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While I like Campbell’s suggestion regarding a Personal Cyberinfrastucture as an extension to the Personal Learning Environment (PLE), I do see some challenges moving from theory to practice. Let me elaborate from recent experiences.  At my previous institution (Lethbridge College) we had our Multimedia (MM) students do exactly what Gardner suggested and required them all to get Bluehost accounts which are only $96.00 per year.  Students used simplescripts and other CPanel (control panel) tools to set up a Joomla, WordPress and many other types of open source web-based tools. Some students rose to the occasion and experimented with all that these accounts had to offer and we even hired a few of these MM grads to work in Educational Enhancement Team.  Unfortunately some of the students did little more than satisfy their assignment requirements and only a few got to the point where they full utilized what was available on Bluehost sever.

There are several reasons many students did not embrace or fully utilize the potential found in the the Cyberinfrastructure system. A significant obstacle or challenge is that despite the maturity of Web 2.0 Server administration systems like CPanel, Fantastico Installer, Simplesripts, phpMyadmin and many other unusually named sever tools, these tools are still just graphical front ends to some very sophisticated server systems. If one does not have the experience, knowledge or more importantly the desire to take on some aspects of the server system administration role then these systems can still be overwhelming. Even though you can easily create a new installation of the Joomla CMS you still need to understand that what a CMS (content management system) really is and how it is best used. These wonderful open source tools like Joomla, Drupal, and WordPress are amazingly powerful because you can configure them to do almost anything. Paradoxically, their power and configurability are their liability because you as the system administrator have to configure them to anything. Unless one lives in this realm on a daily basis and works as a system administrator many of these tools can be too overwhelming for the average individual who just wants to get their Youtube video up on their blog without having to understand how the blog engine works. WordPress has matured to the point where it can be used to be much more than a simple blog and to a certain point can fulfill the role of the traditional CMS but to even understand this subtle difference one has had to have years of experience in both the world of blogging and CMS. Many find it easier to go to wordpress.org or blogger.com to up their blogs within an existing infrastructure that is already pre-configured and requires little or no decisions beyond basic layout, colors and aesthetic schemas.

Another, challenge that has an even greater impact on students is that fact that like the students who may not want to be system administrators, very few faculty want to be or are even capable of being systems administrator of their own cyberinstrastructure. This means that there are very few faculty who can model this type of Web 2.0 utilization. I have personally been involved in the web since the early 1990s and have had one form of a website or another for more than 16 years and even I find it overwhelming and challenging at times to manage all the resources that are available. For example in my latest move from Lethbridge College to Abilene Christian University I have been faced with the challenge of moving the past three years of blogging from Joomla to WordPress. Because I don’t deal with these issues on a daily basis I find myself spending an inordinate amount of time researching, testing and experimenting in an attempt to make this happen–unless I can find a solution in in the next few days I will simply have point to a copy of the old site. There comes a point where there are just not enough hours in a day to do ones “official” responsibilities so when you add the responsibility of managing a cyberinsfrastructure  there are just not enough hours in a day. Managing a cyberinfrastructure is much easier to do today than it was even a year ago but it still takes a significant commit of time to just stay up on the technology changes not to mention what happens when you run into challenges or have to deal with the latest security vulnerability.

Despite these challenges there still is an hugh appeal to being in charge and controlling ones own cyberinfrastructure. Perhaps over time as these systems will amature even more and the administration of these systems will be some less and less of an issue. If the changes in the past 5-10 years are any indication of what the future has in store we are not too far off from this becoming a reality. I agree with Campbell that we need to model the use of PLEs or the Personal Cyberinfrastructure if we expect our students to learn these skills and use these tools. I am doing my part and will encourage others to do so as well….

While I applaud Nathan Barry of Wired for putting together this list of technologies that many kids many never know about I am somewhat concerned that this points to the fact that our culture is so enamored with the now that we aren’t even aware of the most recent history. I am also concerned with the realization that many parents are not bringing their children into their worlds enough to share what it was like when they were a kid. I will be using this excellent list to make sure that my kids know enough about my childhood and teenage years and at the same time appreciate recent history.

I have been adding to my list of youtube favorites for several years (notice the date of some of videos) and have finally decided to move these favorites to a blog post. All these videos deal with education, learning, 21st Century learning, digital learner and so on. The first few videos are my favorates and will be displayed in an embedded youtube format and the remaining are included just as links. Enjoy!

Pay Attention

[youtube]aEFKfXiCbLw[/youtube]

A Vision of Students Today

[youtube]dGCJ46vyR9o[/youtube]

Academia 2.0

[youtube]vZ1jFaXgTnw[/youtube]

I teach, therefore you learn… or do you?

[youtube]6AWYIit1uNk[/youtube]

Tapscott – Hey Moron
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EoqiRRMQ0fs&eurl=http://learn.lethbridgecollege.net/content/view/380/32/

Father Guido Sarducci’s Five Minute University
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kO8x8eoU3L4

ACU Connected
http://www.acu.edu/technology/mobilelearning/researchers/video/index.html

Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iG9CE55wbtY&NR=1
Very powerful and poignant message.

Information R/evoluion
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM

Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmP4nk0EOE

Web 2.0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsa5ZTRJQ5w

Education Today and Tomorrow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fnh9q_cQcUE
I really only like the intro part about the classroom on this one.

21st Century Pedagogy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l72UFXqa8ZU&feature=related

Traditional and digital pedagogy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xa4e8RkhztA&feature=related

Bringing 21st Century Learning to Your Classroom
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XMa91uf-so&feature=related
Good example of using Blogs and wikis in the classroom

Mr. Winkle Wakes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm1sCsl2MQY&feature=related
Satirical view of education today

Curriculum 2.0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xBYSdMK1LU&feature=related
Short but strong message

Tom Peters: Educate For a Creative Society
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_w4AfflmeM&feature=related
This one is REALLY powerful

http://mashable.com/2009/08/08/iphone-live-tv/

iPhone TV: Top iPhone Apps for Live Streaming Television via kwout

When you start to see major networks and the Television industry in general adopt a device like the iPhone for the delivery of their content then you know that this device must have hit the mainstream. While some of these apps will not work that well over 3G and the battery life of the iPhone will be zapped quickly by streaming video there is no denying that the iPhone is a mainstream device. Some would argue that with over 80 thousand apps and counting being developed in the past year for the iPhone, it is not just mainstream it has become a new standard. Nine to twelve months ago this question was still worthy of discussion but I argue that it is time to move on.

A second reason I suggest that this device is now a mainstream device is that IT shops and CIOs in particular are starting to recognize its impact. Jason Hiner the Editor in Chief of TechRepublic points out that while a majority of CIOs still reject the iPhone the resistance to the device is weakening.

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/hiner/?p=2345&tag=nl.e101

Majority of CIOs still reject the iPhone, but resistance is weakening | Tech Sanity Check | TechRepublic.com via kwout

While it is refreshing to see that IT is slowly catching up with what is happening in the “real world” we need to take a lesson from this story. If you are looking to IT and in particular to your CIO for technological innovation and vision then you may be looking in the wrong place. Yes there are a few CIOs who possess the courage and passion to be visionary but for the most part IT is responsible for making sure that technology is safe and reliable. If the lights are flashing, the fans whirring and the bells ringing then we know the IT and the CIO are doing a good job. Unfortunately, safety and reliability have very little to do with progress and innovation. As much as I wish it wasn’t, innovation – disruptive not the sustaining kind, is messy and occasionally unreliable.

The key here is who does your organization look to for technological innovation. If its is IT and the CIO and you have an IT group that is very traditional then you and your organization may be safe but you are not going anywhere. Innovation requires vision and courage to go places and do things that most are not willing to do.

Perhaps IT and the CIO should not be visionary leaders==perhaps their role is to provide the reliability of a utility. With virtualization, and cloud computing maturing to the point where computing is moving into the realm of a utility it may make more sense to accept the fact that the role of IT is to provide security and reliability and not ask them to be innovative.

If you want innovation and effective change then you have to look to who your innovators are and support them rather than asking groups and people not comfortable with innovation to be something that they are not.

I have learned many things in the past 10 days which started with us packing up our spacious home in Lethbridge Alberta (Canada), driving from Lethbridge to Abilene Texas and unpacking a portion or our possessions into a tiny apartment and finally putting the rest of our possession into storage. The experience has made me realize that:

  • We have TOO much stuff–even though we trimmed down and sold or gave away many things we still have enough stuff to fill a small 2 bedroom apartment and a 10X30 storage container. We have a hard time letting go of most things. Even though we watched the Story of Stuff, we (our family) still have a ways to go to learn how to live with less.
  • Moving to the US isn’t that difficult and crossing the border was really very simple–the border guards didn’t even check our Uhaul or our van–so we didn’t have to use our highly detailed inventory.
  • The challenge with moving is getting a new home, insurance, drivers license, registration, credit, electrical hookup, cable, phone and so many of the things that we use daily and take for granted–these are the big items that prevent many people from making the move from country to county.
  • States like Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas are very empty. Even the northern part of Texas is sparsely populated. There were times that we drove hundreds of miles without seeing a person or much of anything else.
  • The great plains are not as flat as one assumes. It wasn’t until we hit the bottom half of Kansas before the terrain flattened out enough to allow us to finally get up to highway speeds in the Uhaul.
  • There are much more corn fields then there are wheat fields, so my idealistic image of Kansas was complete changed. Actually my thinking about the central states in general has changed because I have not only driven through them I have stopped at small and larger centers and have met a wide assortment of people. Knowing what is, is alway better then assuming.
  • Perhaps I was fortunate, but the only bad thing that happened with the Uhaul truck that we rented was that the air conditioning quick about three hours out of Abilene. While I could easily turn this into a much bigger deal I didn’t experience anything like many of the ” Uhaul horror stories” I had heard about prior to leaving. What I did learn from this was that my heightened state of awareness (as result of the horror stories) was that I checked the oil more often, did a full walk around and paid attention to all the warning lights that blinked.

Biggest lesson was that the move from one country to the next is really not that difficult and I would definitely do it again (not that I am planning to anytime soon)–the difference is the preparation and one’s attitude.