How the global knowledge commons emerges

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Posted on 1st March 2010 by Judy Breck in Findability

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UPDATE March 2, 2010
Today’s New York Science Times has a terrific article about the shape of the internet. I will be posting more about what the article reports. But for now, let the record show that the final paragraph says about the scale-free (long tail, 6 degrees) network theorists: “What they’re measuring is not the physical network, it’s some virtual abstraction that’s on top of it . . . .” — they are measuring what I have depicted here as the oval. In that oval is the global knowledge commons, emerging as educators tend still to choose to use content created and organized elsewhere.

My last two posts may seem silly: Open Education Resources are a pizza and Schooling is a pizza. Yet they provide a way to see where in a general way the location of the global knowledge commons is — hovering above other layers of what we call education. The intertwingularity is the best name I know for that place. You may be thinking the place — indicated by the oval at the top of the pizzas — is something philosophical and/or metaphysical. But such thoughts are red herrings as we reconfigure education around the internet.

The place represented by the oval is where the meaning of the content of the internet intertwingles. This place cannot be identified as the physical telecosm itself, which is so eloquently described below by George Gilder. Instead, the intertwingularity emerges from the telecosm and gives birth to new phenomena such as the global economy, the blogosphere, and the global knowledge commons.

The place represented by the oval is also not the packets of zeroes and ones zooming around within the telecosm. Inside the oval is where, as the meaning of the packets intertwingles, patterns of ideas arise that a student connected into the internet can learn. The student can interact with those ideas in real time, adding to and/or changing them. That interaction is very real — not philosophical or metaphysical.

When George Gilder wrote this beautiful description of the telecosm, it was in the context that from it “will spring a new global economy.” The oval can be thought of as the location of the economic intertwingling that has revolutionized the global economy since Gilder wrote these words in 1999.

By 2010, most of what is known by humankind is already on the internet, and a lot of it is sufficiently open and unbundled to participate in the intertwingularity. Because network laws govern within the intertwingularity, the ideas there are self-vetting, with the best of them becoming the most linked and thereby emergent.

Imagine gazing at the web from far in space. To you, peering through your spectroscope, mapping the mazes of electromagnetism in its path, the Web appears as a global efflorescence, a resonant sphere of light. It is the physical phase space of the telecosm, the radiant chrysalis from which will spring a new global economy.  The luminous ball reflects Maxwell’s rainbow, with each arc of light bearing a signatory wavelength. As the mass of the traffic flows through fiber-optic trunks, it glows infrared, with the network backbones looming as focused beams of 1550-nanometer radiance running across continents and under the seas. As more and more people use wireless means to access the Net, this infrared ball grows a penumbra of microwaves, suffused with billions of moving sparks from multimegahertz teleputers or digital cellular phones. Piercing through the penumbra are rich spikes of radio frequencies confined in the coaxial cables circling through neighborhoods and hooking to each household. Spangling the Net are more than 100 million nodes of concentrated standing waves, each an Internet host, a computer with a microprocessor running at a microwave frequency from the hundreds of megahertz to the gigahertz. The radiance reaches upward between 400 and 800 miles to thousands of low-orbit satellites, each sending forth cords of “light” between Earth and sky in the Ku band between 12 and 18 gigahertz. George Gilder, Forbes ASAP, October 1, 1999

The main section FINDABILITY of Handschooling.com is about the intertwingularity and the crucial role of experts and educators in following network laws to make what they know findable. What is not findable will not intertwingle.

The most elegant aspect of the oval is that we each have one hovering above our own brain.  Even more so than Gilder’s “telecosm,” your brain is a magnificently complex network from which ideas emerge.  In future learning the intertwingularity emerging from the internet will reflect whatever a person seeks to learn into that person’s own intertwingularity of what he or she knows and thinks.

Let’s get to work and make that so.

OER is a pizza

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Posted on 27th February 2010 by Judy Breck in Findability

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UPDATE: More about what is in the oval from the New York Science Times, and a later post here.

Open educational resources (OER for short among advocates of open online educational resources) is made up several layers of construction. The image of the pizza suggests this overall structure with these layers, from the bottom up: subject matter, designing of the subject stuff into a webpage, coding that design and content with the browser languages, establishing links among related webpages, and platforming all of that on the internet of wires, glass, and wireless signals that network, as it were, in the global ether. Yet there is more — wonderfully more.

The critical and marvelous layer hovers dynamically, invisibly, virtually at the top of the OER pizza. It is the layer where everything intertwingles. It is not there physically. Its substance is ideas.

What could I possibly mean? Let me give you an example. As I write this it is just past 4PM in New York City. That is the hour that the tsunami set off this morning by the earthquake in Chili is expected to reach the beaches of Hawaii. Thousands upon thousands of pieces of information are being sent into the internet and intertwingling there. They are connecting, forming hubs, attaching new facts, verifying warnings, and on and on. Here is a screenshot of what FoxNews.com is pushing into the intertwingularity at 4PM.

The global knowledge commons, which is the future of OER, is emergent into the intertwingularity as a dynamic network of what is known by humankind. Added to the commons from today’s tsunami will be new knowledge now flowing in and being vetted dynamically. In the FoxNews list, for example, is “Send Your Photos.” This citizen journalism will add to our planet’s record of today’s earthquake and tsunami. Arising from many individual inputs, images will be intertwingled through vetting by editors and online clicks. Some of them will find their way into permanent collections, as order arises from today’s tsunami of input into the intertwingularity.

We are only beginning to understand the wonders of this new medium of what we know as a species. There is no question, however, about this: The freshest, most authentic, and complete repository of what is known by humankind is now openly online. In the open virtual intertwingularity this content interacts freely to emerge new and vetted knowledge. Mobile browsers make it possible to put the emerging global knowledge commons into the hands of every student. We can and should be working to make knowledge in the commons more findable. We should be reconfiguring education around the new location of of what is known by humankind.

I kick the walls when I see billions of dollars gushing toward limiting learning to low standards taught and tested in unequal schools. With handschooling — switching food metaphors — we provide the whole enchilada of knowledge to every student by connecting each one to the intertwingularity.

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