An Autodidact Learns From the Web

An autodidact is someone who learns outside of regular school settings, someone who teaches herself (or himself). It used to be a kind of demeaning label, meaning someone who had spotty and uncertified knowledge. I claim the label “autodidact” as a badge of honour! I used to learn from books, even sometimes from tv, but now we have the web. I love the web. I learn so much from what I find on it.

Recently I gave myself a task that requires me to learn more about how to create web pages. I’d heard about CSS and knew, theoretically, what it could do. But every time I tried to do anything using it I hit THE GAP. THE GAP is the point where I get stuck and can’t go any further, even though I can see what I could do two steps along the learning path I’m on. When I hit THE GAP, I’m stuck. What I do then, is ask a knowledgable friend, if I can find one, or, more often, find a workaround. For a while, my workaround was wikis. I love wikis but they’re meant for sharing, not for using as your personal website, although they can work, sort of, as one.

One of My Wikis
One of My Wikis

Sometimes I find something a lot of the design work has been done for me, and I use that. Blogger had templates, and so does WordPress, which I graduated to.

My Blog
My Blog

But my design vision just isn’t satisfied.

I used tools like the old Netscape Composer and currently its grandchild, Nvu, both of which are WYSIWYG web page creators.

My Domain
My Domain

But my reach exceeds my grasp because I want something I have more control over. I want to produce the kind of website that says to readers “this person has powerful content: you can tell by the appearance!” (I’ve read the research on how people are reading before they decode a single word. The appearance of the text and page gives information that signals information to readers which profoundly affects how they take in the content.)

I’ve learned a little HTML code, and I’ve bookmarked sites where I can find more. But I’ve never taken a course in it, and a lot of it just looked bizarre and unreadable to me. (I was a text person initially, and not technically inclined, but I want to communicate on the web so I have to learn how to do so wholistically.) And using “View Source” and copy/paste seemed to me like a kind of plaigarism and theft. (What can I say? I’m old-school.)

Sometimes I think I learn backwards. I know my desired destination but I keep getting blocked at THE GAP. But I continue to struggle to build a little further out into the unknown territory, and I learn something from each struggle. Each struggle closes THE GAP a little more. I read manuals and follow instructions but I think most people who are inside the knowledge bubble have trouble being aware of what those outside the bubble might not know. The instructions are crisp and clear until they mention going to the “terminal shell” or some other ‘obvious’ term. Huh? Wikipedia tells me what it is, but I don’t get how to use it in this set of instructions. (I’m not the knowledgable audience they were writing for.) So I stop and try some other path. Till I get frustrated with it, because I’ve found THE GAP in it. I’m really good at finding THE GAP. So when I find someone, often on the web, who explains things in a way I can understand, someone who gives me the practical aspects of the concept, I am delighted, excited and grateful.

That happened to me today. I found Chris Coyier’s video on HTML & CSS – The VERY Basics. 32 minutes of pure pleasure. He shrank the gap – till it virtually (no pun etc.) disappeared for me.

He has a gift for teaching and I’m a grateful student.

WordCamp Toronto ’08

I’ve been using Twitter for live blogging but am moving to my own blog.

Joseph Thornley inviting audience to describe their plugins, sites, etc. People giving their site URLs & Thornley showing them to us.Here’s few –

Plugin – on open id

Matt Mallenweg – State of the Word

WordCamp Toronto 08
WordCamp Toronto '08

Lots of upgrades – open source drives it. (Shouldn’t take more than 2 minutes)

WordPress.org is exploding – 2 million in 07 to 11 million this year

WordPress.com also

Spammers use social engineering >> compliments used to get traction

WordCamps all over the world – local, small but many, local culture in speakers & environments

New Features

iPhone – WordPress – lots of installs

The Audience Shapes the Speaker

Last Wednesday, I presented to a group of university teachers in the morning, and then took a shuttle bus out to another campus to teach my first class this term. The experience reminded me of something all experienced teachers come to recognize – the audience shapes the speaker.

My first regular teaching job was teaching ESL to adult immigrants – in the Polish Hall on Barton St. in Hamilton. The teacher I was substituting for wrote out and explained the lesson to me ahead of time – a fifth level lesson in a series of six levels. I finished teaching it before the morning coffee break! While I was panicking, three of the students, recently arrived from then Czechoslovakia, invited me for a coffee in the Chinese restaurant next door. There, while “Hey Jude” played over and over – it was a long time ago;-> – these students gently told me that while I knew the English language, they knew the teaching technique and would I like them to help me. I had no hesitation in gratefully accepting. They shaped me as a teacher – I always try to learn from my students how they need/want to be taught.

Over many years of teaching I have found that I can teach using exactly the same lesson plan and get wildly different results. The time of day, the classroom, the size of the class, all these can contribute to the situation, but the overwhelming impact is the class’s willingness to engage in the learning. I’ve had classes who immediately engaged, I’ve had classes I could woo into engaging, I’ve had reluctant classes who engaged slowly and almost resentfully, and I’ve had – a bitter memory – a very few classes that made my teaching a hollow mockery where I was talking to myself. (I blame, in one case, an ignorant administration completely uninterested in teachers and students as people who fit or don’t fit together, but that’s an old story, thankfully.)

Last Wednesday morning, I was the fourth speaker talking to the group of teachers getting some professional development. My personal context is that I’ve been talking and writing about the pedagogical value of various free and easy web applications for at least four years. Often I have felt resistance or no response, whether to my blog posts, my presentations, or to informal conversations. I have taken solace by going to the edublogosphere where I read the reports of other teachers on what web applications they were using with their classes and I ‘follow’ their blogs and they follow mine. It’s a good community of practice, but it’s ll at a distance. Last Wednesday morning my audience was live, and and it was different.

I watched them respond to other presenters, and sensed their strong attention. The presenter immediately before me, Jim Cummins of OISE/UT, was fascinating and everyone responded strongly to him. I could tell the audience was highly open to being engaged. I relaxed despite my adrenalin flowing.

I was under somewhat of a handicap. My laptop couldn’t connect to the wireless, so I was using another laptop on another platform than I’m used to. As I spoke, using the wiki I had prepared on web basics for teachers, I discovered that the borrowed laptop I was using didn’t have the plug-ins for the videos I’d embedded! Another technical glitch! Usually that would throw me and my presenting skills would break down. Not this time, because I could feel the audience supporting me.

I haven’t had as much fun presenting in months. I could tell I was doing a good job because (my favorite test) they laughed at my bad jokes, and they asked good questions. Because they were such a good audience, I was a good presenter.

My afternoon class went well too. I was still ‘pumped’ from my morning, and excited about my first meeting with this class for a course I love to teach. A full room of students, some of whom heard about this course from previous students before they chose it, makes for a great audience. The class went well, and, as I took the names of those on the waiting list hoping to get a space, I felt the same kind of lift as in the morning. I hope the term goes as well as it feels it will!

Piracy and Innovation

The YouTube video, The Pirate’s Dilemma, looks at the cultural problem of our creativity being largely bricolagic, (if that’s a word). We see other’s doing something and we imitate and/or adapt it. We follow trends, and we build on other’s ideas. But people need to make livings, and creators should get credit and rewards. Yet we humans like to play with ‘stuff’. Where does the label “piracy” stifle innovation, and where is it accurately describing a rip-off? This is the question that motivates people on both side of the Canadian C-61 debate, and the world-wide copyright and intellectual property debates.

via Chris Brogan

Where do you stand?