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Learning Environments & City 2.0 @fredgarnett #SLERD2016 Timisoara 20 May 2016

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Page 1: Learning City 2.0

Learning Environments & City 2.0

@fredgarnett #SLERD2016 Timisoara 20 May 2016

Page 2: Learning City 2.0

Learning Environments & City 2.0

Learning EnvironmentsWeb 2.0Ambient Learning CityCity 2.0Conclusions;Timisoara 2.0;Open Scholars in Open Cities

Page 3: Learning City 2.0

Learning Environments A Brief History

Learning Environments & City 2.0

Page 4: Learning City 2.0

Learning Environments A Brief History

1 million years agoPlains; visionary, improv, Heutagogy 200,000 years agoCultural DNA (Pagel) mimetic Andragogy60,000 years ago…Maps; precise, didactic, Pedagogy

Not just academics but a species…

Page 5: Learning City 2.0

Organised Learning A Brief History

2,500 years agoPlato’s Academy; learning conversations1,000 years agoCity University; monotheistic (self-organized) communities of scholars150 years ago… (Polytechnics)Scientific, taxonomies, curricula

Page 6: Learning City 2.0

Learning Content A Brief History

2,500 Years AgoContent; what content? (Republic)1,000 Years Ago1-32 Books Content-Scarcity (Oxford Uni)100 years ago…Public Libraries; Reading as Learning Content-Surplus (Mechanical Reproduction)Now? User-Generated Content… OR Content Creation & Content Curation

Page 7: Learning City 2.0

Educational Design A Brief History

>Cosmologies>Taxonomies> Folksonomies

The problem with education is that;They impose taxonomies on learners

Instead of Folksonomies on Institutions…

(We could be cocreating open scholarship)

Page 8: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0

Learning Environments & City 2.0

Page 9: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0from

Access(internet)

toContent

(WorldWideWeb)

toContext

(Web2.0)

Page 10: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0

I’m interested in social change through technology use;Technological Innovation Process TIP1771-2021 (in 50yr cycles)Kondratieff long-wave cycles of meta-technologies; microprocessorNetworks, Services, Users model

Page 11: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0

TIP Effects of technology use;1st Order effects – planned use-ve 1st Order Effects – side-effects2nd Order Effects – unanticipated -ve 2nd Order effects – crises…Social change comes through 2nd Order Effects; Trains > Metroland

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Web 2.0

Arguably in tech-enabled change; Change is socially dialogical

rather than intellectually dialectical

It comes from users modifying designers’ original intentions

Page 13: Learning City 2.0

So web 2.0 allows users to shape tech-use

Permanent beta, architectures of participation

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So how can Web 2.0 help designers?

I helped designed a social network before social networks;Information Architecture 4 Civil SocietyFormed lastfridaymob; argued Public technology must be;

Creative, interactive, participative…

Page 15: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0 & Learning

We formed Learner-Generated Contexts group (2006)“A coincidence of motivations leading to agile configurations”Open Context Model of LearningUsing a “development framework” the PAH Continuum

Page 16: Learning City 2.0

P A HTeacher

School

Teacher/Learner

Learner

Research

Cognition Epistemic

Cognition

Meta-Cognitio

n

Adult

Page 17: Learning City 2.0

Pedagogy Andragogy Heutagogy

From Andragogy to Heutagogy Pedagogy Andragogy Heutagogy Continuum

Pedagogy the institutionalisation of learning around facts, resource scarcity, subject disciplines; education as a delivery system (cognition)

Andragogy negotiated, collaborative, interest-driven learning brokered into ‘open’ spaces – at best the community is the curriculum (meta-cognition)

Heutagogy self-determined learning where learner creativity enables innovation (epistemic cognition)

We are interested in post-virtual models of learning

Page 18: Learning City 2.0

Web 2.0 & Context shaping

If web 2.0 with user-generated content & participative qualities Allows for “context-shaping” Can we design a development framework That allows us to shape learning contexts?

Page 19: Learning City 2.0

Ambient Learning City

Learning Environments & City 2.0

Page 20: Learning City 2.0

Ambient Learning City

fromAmbient(environmental)

toSmart

(wired)

toSocial (collaborative)

Page 21: Learning City 2.0

Ambient Learning City

Being “insanely ambitious”We decided to investigate howA multiple-context Ambient Learning City might workWe had Emergent Learning Model…Well! How did I get here?

Emergent Learning Model

Page 22: Learning City 2.0

Ambient Learning City

Emergent Learning ModelEducational design tool, neither institution nor student-centric butLearner-centric (learning-centric?)Education from the right…Learning from the left…

Emergent Learning Model

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Ambient Learning City

In 2000 Proboscis created; “Urban Tapestries” in BrightonEnabling participative use of mobile phones in urban contexts In 2005 Mudlarking in Deptford 2006 Ealing Northala Ambient Learning Park then Kew Gardens

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Interesting cityscapes come -

from sustained collaborative citizen action

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Creekside Centre Sustainable build…

Used in Olympics 2012 build (IOC standard)

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Urban Ecology rools OK!

Crofton Fields (Riverways project)

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Recently celebrated on BBC TV Culture Show

For Art Walks (SLAW) & cultural regeneration

Social action

Cultural regeneration

Property speculation

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Ambient Learning City

2007 EU-IST 7 Future of LearningFor the “classroom of the future” but learning context-responsive2010 Ambient Learning City>>2011 MOSI-ALONG Ambient Learning Open Network Group

Ambient Learning City

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Ambient Learning City

1998 Lewisham Citizens ConnectCan the Internet be used to stimulate “Active Citizenship”?TaLENT Community Grid for Learning (CGfL) (CoP model)but Best CGfL in Manchester… learners.org

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Ambient Learning City

Question; can we use our development framework toDesign interactive learning - In multiple contexts in Manchester1 Participative curatorial strategies2 Object-centred socialityHistory of Manchester in 100 objects

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Ambient Learning City; New Metaphors

Digital / Cabinets of Curiosities

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Ambient Learning City; New Models

Aggregate then Curate; Social Media Participation Model

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Social Cities of Tomorrow

Some AnswersNew metaphors

New relationshipsObject-centred sociality

Participative curatorial strategiesAggregate then Curate

Post-institutional thinkingParticipatory Cities

Social cities not smart cities

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Ambient Learning City

Answer; 1. New reframing metaphors;Digital Cabinets of Curiosity2. Non-taxonomy learning-model;Aggregate then CurateNo Taxonomies – interest-driven with QA of the learning process!

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Ambient Learning City

Effectively we were getting our hands dirty on 2nd order effects; The problem was we were in an industrial city with 150 years experience of doing that…We were learning about contexts but we weren’t context-shaping…

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Ambient Learning City

Question; how do we move from context-responsive processes to Context-shaping capabilities?What new problems do we need to solve… So that we can create a dialogical development process?

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City 2.0 & CityZens

Learning Environments & City 2.0

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Context-shaping in City 2.0

fromRepresentative

(19th century taxonomies)

toOpen

(access to hierarchy)

toParticipatory

(folksonomies / intangible culture)

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Context-shaping in City 2.0

Smart Mobs +

Everything is Miscellaneous =

Here Comes Everybody

Enabling Consequences

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Context

In 2010 Proboscis asked me to critically review their workI wrote “enabling consequences” about shaping second-order effectsAs generative innovations / platforms Giles Lane, as an artist & cultural broker, argued that they were…

Enabling Consequences

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Context

“Moving Criteria across contexts”

Or what Steven Johnson callsexaptation

Or what we call#heutagogy or…

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Context

Creativity! Playing with formCreating platforms for changeBUT!!!Are we using new technologies;To e-enable existing processesOr to Transform them?

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Context

Manchester Historic knowledge context1845 Museums Act1850 Public Libraries Act1871 Education ActThe 19th century created a context where taxonomic hierarchies wereThe basis of institutional organisationStill in that form in the 21st century

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Context

In an Internet of People @BenHammersley said that “network society cannot be born”Because people who grew up in hierarchies are still in POWERHow do we move from hierarchies to a participatory network society?

An Internet of People British Council Lecture 2011

Page 45: Learning City 2.0

Context

The Industrial Revolution threw a bomb into communitySeparating Home Work Leisure & Markets from each otherYet the digital revolution has the potential to…Re-integrate all our daily lives(If you want it)…

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Context-shaping in City 2.0

fromSubject

(monarchy)

toCitizens

(constitutional monarchy)

toCityZens

(who knows?)

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Context Engineering the Participatory CityMunicipality Smart City

City 2.0

City City Hall Real-time City Hall

Networked City Hall

Institutions Bricks & Mortar

Clicks & Mortar

Arch of Participation

Street Tarmac Wifi/Digital Context Engineering

Strategy Urban Plan Urban Vision

Collaborative Vision

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Conclusion; Timisoara 2.0

Learning Environments & City 2.0

Page 49: Learning City 2.0

An Open City of Open Scholars

Timisoara 2.0

Page 50: Learning City 2.0

Conclusion; Timisoara 2.0

Become a Participatory Smart City Create Timispedia to curate its history & create its own identityBecome a Open Source City hub sharing/documenting its evolution…Become a City of Culture 2.0 crowd-sourcing cultural developmentsCreate a city product of participatory culture

Page 51: Learning City 2.0

Conclusion; Timisoara 2.0

For every risk…There is a chance

Mayor Brune, Nijmegen, April 2016

Page 52: Learning City 2.0

An Open City of Open Scholars

Timisoara 2.0

Page 53: Learning City 2.0

Learning Environments & City 2.0

@fredgarnett #SLERD2016 Timisoara 20 May 2016

Page 54: Learning City 2.0

Context Engineering the Participatory CityMunicipality Smart City

Participatory City 2.0

City City Hall Real-time City Hall

Distributed City Hall

Institution Bricks & Mortar

Clicks & Mortar

Arch of Participation

Street Tarmac Wifi/Digital Context Engineering

Strategy Urban Plan Urban Vision

Collaborative Vision

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Participatory City Futures

Post-war and post-modern urban plan solutions

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Participatory City Futures

Why are we talking about Smart Cities?…Social Cities, Hybrid Cities, Port Cities,City 2.0, Green Cities, Happy Cities, Future Cities, Messy Cities, Invisible CitiesTransition Towns, Planet of Slums?We are facing a “paradigm shift” in our thinking about cities…

Against the Smart City Adam Greenfield

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Participatory City Futures

20 years ago I started teaching aboutInformation Systems in SocietyAs digital technology use developed beyond business organisations then…Their impact would be felt in our social livesThis would create a Kondratieff long-wave change process in our society (1971-2021)And we have a choice in what that means because we are the USERS of new tech

Page 58: Learning City 2.0

Participatory City Futures

Paradigm Shift (from Kuhn) features A transformation process not an elaboration of the existing (19th century) paradigmWith “debates about fundamentals” (or types of cities – as in this presentation)No need for “consensus-forming” around existing City Hall paradigm…“Smart Cities” approach by Intel Cisco IBM Siemens is exactly this “consensus-forming”

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Participatory City Futures

BUT!As Hazel Henderson said

Technology is the essence of politics

Our technology choices createThe kind of society we live in

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Participatory City Futures

Cities are where the eternal human conflictBetween settlers and nomads is resolvedSettlement requires ownershipNomads need to shareBut ownership & mobility are challenged by collaborative economy & smart phonesTetrad (Digital McLuhan) shows new tech; enhances^, >retrieves, <reverses, removes∨AND we have a choice IF we are informed

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Participatory City Futures

So, how do we engage with this social change process as it affects us day-by-day?How do we frame our thoughts on the kind of cities we want to live in?Web 2.0 holds potential for participation But existing organisations want more of the same (same as <the past only more intense)Transition Cities or privatised Municipalities?

Page 63: Learning City 2.0

Participatory City Futures

Some ideas from Origin of Spaces (EU)ZAWP – BilbaoRolling process of hyper-local partnerships, permanently debating w/the council “from action to process”LX Factory – LisboaHyper-cool Coworking hub, designing in a social mix. “Hoxton in a factory” a “post-welfare state” solutionROJC – Pula Rebuilding Civil Society (post Civil-War) through NGOsDarwin – Bordeaux Ecological transitions to a sustainable economy

Co-creating Coworking Spaces

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“from action to process”

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Lxfactory Lisboa

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Participatory City Futures

On the design side we need…Development Frameworks to help the dialogical design of The city we choose to live in! Both for

Network Society & City 2.0 or…

CityZens Context EngineeringDevelopment Framework for Network Society

Page 67: Learning City 2.0

Context Engineering the Participatory CityMunicipality Smart City

Participatory City 2.0

City City Hall Real-time City Hall

Distributed City Hall

Institution Bricks & Mortar

Clicks & Mortar

Arch of Participation

Street Tarmac Wifi/Digital Context Engineering

Strategy Urban Plan Urban Vision

Collaborative Vision

Page 68: Learning City 2.0

Conclusions

Designing Participatory Smart Cities

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Designing Participatory Smart Cities

1. CityZen action creates diverse city spaces 2. Web 2.0 allows dialogical user choices3. Social change needs new framing devices4. We can shape the contexts we live in5. Mashups maketh new – we need dialogical development frameworks that are CityZens-centric 6. CollaborativeVisioning…

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Designing Participatory Smart Cities

ThankYou More information on this will be found in;Digital Futures and the City of Today (forthcoming 2016)Chapter with Context Engineer Dr. Carl Smith entitled…Context Shaping City 2.0; how to use Hybrid Technologies and Techniques to make the Smart City 2.0 participatory & Cityzen-centric

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Designing Participatory Smart Cities

@fredgarnett http://bit.ly/CityPeeps

Page 73: Learning City 2.0

WikiQuals “Yes You Can!”Learning not Education

Liminal not Institutionalised Bio-diversity not Monoculture

Learner-centric not Student-centredLearner-generated not Course-defined

Community as Curriculum not Syllabus definedCommunity of Sqolars not Community of PracticePersonal Learning Networks not Content-delivery

Quality Assured not Quality ControlledDynamic Quality not Static Quaity

Affinity not SupervisionEmergent not Linear

Trust the learner to be themselves; Identity…