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Putting the Classroom in the Computer: The Rhetoric of the Open Courseware Movement Elizabeth Losh University of California, Irvine.

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Presentation on theme: "Putting the Classroom in the Computer: The Rhetoric of the Open Courseware Movement Elizabeth Losh University of California, Irvine."— Presentation transcript:

1 Putting the Classroom in the Computer: The Rhetoric of the Open Courseware Movement Elizabeth Losh University of California, Irvine

2 1) tensions between regulation and content-creation in institutions such as government agencies, universities, and corporations

3 failure and more failure

4 2) tensions between a culture of knowledge and a culture of information updating the “two cultures argument” not just about “print culture” vs. “digital culture”

5 epistemological issues: appearance and reality vs. contingency and probability

6 3) tensions between “openness” and “reputation” as institutions seek to promote their “brands”

7 risk to institutional ethos and the law of unintended consequences: unplanned audiences and purposes the case of videorecorded lectures posted online

8 rethinking the digital divide: no longer just computers in classrooms

9 open research and scholarship

10 looking at language: a rhetoric of openness

11 open pedagogy: participatory culture, P2P education, and personalized intelligent tutoring

12 looking at the gap between open information and open education

13 how is “open courseware” different from “open source software”?

14 what are the ideologies of “openness”? how are they different from the ideologies of “freedom” and “honesty” we already have when we talk about “academic freedom” or “academic honesty”? what are the rhetorics opposing “openness”? “commercial interest”? “security”? “exclusivity”? “stability”? “selectivity”? “privacy”? “constraint”? does it really avoid the double meanings of “free”? why not “shared”?

15 where are words like “labor” and “consumption”?

16 institutional rhetorics: MIT as a non-”lovemark” campus

17 institutional rhetorics: the Harvard response

18 a pre-history of cathedrals and bazaars

19 a shared pedagogical initiative

20 resisting being trapped in the web anxieties about ownership of intellectual property anxieties about the leveling effect anxieties about how public a public intellectual should be anxieties about the privacy of students anxieties about the alienation of labor anxieties about the colonization of lifeworld by system

21 a rhetoric of disclaimers: what it is not

22 distance learning agendas

23 corporate competition and derivative works: arguments against the public domain

24 how will this affect the Googlization of universities? can we have open access without open search?

25 costs to the public sphere creating more shut-ins

26 the afterlife of SPIDER the reputation economy of open courses


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