I don’t Google much anymore, having set DuckDuckGo as my default search engine on every device and browser that I use routinely. I do struggle slightly with finding a good verb to use for it, though. Google has managed to embed itself in our language as both a business and as a daily activity, and I have to applaud them for that. I started using Google in the late 1990s, when it was a young upstart, and I readily admit they have (and have long had) a very solid search engine. It was fast and streamlined from my first use, and has long had a more intuitive interface than its predecessors. Several years ago, though, as I became more aware of the growth of privacy concerns, I heard of a newer, privacy-oriented search engine and I decided to try DuckDuckGo. As a happy Google user, I expected to have to make a trade-off between privacy and user experience. I was delighted and surprised by the reality. I find DuckDuckGo every bit as intuitive and effective as its top competitor. It offers a visually clean interface, solid and expansive results, and clear identification of advertisements among those results. In general, I tend to find its results a better fit for my searches and less dominated by the tricky ads that make you believe they are official websites for a known organization. In library work, I have seen many of those types of advertisements lure desperate patrons into questionable portals for drivers licenses and birth certificates, paywall versions of telephone listings, and expensive resume services that looked to be free, among others.
Since both search engines satisfy my essential needs of finding and presenting relevant and accurate results reliably and quickly, I can use privacy considerations as another standard criterion, rather than a luxury add-on. In that category, DuckDuckGo is a clear winner. Privacy is a primary goal of the search engine, and they have an entire section of their website to discuss it and promote more private ways to use the internet, in addition to providing browser extensions and apps for mobile devices. (https://duckduckgo.com/about) They emphasize that the company does not track user search history, nor collect personal information. Since they do not collect or store the information, it is not available to be hacked, sold, or collected by subpoena. This may result in less personalized results and ads, but I regard that as a feature rather than a drawback. I would prefer to choose results from a larger and less-tailored group than see only a pre-filtered list that may omit or bury a result. I also find DuckDuckGo’s predictive text suggestions quite reliable without a need to connect them to my previous searches.
Since they do not sell user information, a logical question is how the search engine produces revenue to operate. DuckDuckGo sells ads on its platform, which is a common revenue model. Unlike Google and many other platforms, DuckDuckGo does not target those advertisements based on a user’s prior searches. Ads shown are based solely on the search terms entered at the time. This can provide a more comprehensive results list and will not advantage some brands over others based on your history with them. (Sheth) DuckDuckGo also earns a small commission from affiliate partnerships with companies like eBay and Amazon, when users follow links from their searches to purchase items from these sellers. Finally, DuckDuckGo also earns a very small portion of its income by licensing commercial users to access its “Tracker Radar” system. This system is freely accessible by the public to see common methods being used to follow internet users with publicly available information, but can be used commercially for a fee to DuckDuckGo.
If you are concerned about your online privacy or just interested in learning more about a different way to search, I encourage you to check out duckduckgo.com, and consider using it as your default browser!
References
Duckduckgo homepage. (n.d) DuckDuckGo. Retrieved October 29, 2022 from https://duckduckgo.com/about.
Sheth, N. (2022, August 18). How does duckduckgo make money? Finty. https://finty.com/us/business-models/duckduckgo/
In a classroom setting, educators teach and support critical thinking and metacognition to a stable audience. Assignments can be structured to require or at least encourage analysis and awareness of bias or intent by creators of the works being studied. It’s a safe bet that most teachers hope their students will develop those skills as habits and carry them into the rest of their lives. Whether students carry those skills forward or not, most people living outside the academic sphere have not had significant training or incentive to examine their media exposure or its effects.
In the larger world, much is made of the importance of people having digital literacy and thinking critically, but a bigger question remains: how can we influence people to learn and apply these skills in a meaningful way rather than just to support their current beliefs? When danah boyd asks “Did Media Literacy Backfire?,” she writes about the dangers inherent in readers drawing conclusions about the trustworthiness of their sources based on intuition and their own experience rather than deeper analysis. She recognizes the tendency of people encouraged to be critical of their information sources to trust or doubt based in large part on how closely media aligns with the readers’ worldview. Are there practices or structures that can be deployed to divert people towards thinking outside their usual filter bubbles? And will media consumers be open to them?
Wendy Rose Gould invites readers to analyze their social media bubble and gives practical, concrete ideas to break out of them. She acknowledges that people continue to live in and reinforce their bubbles because it is uncomfortable to experience cognitive dissonance, and easy to avoid it, especially in an era of algorithm-curated news feeds. The question that arises then, is how can we encourage society around us to do the work to expand their bubbles and be interested in other points of view? As educators, do we have a responsibility outside the classroom to foster growth? Trevor Hoag’s article “The Pretense of Neutrality” resonates as applicable within the higher education system, but even more for those that feel called to advance the aims of critical pedagogy outside a traditional pedagogical structure. In an era of prominent mis- and disinformation, it feels almost negligent to refrain from the attempt to nudge the conversation towards deeper thinking about media, its creators, and its aims.
I work in libraries rather than schools. Libraries are educational institutions, far more self-directed than the average classroom. Constituents directly control their learning by choosing their own materials and programs, and may decide either not to use our services at all, or to work for change in our policies and holdings through elections or appointments to governing boards if we seem to privilege a philosophy contrary to their worldview. We support life-long learning and work towards social justice, while navigating the constraints of each community’s dominant culture. A similar tension exists on social media. I cultivate a variety of viewpoints on my feed to expand my own bubble, and hopefully that of my contacts through my own contributions. The question that unifies all of these interactions is how can I/we combat misinformation and present counternarratives in a way that may have constructive effects on our network? As described by Elizabeth Kolbert in the New Yorker (print version 2/27/2017,) confirmation bias is a well-known hazard to simply sharing facts that contradict a person’s deeply held belief, so better methods need to be employed for goals beyond starting a disagreement or inspiring a cull of contacts lists. The underlying mission may be to hold attention long enough for an audience to take an extra moment to interact with new information, or to consider a new angle to a subject about which they already have firm opinions. As I look forward to future library programs and publicity, and as I consider my footprint on social media, I intend to incorporate some of the following concepts.
Empathy
In sources as disparate as Forbes magazine and a Community Toolkit for Addressing Health Misinformation from the Office of the US Surgeon General, authors emphasize the need for empathy and understanding other viewpoints. Neither makes the case that we need to embrace alternative interpretations or knowledge we understand to be demonstrably false, merely that it is essential to approach from a position of humility and seeking to know how someone has arrived at their conclusions. In many cases, it depends on group identities and status. Relationships and identity are integral to a person’s trust in information sources and willingness to process new information. In order to better understand a person’s worldview and areas of contention, it can be helpful to consider their day-to-day concerns and how those affect their experience with contentious issues. It is important to address misinformation or perceived wrongs privately, rather than in a public forum like a comments section. Nobody responds well to public shaming, and defensiveness will prevent someone from considering your input, much less adjusting their views.
One strategy to increase empathy in our lives includes consciously curating our own varied social media and news feed. This may look like maintaining contacts or following newsfeeds that disagree with us on important issues. We can observe the sources they cite to see which media channels are shaping their views and providing them with the information they trust. If we find the validity of these sources suspect, we should be able to identify why we doubt their credibility and seek other sources with similar bias and better fact-finding.
In the library world, empathy-building might look like some of the “Human Library” or facilitated conversation programs like the “Community Conversations” program in Estes Park, CO. These programs create an intentional environment for people to engage with each other and better recognize their shared humanity while recognizing that mutual respect does not require agreement on every topic.
When we investigate our own beliefs and find we have made mistakes or misunderstandings, it is vital for us to accept responsibility and be open about our own fallibility. We should be willing to share our thought process or discoveries and how our views have matured. It is easier to connect with others when we acknowledge our own failings and can share that vulnerability. Being supportive and respectful when others change their minds or behavior due to increased knowledge or understanding is another essential aspect of fostering empathy in the world around us.
Not Perpetuating the Problem
Kris Shaffer writes about “truthy lies and surreal truths” and how to recognize deceptive practices and prevent oneself from inadvertently propagating misinformation. He describes common methods used by malicious actors to link blatant untruths to factual information or to present falsehoods in a manner that looks more credible. He also discusses some ways in which truthful information can be presented to seem clearly inaccurate. A driving force throughout his article is doing the research to be certain of what and how much we know before creating or spreading information. It is vital to check varied sources for confirmation before sharing news stories, memes, videos, or pictures. Later findings of inaccuracies or embellishment lessens our credibility moving forward. He also stresses the importance of gathering and sharing reliable resources for finding and fact-checking news items. By creating a list of trustworthy sources, we promote our own accuracy and better understanding of contentious topics. If we share those sources and information about why we find them to be useful, our relationships within a network may offer a boost to those sources and their broader acceptance. Consistent repetition and sharing of both informational resources and true versions of misinformation is also important, as one of the ways conspiracy theories and other disinformation spreads is through frequent sharing. Even when people are arguing against it, merely sharing the phrases, even in a denial, helps embed it more firmly in readers’ minds. Sharing the counterinformation without reference to the initial statement helps create another narrative for receptive and undecided consumers. Shaffer’s suggestions require effort and dedication, but he makes an excellent point that we have to be willing to put in the work to help counteract the far easier, algorithm-guided, social media feed methods that so many people around us rely on for their news and to guide their decisions.
Within a library setting, it is important to recognize our role as a community-supported information source. It is particularly vital to maintain a neutral tone and provide information the citizenry recognizes as valid. Libraries have been traditionally seen as trustworthy and valuable sources of information and services. We must maintain and grow that trust as various groups and individuals look to shift libraries’ priorities, programming, services and collections through the makeup of their governing boards. It is essential to continue our commitment to social justice and accurate information while protecting our ability to express those professional values in a manner that encourages mutual respect. When we maintain our reputation for trustworthiness, materials we share can benefit from our own credibility. Cultural shifts will be slow in some communities, and we have to be willing to commit to a long trajectory rather than looking for instant and wholesale shifts in worldview.
Levity
Laughter builds trust, lowers stress, and increases memory retention. These are just a few of the tidbits that Jennifer Aaker and Naomi Bagdonas include in their book, Humor, Seriously: Why Humor is a Secret Weapon in Business and Life. The rest of the book is an enjoyable exploration of how to find levity in even the serious subjects as we navigate life. Humor is not appropriate in all discussions, but when there is room to lighten the mood or set the tone with a touch of the unexpected, a shared wry observation, or a self-deprecating statement, it creates a more fertile environment for increased flexibility, receptiveness and engagement. Even serious topics like seat belt use have benefited from a lighthearted approach in advertising and public awareness. According to Aaker and Bagdonas, important considerations in the use of humor to support behavioral change include not picking topics too emotionally close to the other party and keeping the humor inclusive rather than an attack. Jokes should never be about another person’s identity or situation, and should not disparage a group or individual. Recognizing irony in a situation or a shared annoyance can be funny, but only when it is not at the expense of or pertinent only to people in a specific situation. These factors frequently make memes or other online attempts at humor distasteful. We have all seen the memes that capitalize on the “otherness” of a group. Sometimes we are in that group, and we feel excluded. Other times we are not in the targeted group, which makes us complicit in the disrespect. It is difficult but valuable to search for and capitalize on opportunities to share humor that enhances relationships and our interconnectedness by focusing on shared concerns or the universality of the human condition.
On a personal level, I rarely share memes or other humor, but I will be more attentive than ever to the tone and object of ones that I choose to share. Being conscious of potential unintended meanings and ready to apologize and make amends for accidental missteps are also important considerations. Thinking twice before clicking on “share” is a good way to give oneself an extra moment to notice characteristics that might have unexpected meanings.
Libraries and their staff demonstrate humor in display themes, signs, and funny fake statistics, many of which are noncontroversial and sometimes make fun of the industry itself. In addition to slowing people down to appreciate the joke, it humanizes the institution and hopefully makes the library a more welcoming environment and its information more credible as users develop a sense of connection through shared humor.
Games/Gamification
Video games, role-playing games, and books are all good ways to experience life from another perspective. Making learning fun increases engagement in a learning experience and can take many forms. As noted in this 2015 article, libraries have been using game mechanics in real world activities to engage visitors, increase awareness of services, and enhance marketing. Most U.S. public libraries run some form of a summer reading or summer learning program, and libraries where I have worked are using systems like digital badging, cooperative achievements, and virtual leaderboards to enhance participation. Virtual reality is frequently seen as a gaming medium, but it can also be used to help people explore the world through the eyes of refugees or medical patients, helping students and potential caregivers to better understand future interactions. On a museum exhibit about the Titanic disaster, each visitor received a ticket for one of the passengers on the voyage. As they explored the exhibit, they could imagine the experience through the eyes of their assigned passenger, and find out at the end if that person survived the trip. This can better hold attention and increase engagement in the experiences of people living in a different world.
While much of the gaming industry is dominated by marketing towards white, cis-gendered, heterosexual males, some gaming industry members are starting to see some isolated signs of progress towards better representation in the industry. Hopefully these games will serve as mirrors for players that share characteristics with the game figures, and as windows for other players to observe the game from a different perspective. As the industry expands in these directions, further investment and a broader audience can continue these transitions, leading to a more welcoming environment for all.
Libraries can support these initiatives by curating their collections with special attention towards creators and intended audiences, much as they do for books, movies, and other collection materials. Libraries with a video game collection can intentionally include games such as Spider-Man: Miles Morales in their purchases, including replacing it when damaged or lost. When collections hold role-playing systems like Dungeons and Dragons, they can also seek systems by BIPOC and/or LGBTQ+ creators. A couple recent Kickstarter examples are Coyote and Crow and Into the Mother Lands. Library holdings do not typically include Kickstarter support, but if games become available for retail, they may be a niche market worth exploring, showing cultures and experiences reimagined through the eyes of creators frequently excluded from game writing.
Conclusion
In a world of deep division and polarization, finding ways to connect people that hold very different views is vital to the pursuit of increased understanding. Only when people of differing perspectives can communicate constructively with each other is there room for progress. Much of our society is retreating into ever more isolated camps, and we have to work together to overcome these temptations and offer another way forward. Some of these tactics may benefit participants trying to find solutions and create alliances. Working towards civility is not a positive goal when it means trying to support current systems with their inherent inequities. However, starting with strategies to catch the attention of the otherwise uninterested and possibly even inspire them to consider other points of view may be a way to open doors otherwise ignored by people not seeking to find them. How can we move through the world facilitating some of these discoveries and explorations? It seems essential to make the attempt.
My library’s Homework Center closed at the beginning of pandemic shut-downs in March 2020. Along with the rest of our in-person public programming, it remains inactive nearly a year later. Given current health guidelines and the vaccination timeline, it will remain closed for the rest of the 2020-21 school year.
The educational community has had concerns about “summer slide” for many years, and research is supporting fears that pandemic-related school interruptions will be significantly greater, and impact underprivileged students more strongly (Doepke & Zilibotti, 2020). Homework Center attendance has fluctuated over the last few years, leaving it potentially vulnerable to not being a top library priority to return to active status. I would like to offer good research to support reopening it alongside our other in-person programs when that is possible. That may involve offering some specific, topic-oriented programs (such as multiplication, fractions, or tricky spelling words) to get kids and parents in the door to overcome some inevitable academic gaps of the last year, or we may continue with our free, drop-in tutoring provided by experienced volunteers.
My key question: What methods are most effective for helping K-12 students (with an emphasis on grades 3-8, our top attendees) to gain or master missing academic knowledge and topics resulting from nearly-universal remote learning?
Search Method
I began with the Auraria catalog, with the search terms “recovering academic gaps pandemic” and “recovering pandemic academic slide,” which turned out to be overly broad and returned mostly sources unrelated to the education system, exploring other inequalities laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic. I next tried “academic gaps at-risk students” and “targeted learning academic gaps.” The results from those searches came closer, with plenty of information about the education system and inherent inequalities experienced by students. There was still minimal information about methods and systems to improve the situation
At this point, I realized I still had not refined my search enough, and used the search string ”programs improve math skills pandemic gap” in my preferred search engine, DuckDuckGo. I use DuckDuckGo for its emphasis on web privacy and practice of not collecting search history or curating search results through algorithms that would use that history to affect them. I find this less-filtered list of resources valuable to maintain a broader search. (“Welcome to DuckDuckGo,” 2021) Search results included articles and blogs from sources such as Scientific American and Psychology Today, popular national magazines with established credibility. These results included sources to use in my further exploration of the topic, and helped me narrow my next search on the Auraria catalog to “effective mathematics tutoring k-12.” The vast majority of our students come for help with math, and anecdotal evidence suggests it as the subject more parents and caretakers struggle to support in the at-home learning, so our efforts will likely be most focused on how to help with those topics.
Resources
Articles References:
Burch, P., Good, A., & Heinrich, C. (2016). Improving access to, quality, and the effectiveness of digital tutoring in k–12 education. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis,38(1), 65-87. http://www.jstor.org/stable/44984528
An article originally written to explore the efficacy of digital tutoring for students in a variety of school districts. Having worked remotely for the style of for-profit tutoring company they were analyzing, I was particularly interested in their results. The authors were careful to note that their study is merely an exploration of the topic, and should not be taken as the final word on such efforts to improve scholastic achievement. They note wide variation in the models they observed, but came to the conclusion that in-person tutoring still seems to have the most positive effects, especially for English-language learners, students with special needs, and other marginalized groups. Many surrounding libraries subscribe to an online tutoring service, but with our dedicated volunteer corps, it seems likely that our model holds certain advantages for students.
This is a blog post from early in the pandemic shutdown. The authors explain concerns about school-age children losing academic knowledge as well as not advancing their learning during remote learning. It suggests massive, school-based summer programs, focused especially at students from marginalized backgrounds, to recapture that learning. It is clear that the authors did not expect us to still be navigating high levels of at-home education nearly a year later. While the library will not be able to recreate the comprehensive type of programming they suggest, we can stand ready in the next school year to help students, recognizing that skills may not be at customary mastery levels.
This blog post touts research supporting tutoring in various formats to help lessen academic achievement gaps as an important step for schools to be pursuing for students falling behind. It states that tutoring can help struggling students make significant progress, and even states that it is one of the most effective interventions available. It also makes the claim that in-person tutoring is most effective, another factor in favor of our program, once that is possible again. I have many volunteer tutors, most with years of experience in the program, eager to provide in-person homework assistance again. It suggests online tutoring as a good stop-gap, though we are unlikely to provide that at the moment, due to administrative concerns.
This book discusses ways to make mathematics topics more visible, resulting in better learning. It stresses the importance of making mathematical thinking meaningful and less procedural. Chapter 3 particularly focuses on types of tasks and dialogues that make mathematical learning more relevant and enhance student understanding. I will likely refer to this book in a re-training session for our volunteers before we open the Homework Center again.
McCombs, J., Pane, J., Augustine, C., Schwartz, H., Martorell, P., & Zakaras, L. (2014). Ready for fall? Near-term effects of voluntary summer learning programs on low-income students’ learning opportunities and outcomes. RAND Corporation. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7249/j.ctt15zc6t0
Cited in the Psychology Today article, this book explored various school-based summer programming, how to make it most effective, and how students are affected by socio-economic status, particularly during summer recesses. Its final chapter particularly caught my attention, highlighting specific strategies and best practices for programming to offset learning loss.
Takeaway
When I start a research exploration, it is not uncommon for my first couple of searches to bring up results that do not answer the question I want to answer. This was an excellent demonstration of the need to be flexible and creative in approaching answers. The initial search terms I used probably made sense to the average human living in this time and understanding my context. However, they had too much overlap with other disciplines and needed further refinement to get to results that supplied answers to the question I was really asking. In the library, we call this a reference interview. In learning design, it is a needs assessment. In both fields, it is an important first step, as it is frequently not useful to answer an unasked question, or try to solve a nonexistent problem. Openness to a change in approach and active listening are vital components of seeking solutions.
This is a question that has been on my mind a lot, as one role the library fills for many people is to provide internet access. People use library wireless internet for work, job interviews, school work, and entertainment, to name just a few applications. Many patrons lack a computer, internet, or both at their home.
Some of the children I’m most concerned about are the ones that don’t have internet at home. The local school districts have been pretty able to supply Chromebooks and/or iPads to their students’ households, so though siblings may need to share, basic machines have been relatively available. The trouble is, those machines are useless without reliable internet access. Many libraries have kept their wifi on during their closures for our patrons of all ages to be able to access it from the parking lot or beside the building. Some have even increased their strength or improved their equipment, knowing people are unable to come inside to use the network.
Even for people that have high-speed internet at home, many are noticing the effects of more people in their neighborhood and their home being online at the same time. A colleague and I were discussing a couple months ago the impact her family was noticing with one or both parents and multiple children needing to access internet resources consistently throughout the day. Mobile and online learning occurs in formats that need solid and rapid internet access to be functional. Slow microlearning is a relatively useless offering, and being able to do mobile learning on the go implies agility and responsiveness, both of which suffer with insufficient bandwidth.
Finally, reliability is also becoming more essential. In a world where we all depend on being able to pop online and run a quick search for the information we need in a given moment. When networks go down frequently, an entire system can suffer from a lack of reliability in accessing that knowledge, especially in workplaces that are trying to keep more of their procedural information in shared drives, blogs, or intranet pages where they can be updated once and reach everyone rather than tracking which version is currently making the rounds. We recently received a new internet network at the library, both as an upgrade, and so the previous one can now be our back-up option. Consistent access has become such a priority that they moved forward with the installation, even while we’re closed, usage is less and finances are more strained.
In the maelstrom of
seemingly unlimited learning theories, evaluating the defining characteristics of
particular theories can help to determine the one most applicable to a given situation,
or which have the broadest application to learning in general. As I considered
the various readings on connectivism this week, one of the most striking
assertions I saw was George Siemens’ statement that “In a networked world, the
very manner of information that we acquire is worth exploring. The need to
evaluate the worthiness of learning something is a meta-skill that is applied
before learning itself begins.” (Siemens, 2005) In most previous learning
models, increasing internally-held knowledge has typically been seen as the end
goal of any learning activity. Connectivism counters that in today’s world,
where people will encounter a never-ending progression of new situations and
increased available knowledge, a lot of knowledge does not need to be
internalized, merely accessible. The theory holds that being able to find
relevant knowledge and ignore unhelpful input is likely to be a more useful
skill set than memorizing new processes or facts that are likely to change
frequently, or be pertinent only rarely. The theory doesn’t preclude the possibility
that people can and will internalize certain learning that remains stable and
germane to their life or work. It merely highlights the prevalence of tools
that can store and retrieve facts that used to rely on individuals’ retaining
them. Very few people remember a long list of phone numbers anymore. Instead, they
usually have them programmed into phones and other devices. Simple cooking
tasks like how to boil eggs, calculate measurement conversions, or substitute
ingredients are quick and easy to find online, so many people look them up each
time they need to do the task rather than devoting memory to the process.
In a workplace, last week’s procedures for a particular
situation may have been updated as outside factors changed. In this case, remembering
the older process too well may in fact interfere with using the new one
correctly. Many organizations maintain an internal wiki or blog to store the
most recent information. Users can check it to make sure they know the most
current version. Learning then involves being able to find and correctly
interpret the desired knowledge. Searchable email systems make that another
viable system to disseminate information. When in doubt, a person can easily
search for keywords about the topic, then use the time stamps to be sure they
are using the correct version. In this case, a good subject line, and the
ability to choose fruitful search keywords are far more important than
memorizing new procedures. When seeking a novel solution to a problem, a good
learner will pinpoint applicable information in the sea of facts and opinions
available across a spectrum of fields that initially may or may not seem related
to the subject at hand. With the assembled data, they can create a resolution
for the current need and still remain ready to update anew when situation
changes.
An interesting juxtaposition recently happened for me between class work and my outside reading. I have been working my way through a pair of books that both explore human capabilities and roles in the current era as they relate to each other, machines, society, and the world. The books are Range: Why generalists triumph in a specialized world, by David Epstein and Thank you for being late: An optimist’s guide to thriving in the age of acceleration, by Thomas Friedman. Both are written from a more optimistic point of view than many other current releases, and both offered some different approaches to thinking about social media and its impact, among many other topics. Plenty has been written about the negative aspects of connectivity and social media, and many good points have been made regarding addictiveness and resource waste, destruction of focus, anxiety caused by comparison with others’ curated lives, and lack of real connection between people. These books highlighted some of the more positive effects that can also come about in the current world of connection. In Chapter 5 of his book, Friedman talks about some of the ways in which easy and fast communication is changing the world. His examples include the fact that when he wrote the book, 914 million people had at least one international connection on social media and at least 50 percent of Facebook users had at least one international friend. (Friedman, 2016) I will readily agree that many of these “friends” may not be close, but they do at least give us some more access to outside viewpoints. Through Facebook, I get to maintain some level of contact with cousins in Norway, in addition to friends in England and Peru. There is almost no chance I would stay in any form of contact with these people without social media, but with the connections, when they come to town (or the country) for a visit, we may choose to meet up and continue our social ties in person. Friedman also devotes a fair bit of space to a discussion on ways that internet and social media offer people in developing countries better access to education, new philosophies, and a new audience for their thoughts and problem-solving ideas. David Epstein’s book is largely about the benefits inherent in approaching learning and problem-solving from disparate angles and disciplines in order to arrive at novel solutions. In chapter 8, he highlights some crowdsourcing programs including Innocentive and Kaggle that pose questions on the internet, and ask for solutions. These solutions usually come from a wide range of areas of expertise, and typically arise from well outside the expected backgrounds. These programs work by giving a large number of people access and a sense of community to work on problems together, learning from each other, and making contributions within a specific context. These are a little beyond the typical realm of the social media landscape that most of us inhabit, but they are another form of personal learning network and social interaction across large gaps in distance and time. As Paul Miller pointed out in the video and article, while these tools can easily drive wedges between people and interfere with in-person contact, they can also be invaluable for organizing more contact between people and better communication, if we choose to use them in that way.
Epstein, D. (2019) Range:
Why generalists triumph in a specialized world. New York, NY: Riverhead
Books.
Friedman, T. L. (2016) Thank
you for being late: An optimist’s guide to thriving in the age of accelerations.
New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.