Stories and Perspectives (#Reflection)

  • Introduction:
    • Name and a little about me
    • Course: EDCI 572 with Dr. Verena Roberts D
      • Development and Implementation of the Curriculum in Digital Learning Contexts
    • Overview: Stories and Perspectives: How to Search for and Find Different Stories and Perspectives.
  • Outline:
    • How can our digital bubble as educators filter the stories we hear and believe?
    • What kinds of digital tools expand filter bubbles in your learning context?
    • What types of filter bubbles are influencing your digital project?
    • What are you doing to ensure students are using a wide variety of digital resources?
    • Tech of the week
  • How can our digital bubble as educators filter the stories we hear and believe?
    • Website algorithm
      • Sites, like Google and Facebook, note links you click on and then edit what you see based on those choices. This in turn creates a filter bubble that only shows you things you have proven interested in and pushes all other things out, including differing opinions (Pariser, 2011).
      • Eli Pariser suggests we find things that are not only relevant to us but also uncomfortable and challenging to help burst the filter bubble (2011).
    • Feedback loop – same information repeated, exaggerated, etc.
      • Rheingold suggest we find people whose intelligence and honesty we respect but disagree with on things (2020).
    • Search engines and other websites may endorse paying advertises over other options and information.
      • Avoid paid advertisements at top of search
      • Search passed the first page of results
    • Find out who is the author and then research their reliability and their sources (Rheingold, 2012).
  • What kinds of digital tools expand filter bubbles in your learning context?
    • Demonstrate research and information literacy as outlined in the BC digital literacy framework (British Columbia Ministry of Education, 2016)
      • find, organize, analyze, evaluate, synthesize, and use information ethically from a variety of sources and media
    • Using multiple search engines
    • Fact checking websites: Snopes.com, factcheck.org, politifact.com, etc
    • Use Rheingold’s (2012) suggestion to “triangulate” sources and information.
      • Markhal Nolan demonstrates in his TED Talk, How to Separate Fact and Fiction Online, how he used human sources and the internet (using google maps) to find that a video that was posted online of bodies being dumped off a bridge in Hama was not accurate and took place in a different location, possibly at a different time (2012).
  • What types of filter bubbles are influencing your digital project?
    • The apps and tech suggested by classmates
    • The readings provided my prof (one side of the story?)
    • My own biases and beliefs
    • Website algorithms
  • What are you doing to ensure students are using a wide variety of digital resources?
    • Provide places to start their search:
      • Instructables website and Other woodworking related websites
      • Multiple search engines
      • Rheingold (2012) talks to Googles “search anthropologist” Dan Russell who suggests Wikipedia as a place to start your search.
    • Students need to provide multiple sources and cite them properly
    • Have students find counter narratives and compare and contrast
  • Tech of the Week:
    • freesound.org
      • Collection of sound effects
      • Creative Commons
  • Outro Music
    • Music by Canada by Picture of the Floating World

References:

British Columbia. Ministry of Education. (2016). BC’s digital literacy framework. Victoria, B.C.: Ministry of Education.

Nolan, M. (2012). Retrieved March 18, 2020, from https://www.ted.com/talks/markham_nolan_how_to_separate_fact_and_fiction_online

Pariser, E. (2011). Retrieved March 18, 2020, from https://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles

Rheingold, H. (2012). Chapter 2 Crap Detection 101: How to Find What you Need to Know, and Decide if It’s True. In Net Smart: How to Thrive Online. (pp. 77-111). Cambridge, Mass. MIT Press.

Rheingold, H. (Producer). (2020). Interview about Chapter 2 Crap Detection 101 [Audio podcast]. Retrieved from https://drive.google.com/open?id=1RkfP8XeIxKaRmBMmLzkevv3DMSH1zqyR

Audio:

Musical Intro/outro is Canada by Picture of the Floating World found at freemusicarchive.org

Doppler Horn sounds effect by Mullumbimby found at freesound.org

One Comment

  1. Reply
    Verena Roberts April 15, 2020

    I really appreciated this podcast – except for the loud zoom at the end… 🙂
    The use of the outline made it super easy to understand your podcast! You gave me so many ideas to consider in my own podcast making!

    Thank you for sharing!

    Verena 🙂

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