Busy day yesterday with #change 11 and then a Google+ Hangout w/ @giuliaforsythe and company via DTLT Today. Episode 71: The Social Artist DTLT Today. Here is the video! More play with the idea of social artists, transversalists and the power of creating our own visuals.
Category: online interaction
The 2011 State of Community Management
Well, I’m only five months late sharing this, but because some of you, dear readers, travel in different circles, you may not have seen this. It is worth a read for anyone interested in online interaction from the good folks at the Community Roundtable!
Monday Video: Conformity
Via Howard Rheingold, Face the Rear: An Illustration of Social Influence rings true like a bell. I love playing with “elevator etiquette” by not standing the way the group is. Last month at eLearning Africa in Dar es Salaam, our hotel had one elevator out, and tons of people moving in and out of their rooms on the same schedule. Yup, crowded elevators. I was on the 7th floor of my 13 floor hotel and each morning as I sought to descend, the door would open showing me a packed elevator. Overpacked according to standards here at home. Body to body. But everyone seemed quite comfortable, if hot. But I had to switch my tactics (because the lights were burnt out on the stairs, so that was a tricky option as well.) I hit the up button, got on as the car was going up in the morning and rode down 13 to 1 on the ever filling car. In the back. In the corner. Watching — you guessed it — how people behaved. How they accommodated a suitcase. What Africans did vs colleagues from Europe or North America. So when I saw this video, I was hooked. Watch the video. Then one more comment at the end…
When I think of group dynamics both face to face and online, there is this dynamic of conformity. It is stronger in some cultural contexts and in my experience, stronger F2F. But it also exists online — despite all the talk that people act with less inhibitions online. Some people do. Not everyone. đ
And for my US friends, Happy Fourth of July!
How Tech Shapes Us and We Shape Tech
A tweet led me to a post today at Rethinking Technological Literacy — Campus Technology. Mary Grush writes:
Turkle introduced attendees to her concept of âtechnology as the architect of selfâ–that even as we shape our technologies, they shape us. Itâs a two-way street that is producing a complex set of problems and conditions surrounding the relationship between people and technology.
This strongly resonates with what we posited in Digital Habitats at the community level. Our choices of technology shape the community and the community influences and shapes the technology, both in how it is designed, deployed and used in practice.
I’m reading Turkle’s new book (Alone Together)Â slowly and how she frames the negative consequences of this interaction. I think we need to pay attention to both the negative and the positive.
Responding to Negative Comments Online
Nice visual organization of useful/not so useful responses to negative comments online. Take a peek! Thanks @silkcharm / Laurel Papworth!