My Digital Fiction Presentation for Futures in Literacy Conference

Creative Conferencing – The “Unconference”

Today I was invited to be a discussion leader / facilitator at an “unconference” on blogging.  Although I am unsure whether I can accept the invitation yet, I just loved the instructions for the facilitator and wanted to share, particularly in light of some of the critique of the traditional conference scene (poor Alan!). Here are the instructions:

This will be an unusual conference. We generally won’t have speakers, panels or an audience.  We will have discussions and sessions, and each session will have a discussion leader.

The discussion leader
Think of the discussion leader as a reporter who is creating a story with quotes from the people in the room. So, instead of having a panel and an audience we just have contributors.  We feel this more accurately reflects what’s going on. It’s not uncommon for the audience at a conference to have more expertise collectively than the people who are speaking.

The discussion leader is also the editor, so if he or she feels that a point has been made they must move on to the next point quickly. No droning, no filibusters, no repeating an idea over and over.

The discussion leader can also call on people.

Think of it as a weblog
Think of the conference as if it were a weblog. At the beginning of each session, the leader talks between five and fifteen minutes. He or she will introduce the idea and some of the people in the room.

Then he or she will facilitate the discussion among all the contributors in the room, inviting others to comment and asking questions of others. It is hoped that everyone who would like to contribute to the discussion will be able to do so in the allotted time.

We have a limited amount of time, and a group of participants whose time is valuable. The leader’s job is to make sure the show stays interesting, even captivating. If it gets boring people will leave the
room and schmooze, or read their email, or whatever. So the leader’s job is to keep it moving. Sometimes this may mean cutting people off.

How to prepare
Since every person in a session is considered an equal participant, everyone should prepare at least a little. Think about the subject, read the comments on the Conference site. Follow weblogs from other
people who are paticipating. Think about what you want to get out of the session, and what questions you wish to raise, and what information or points of view you’d like to get from the session.

Everyone is a journalist
This will be an unusual conference in that almost everyone participating writes publicly. So we assume that everyone present is a journalist.

On the record
All conversations, whether to the entire room or one-to-one, unless otherwise stated, clearly and up front, are on the record and for attribution. You do not need to ask permission to quote something you hear at the conference. Of course you may ask for permission to quote, and you may choose not to quote things you hear.

It’s a user’s conference
Most technology conferences are centered around the vendors. This is not like those conferences. Here, vendors are welcome, and we hope they will help by sponsoring in some way, but they participate mainly by listening.

Most of the people who will be talking are users. These are the revolutionaries. Vendors make a living by creating tools that these people use to change the world. So much attention is focused on technology.

At this conference we turn it around and focus on what people are doing with the technology.

Internet access
Wireless internet access will be available. Each session will also be hopefully be podcast, audio only. You are welcome to bring your own recording equipment and cameras are allowed. You are free to record it and broadcast it any way you like as long as you don’t interfere with the sessions in any way.

That’s pretty exciting.

I like this: It’s not uncommon for the audience at a conference to have more expertise collectively than the people who are speaking.

But this quite true fact is kind of intimidating: If it gets boring people will leave the room and schmooze, or read their email, or whatever.

Sometimes I get very tired when colleagues IN AN EDUCATION FACULTY lecture to students that we should not consider children to be “empty vessels to be filled up” and yet that is the very paradigm they use themselves when lecturing.  Its also very very frustrating when the worst offenders of being lame and uncreative and masters of boring dot point powerpoint shows are lecturers from an education faculty, or speakers in an education strand.  HELLO!!!  We are supposed to be EXPERTS in pedagogy!!!

Anyway  I am really hoping I get to go to this “unconference” as it sounds fabulous, and provides a creative model for sharing, collaborating and communicating with colleagues.

The Cross-Media Self

andypart1

Yesterday when I added Andy Piper as a friend on Facebook, I flippantly said “now we’re friends everywhere” – since I knew him on Second Life, on Facebook, on twitter, on flickr, on his blog, and through his comments on my blog.

He paused for a while, then replied with a wide ASCII grin:

“friends *everywhere*? 8-) see http://onxiam.com/people/andypiper“ 

I clicked the link, and my jaw literally dropped in astonishment at the number of tracks Andy makes across the web.  How the HECK can any one person do so much?!?!

Right now I feel pretty overwhelmed by the number of social media spaces I seem to exist in: 3 blogs, 3 or 4 roleplaying forums, a fan forum, a zine, flickr, linkedin, twitter, facebook, Second Life (plus an alt), 2 youtube accounts, gmail, work mail, skype, google chat. People keep inviting me to new things but I just don’t have the time!  And each one of these has channels or groups or threads – I am in 63 flickr groups, 19 facebook groups, subscribe to numerous blog feeds, several podcasts and a number of youtube channels.  I’m part of 2 high traffic email lists (Association of Internet Researchers and Second Life Education), and about 10 low to medium traffic ones.

My solution at handling them all is to concentrate on two or three at a time.  The amount of reading and writing and uploading and downloading and viewing and clicking I do every day is becoming ridiculous.  I am a terrible commenter on friend’s blogs, I only blog once every day or two, I barely post to email groups, and I only keep up with urgent emails.  If I tried to fully engage in everything I wouldn’t ever get any work done!
Andy wrote a post about his experiences called The Quicksand of Web 2.0, in which he debates some of the pros and cons of different applications and talks about addiction and his “off switch”.

Its all left me wondering about the kind of identity play we engage in across all of these different spaces we inhabit, and the type of narrative constructions other people are making about us as they make connections between our multiple cross-media selves.

And is it possible for people who read your work across these spaces to suddenly get turned off by a bad case of TMI (too much information)?  Or as one of my literary colleagues is wont to say, “that person just has too much narrative going on.”

But not you Andy :)

BlogHer 2007 Conference in Second Life

BlogHer '07 I'm Going in Second Life

How wonderful! The 2007 BlogHer conference is being streamed into Second Life!!!

Look at some of the amazing speakers.

… and doesn’t this panel sound fascinating:

Digital Exhibitionists or Chroniclers of their Time: Will Naked Bloggers Make History?

Hopefully I will be able to stay awake into the wee hours for this one :)

I can’t find a SLURL for this yet but you have to register (it is free) and join a group so I guess more information will be forthcoming once you join. What a wonderful opportunity to be part of this conference that I’ve been reading about every year with envy on my US colleague’s blogs.

Blogging and Gender Issues

she_blogger

Lately on the AoIR list there’s been some useful discussion about gender and blogging, so I figured I would compile some of the links together here so I don’t lose them.  I wrote about this area of research in a book chapter in 2005 but the book hasn’t been published yet.  It’s actually frustrating how long some things take before going to press.  By the time it comes out people reading will go – huh, that’s old news!  But it wasn’t when I first wrote about it :)   I really think blogging should be recognised more as a new form of scholarly writing but then I said that a few years ago too.

Henning, Jeffrey. “The Blogging Iceberg.” *Perseus*. 4 October 2003. Perseus Development Corporation. 11 November 2005
http://www.perseus.com/blogsurvey/thebloggingiceberg.html


Herring, Susan and Inna Kouper, Lois Ann Scheidt, and Elijah Wright. “Women
and Children Last: The Discursive Construction of Weblogs.” *Into the
Blogosphere: Rhetoric, Community, and Culture of Weblogs*. Ed. Laura J.
Gurak, Smiljana Antonijevic, Laurie Johnson, Clancy Ratliff, and Jessica
Reyman. June 2004. 11 November 2005
http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere/introduction.html

Papers from the 2006 Blogher Conference
http://blogher.org/about-blogher-conference-06

Book chapter – Posting with Passion: Blogs and the Politics of Gender
by Melissa Gregg in Uses of blogs
(http://snurb.info/index.php?q=node/335)

Papers from AAAI 2006 Symposia on Computational Approaches to
Analyzing Weblogs
(http://www.aaai.org/Library/Symposia/Spring/ss06-03.php):

- The Identity of Bloggers: Openness and gender in personal weblogs by
Scott Nowson and Jon Oberlander -
http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/s9553330/papers/SS0603NowsonS.pdf

- Effects of Age and Gender on Blogging by Jonathan Schler, Moshe
Koppel, Shlomo Argamon, and James Pennebaker -
http://lingcog.iit.edu/doc/springsymp-blogs-final.pdf

- Gender Classification of Weblog Authors by Xiang Yan and Ling -
http://www.stanford.edu/~xyan/publications/SS0603YanX.pdf

(By the way, does anybody know the original source for that image so I can attribute it?)

Youth Online – almost there!

cover

Yay! Here is my final book cover!!!

And here is one of the endorsements:

insidecover

How lovely of Len Unsworth to write such kind words.

Thinking Blogger Award Meme

How exciting! This is the first meme I have ever been officially tagged withand it’s the thinking blogger award! Many many thanks to Jerry for tagging me – Jerry’s work has been an inspiration to me since way back in 1995. I’d announced on my website that I was thinking about doing a PhD but at that stage the area of virtual worlds and identity was very under researched and I was fumbling around wondering how to go about it. Jerry emailed me and encouraged me and gave me links and references and although it still took me a while to get started, this was the very beginning for me.

So, here are 5 bloggers (or blogger groups) that make me think:

  1. Henry Jenkins: Thoughts of an Aca-Fan. Henry Jenkins, is addition to being one of the most prolific bloggers I read, writes on all of my favourite subjects: fan fiction, pop culture, new media literacies, youtube, gaming, virtual worlds. He is an inspiration and barely a paper goes by without a mention of his work.
  2. Terra Nova: the group blog that write about all aspects of virtual worlds. This group is made up of some of the most well known VR researchers (though they don’t have many females) and their work is sometimes controversial, mostly academic in nature and always thought provoking.
  3. Jill Walker: jill/txt. Jill Walker’s work on digital fiction, blogging and new narratives really expanded my own thoughts and scholarship in these areas.
  4. Julia Davies: DrJoolz Snapshotz on Life. Julia has amazing insight into new literacies practices and a real flair for the visual and aesthetics of new media.
  5. Jess Laceti: Jess. Jess is doing some really cutting edge work with multimodal new media narratives and I love the enthusiasm she conveys about her work.

Well, that was fun!  I am going to locate the award banner on my sidebar now.

New Literacies Sampler Online

New Literacies Sampler

Peter Lang Publishers are incredibly forward thinking – they have provided the full manuscript of this book online here!  This book has chapters from all of my favourite new literacies authors – see the table of contents below:

Contents

Chapter 1: Sampling “the New” in New Literacies
Colin Lankshear & Michele Knobel

Chapter 2: “You Won’t Be Needing Your Laptops Today”: Wired Bodies in the Wireless Classroom
Kevin M. Leander

Chapter 3: Popular Websites in Adolescents’ Out-of-School Lives: Critical Lessons on Literacy
Jennifer C. Stone

Chapter 4: Agency and Authority in Role-Playing “Texts”
Jessica Hammer

Chapter 5: Pleasure, Learning, Video Games, and Life: The Projective Stance
James Paul Gee

Chapter 6: Digital Design: English Language Learners and Reader Reviews in Online Fiction
Rebecca W. Black

Chapter 7: Blurring and Breaking through the Boundaries of Narrative, Literacy, and
Identity in Adolescent Fan Fiction
Angela Thomas

Chapter 8: Looking from the Inside Out: Academic Blogging as New Literacy
Julia Davies and Guy Merchant

Chapter 9: Online Memes, Affinities, and Cultural Production
Michele Knobel & Colin Lankshear

Chapter 10: New Literacies
Cynthia Lewis

Experimenting

The main reason i moved blogs recently was because I was experiencing major delays and difficulties with blogsome.  WordPress.com is so fast and easy to use I can’t believe the difference it has made to my attitude and blogging practice.  Maybe its because it is new and still has novelty factor, but I realise that the cumbersome process of the old blog actually deterred me from posting much for quite a while.  It was too time consuming, and I would lose posts in the ether which meant I felt like I was wasting time.  But now that the process has become so easy I have a tendency to blog more often.  I wonder how many other people notice that the interface significantly affects their blogging / literacy practices?

And one of the unexpected results of moving blogs has been the number of widgets now suddenly available at the click of a button.  So I am going overboard a bit and trying them all out – from the movie trailer “pod” widget, to adding in some of my favourite blog feeds directly into my blog.   It’s fun and I haven’t finished experimenting yet, but I feel guilty about spending too much time on it and better get back to some serious work :)

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 366 other followers