19 edition
Inferior: How science got women wrong and the new research that’s rewriting the story
The Fallacy of Open
Metaphors of Ed Tech book
EdTechie blog
In this episode I explore two rather persistent, and often damaging, metaphors, namely that of Digital Natives and Uber (or other technology companies) for Education.
Links:
Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants
Is It Age or IT: First Steps Toward Understanding the Net Generation
The “digital natives” debate: A critical review of the evidence.
The net generation and digital natives: Implications for higher education
Self organising systems for mass computer literacy: Findings from the “hole in the wall” experiments
Hope-in-the-Wall? A digital promise for free learning
The Uberization of Education
Wanted: Uber-Ized Education
Unbundling and rebundling higher education in an age of inequality.
World’s 1st blockchain university to begin teaching in 2019
Disgruntled drivers and “cultural challenges”: Uber admits to its biggest risk factors
Uber’s nightmare has just begun
Metaphors of Ed Tech book
Edtechie.net
I explore two metaphors relating to specific educational technologies. Firstly, the implementation of Video Assisted Refereeing in football and what it tells us about learning analytics in education is explored. Then the various metaphors relating to VLEs (or LMSs) are discussed.
Links
VLEs: A metaphorical history from sharks to limpets
The inside story of how FIFA’s controversial VAR system was born
The problems created by VAR are worse than those it was designed to solve
Learning analytics: The emergence of a discipline
Metaphors of Ed Tech
Edtechie.net (my blog)
I look at two metaphors: The Welsh castle, Castell Coch, and what it tells us about venture capital investment in higher education; The rewilding approach to introducing apex predators and how we can think about our ed tech ecosystems.
Links:
Castell Coch
Cardiff and the Marquesses of Bute
Chartism in Wales
Educating Silicon Valley: Corporate education reform and the reproduction of the techno-economic revolution
My manifesto for rewilding the world.
Wilding: The return of nature to a British farm.
Reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park: History, values, and ecosystem restoration
SPLOT
Metaphors of Ed Tech
Edtechie.net (my blog)
I explore early metaphors of the Internet and how these shaped our thinking, but then how they have changed also over time.
Links:
Foucault in cyberspace: Surveillance, sovereignty, and hardwired censors.
What Gamergate should have taught us about the 'alt-right'
Since when is it illegal to just mention a trademark online? (Streisand Effect)
SIFT - The Four Moves
The Outrage Economy
Metaphors of Ed Tech
Edtechie.net (my blog)
I briefly set out the reasoning behind using metaphors to talk about educational technology, and then how metaphors work and shape our thinking.
Links:
Metaphors of Ed Tech
Metaphors We Live By
Why Metaphors Matter in Education
When a bad metaphor may not be a victimless crime: The role of metaphor in social policy
On Two Metaphors for Learning and the Dangers of Choosing Just One
Edtechie.net (my blog)
.
This episode looks at the growth, impact and legacy of MOOCs
Between the Chapters ePortfolios episode
25 Years Audiobook
25 Years of Ed Tech book
Questions to ask of AI learning platform vendors
Edtech Unicorns Are Evolving Rather Than Disrupting
Maren and I discuss our upcoming OER24 presentation on the subject of podcasting and internet radio
Our slides for the talk
OER24 programme
This episode looks at the idea of the personal learning environment (PLE) and associated personal learning network (PLN)
Between the Chapters ePortfolios episode
25 Years Audiobook
25 Years of Ed Tech book
This episode looks at the theory of connectivism and whether it was useful and issues associated with it
Between the Chapters ePortfolios episode
25 Years Audiobook
25 Years of Ed Tech book






