Friday 4 December 2009

Lovely kids movie from Zanzibar

Gotta share this and thanks to my friend Adam Salkeld for connecting me to zanzibits where I found it

Monday 30 November 2009

Brazilian Job


I was pleased to learn about Participatory Budgeting (PB) a practice which originated in Brazil in Porto Alegre where it now covers 18% of public spending. I like to visualise this legacy to the world of public service accounting (1200 cities are now using it worldwide) on the list of Brazilian exports alongside less substantial items. (you can google those)

PB is when the citizens get a direct say in small and usually tokenist portions of public spend. This changes the dynamic between the governors and the governed. That’s good especially where officials are corrupt or out of touch. Having sat through parish budget committees in the UK however, I think it's gonna change very little in the UK.

Horsesmouth chomps at the bit

MT Rainey the founder of Horsesmouth should be stamping her feet (although she’s too well mannered) at the failure of education and learning to pick up her brilliant online advice and mentoring community platform.



I often cite Horsesmouth in my presentations as the best example of a web learning community that thrives without the backing of any learning institution. So it’s nice to meet the face behind it.

MT’s confidential and voluntary mentoring and advice brokering engine has fabulous web 2.0 quality indicators. Average dwell time 8 mins and 15 page views/visit shows this is a place people really want to stay tuned. The lemmings of online help should go green with envy. Average 20 written replies within one day to any “call for help” posting is something Yahoo! answers would die for and those speculative mercenaries at e-how should hang their heads in shame. NHS Online can also eat its heart out. 84% of MT’s pages contain deep links to sources of help, advice and support – and those are provided by the public, not by the public service managers.

Presenting at MPS09, MT (MaryTheresa for connoisseurs of unusual first names) talked about how all the time and investment had gone into the reputation, security, moderating, integrity of the service. To ensure that the transactions are as deep and honest as possible. This is the opposite of the Social Network business model – where you invest everything in expansion and the quality net is the lowest you can get away with.

How do we get resources and partnerships into this fantastic channel ? MT and I brainstormed a few ideas later over the home-made cakes. How about an accredited mentoring activity as an in-service training element for one of the caring professions ?

Later I read that the Government wants to launch a new Royal College of Social Work on the lines of the RCN. Hey, they actually have it already made. Just take some walled space on a hosted segment of Horsesmouth. Most betters would wager they will actually spend half a billion and ten years, so that a minister can cut a ribbon. But if the spirit of this conference prevails, you never know, this might be the place you heard it first from the Horse's Mouth

Direct Action reborn

ThinkPublic did a session at the MPS09 meeting– they are one of the organisers – about their work using the kind of 2-way participative interactions the web has created, to re-design services. It’s not necessarily a question of using the web – just of modelling its kind of conversations. Sometimes you see the principles of web 2.0 projected back into face to face situations.

Their take is that re-design by participation is more powerful than re-design through reports, consultation, analysis, synthesis and any kind of management planning. Looks convincing when you see projects like early-stage Alzheimer patients working with late-stage patients to re-design dementia services. Interesting that in general this kind of participative planning has little place for written word, and works better through video communication or direct action. When they had the brief to redesign hospital waiting areas, they got the patients to do it themselves even down to shifting the chairs around.




The ThinkPublic spin is that this approach not only delivers better service designs, but (more significantly) changes us from consumers of public services to owners. Transactions with a service like Health, in this approach, are not moments when we take goods and deplete the cupboard. They are moments when we share the benefit of our experience and re-invest it. This puts the direct action back into the internet in a more fundamental and creative way than say Carrotmob, which is simply using the web as a better mailing system to trigger real world direct actions.

Thursday 26 November 2009

Real cakes and social media reporters



Two things really engage me about this conference, which massively build its community impact
1. A community approach to catering. There’s a gift economy around cakes and biscuits. Delegates were asked to bake and bring. Some gluten free, super brownies, great to celebrate attendees ability to be creative and have a home hinterland. I felt so caked-out I had to run for 30 minutes to feel normal appetite.
2. Big emphasis on real-time social reporting. I’m also here as a social blogger along with a posse of twitterers, podcasters, video shooters, picture snappers, social bookmarkers. Despite a slow wifi at the Abbey Centre, there’s a useful and genuinely valuable stream of content and reflection emanating out from this event into the cloud. It amplifies the response and gets the process of reflection intensified. Read the collected twitterstream. And then compare it to the BBC's report on the event. I think I know which is more useful if you want to put the conference themes into action

Now this homemade cakes and is social reporting lark is fun, and I hope it’s gonna be a trend in 2010. Watch out for the pioneer who’s making this social reporting a profession - the delightful David Wilcox, part of today’s posse, who turns out film, boos, podcasts, blogs and microblogs all day long.


But the worry about the social reporting is that it might be used to head off the increasingly common scenario of microbloggers operating as an unlicensed fourth estate during events – and often undermining a meeting’s purpose. I’ve heard of many keynote speeches where the real time twitter backchannel is an anarchic and sometimes disfunctional real time ratings system that verges on mob rule. (Example here) Organisers who are worried by this (or who are simply paranoid) should co-opt their audience as social reporters in the way that My Public Services conference showed how. But reporters have to be free to vent contrary and vexatious opinions too. The #MPS09 stream was uniformly positive, engaged and supportive – because the conference was all of these things. But I can’t help worrying that it won’t be long until we see the manipulation of this new form of media coverage by organisers who see its potential to brainwash their audiences.

Public Service and the Web


My Public Services Conference

"Stories can change the world" is the maxim. Check it here.

A one-day London gathering to reimagine public services, especially health, in the light of the web’s abundance of information, contact, choice.

This is a transformationist agenda: they want us to imagine how choosing can help to create change and improvement. Not just give the chooser an advantage for themselves

The premise: the tools now available for managing the interface of consumer and provider are so utterly different from what we have had, that we should re-design the entire system. Don’t copy the old models and just digitise them. We are working with new materials.

This analogy from organiser James Munro:

Ironbridge by Telford the first ever iron construction. It was built using carpentry techniques, jointing and pinioning as for wood. Yet the material allows entirely different possibilities. We need to avoid making this mistake for public service delivery now that the web is here.

Questions for our age in online delivery of Government:

  • Why do we have centralised departments (to locate files in)
  • Why do we have queues ? (because expertise is concentrated)

Probably none of this is necessary now

Tom Loosemore of 4ip

Tom says that Govt’s first job on the internet is to stop running websites. They are not good enough for the cost. Big public organisations are bad web publishers. BBC.co.uk is poor value for money. When Tom ran all the bbc's community outlets, he shut them down. They weren't listening. The conversations were happening elsewhere, and the BBC wasn't going to be the place they were taking place. In fact, hosting those community conversations was just trouble: defamation etc... When NHS hosts conversations about health services, you know it is going to be following a corrupt editorial policy and not be transparent about it. The fifth estate (the web) has to hold power to account.

Government should be publishing information and keeping it up to date. Other people should be using it to create services and interfaces.

Tuesday 24 November 2009

How to use online absence ?

The Manitoba Emerging Technologies - Africa online course is focussing increasingly on participation. What does it mean to participate in a global online course where many of the students have real difficulties in getting online, and getting bandwidth.

It was a student based in West Africa who had the courage to first raise the question - why is there so little participation in the forums ? At first sight the issue can look like a purely tech/bandwidth one. No access = no voice.

Thinking about this, another student with good connectivity has has said that what keeps her out is more social factors. Time, opportunity, and a preference to engage as a reader not a contributor make her a quiet voice.

With online social networks we all bring perhaps a set of confused and emergent expectations which are still grounded in the social conventions of the real world gathering . So, a student may be on the network, or has joined the course, with the explicit expectation of a certain level of participation from others. This student is puzzled not to see a mirroring engagement from others, who have nevertheless declared their participation. Whereas if we'd all gone to a lecture room and some people at the back are simply taking notes not asking questions, everyone can be very cool about it...

Are we all perhaps unskilled (as yet) in interpreting and giving the subtler social signals online ? To join when "convenient/possible" and mostly through reading is of course a crucial function. The person who exercises that role should be proud to do so. Groups need critical and externalised consumers who can assess the value in the wider context, and not be seduced by their own voice and their own conversations. The challenge for us all in any online world is: how is the online group going to feel the benefit of these critical readings....and how are we going to feel the social signals that someone who is in a mode of "convenient/possible" and "read-only" is nevertheless wholly engaged with the learning ?

Online lacks a way for everyone can see the mental connections that others are making even if they are unable/not disposed to start writing in moodle forums.

For learners located on the wrong side of the digital divide, the question is crucial and touches on entitlement and equity. They are going to operate in an environment where connection and online presence are not easy and not regular. So they have to be able to signal their mental engagement by some other means - if they are not to appear, and to feel, to be excluded.

Friday 20 November 2009

Conservative backlash against online learning


Onetime leftie Frank Furedi is writing today the predictably vexatious and stuffy online rag Spiked! The man is recently striking the pose of an arch reactionary on education (See Wasted etc) - and now he's laying into the young generation of "digital natives" who use the web to educate and broaden themselves in ways that traditional top-down education never permitted or imagined.

Furedi's been moaning about education in general for a long time, and now wants land a hit on digital learning. This is how he headlines his sentimental thesis

Let’s give children the ‘store of human knowledge' !

In flattering kids as ‘digital natives’ for whom the past is irrelevant, we degrade a vital adult mission: transmitting knowledge.


Come on Frank, this is drivel and you know it. Digital Natives may well care as much or more about the past as the mythical chalky old profs you nostalgically evoke. Online kids certainly chew over the past in many more ways than you'd imagine, and not just through games. Look at one normal school history site and I guarantee you'll be astonished by the high quality of analysis and thought that every school kid now can and does access. (Example here)

And anyway on what rational grounds can we say that knowledge of the past is more crucial than knowledge of the present ? All human eras are well larded with bunkum. At least the digital world programmes its natives to question what they read, seek out contrary opinions, and resist the channeling of their mind by the most immediate sources of authority.

If you wish to expose the links between "digitally driven society" and "present educational fads", Frank, that's wonderful. I'm ready to listen. There is plenty of digital garbage masquerading as education. Most of it produced in fact by respectable publishing conglomerates. Please get on and lay into it.

But cut the misty-eyed sentiment. The digital genie will not go back into its bottle and grateful youths will not start to sit at the knees of the elders, intently absorbing every word.

You also say that modern schooling has lost touch with basic fundamentals of education, such as subject based knowledge or theory. You say "Curriculum engineers often display indifference, if not contempt, for abstract thought".

Sorry, but your prejudices are running ahead of your knowledge.

Look at the case of science. You probably got taught a lot of stuff about periodic tables and newtonian theory etc. (So did I btw). Now look at what 15 year olds do in the Twenty First Century Science curriculum developed by the University of York. Go here and see the enormously challenging mix of theory, abstract reasoning, empirical knowledge, and data-handling skills that are required. This rich synthesis is exactly what the digital generation excels at. It is building citizens who are scientifically literate. It's miles better than the dry and inherited school science you and I learned.

So Frank please do better than this. I welcome you writing about digital natives it's an important theme and the networked information age does create problems for learning, that is sure. We need intelligent people like you to stop being lazy luddites and to start writing properly informed critiques.


Monday 16 November 2009

Personal Learning Environments compared

As part of attending the University of Manitoba course on Educational Technologies in Africa I've had to take a look at Personal Learning Environments.

George Siemens the tutor asks for us to sketch our own but I found it more interesting to look at the PLE of Abdou Makayang, the 16 year old student I met in Gambia and whose final two years of High School I have agreed to pay for (£75 the notional price of education ending at 16 vs. 18). And to contrast it with the PLE of my own son Remy, 14.

The two slides are here

Friday 13 November 2009

BBCrap


Roll up Roll up for the online horror of the year.

The BBC has rebuilt and redesigned its cbeebies site for under-10 kids. What was a site that gave 3 year olds complete web mastery is now impossible to navigate, poorly designed, and mostly broke.

Yes it looks pretty.

But it's organised by categories that are meaningless to children.

They used to be able to select a character and then find all the activities they wished under that person/toy/animal. Perfect. That's how small minds work.

Now they have to identify first what output mode of production they want (stories, games, painting etc) and then they can select the character. Small kids don't work like this. They are multitaskers and their motivation for a character can and should drive them to experiment in all kinds of output modes.

The page of characters (now called "shows") organises them by alphabet in such a way that you can only ever see a dozen at a time. Gone is the miraculous gallery of friends that you could recognise and click to. Instead, get literate and get spelling. Navigate six pages of names, or scroll down a master-sheet of all characters that is three pages long.

The home page does offer "picks" - what they'd like to recommend your kids to do. (That's what the BBC means by choice !). But these choices are below the fold so unless your kid knows how to scroll down, they will never want to discover anything.

The old site was a treasure trove. This is blah and unworkable. I predict the children and their parents will drift away and stay away in their droves from what has hitherto been one of the best and most popular sites in the world.

BBCrap

Language and Technology

To SOAS for a conference on technology and language learning run by its CETL. Programme is HERE. Astonishingly for a technology conference, no wifi allowed so no communication from the inside. Ah well, at least got some proposals written in the boring sessions (there were a few)

What the academic speakers don't get, is that this field is about dynamism, energy, initiative and taking part. I heard at least three funeral orations, I am sure.

Honourable exception: Graham Davies. A consultant well past retirement (by his own confession) who is more energised and participative than all the post-doc whippersnappers put together. Check him out, and his language lab at Edunation in second life. He goes by the name of Groovy Winkler and Second Lifers would do well to befriend him and get the tour. A gripping use of the Startrek concept of the holodeck, to beam the language learners into every conceivable setting and really stretch their social and metalinguistic powers. Bravo EU for supporting this guy.

Saw a demo of a videoconference-linked joint class format between Aberystwyth (Wales) and Masaryk (Czech Rep). The setting means that the learners are also picking up mediation, film use, technology... as they learn language. The Welsh group is mostly Asian and exposes the Czech learners to different accents. The Wales learners are doing a foundation access course and come out with social confidence as well as English. Some slides here

Wednesday 11 November 2009

How to get 15 mins to catch up with work

Headphones and a kiddy download to itunes create the small space necessary to deal with something right now.

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Says it all


Thanks to Iain Tait for finding this. Follow him www.crackunit.com

Tuesday 27 October 2009

A Web for Learning in an IT-free space

The kids' school asked me to construct a site and online service to help them to use their remarkable GREENSPACE better. Greenspace (current holding site here) is an unused portion of a cemetery behind the school, which a group of parents has taken over and reclaimed as outdoor classroom. Now, we want to get the kids using it on a regular basis. Some schools teach up to 80% of lessons outdoors. We'll start modest.

The job of the web is to sow inspirations online that can be taken offline by the teachers into the Greenspace.

So: video, searchable resources, community and support....

I'd wondered about a googlesite simply because it's so simple to get every person in the school and community adding stuff to it. But the search is poor so you have to construct an elaborate hierachy of content to get navigation to the right pages. Sure, that conflicts with an anarchic site. But the lack of a webmaster authority brings benefits too.

Maybe it's not a site but a wiki, anyway ?

This video by Michael Welsch at digital anthropology got me thinking that perhaps it doesnt' matter so long as the tagging and bookmarking are powerful...

Wednesday 21 October 2009

Colours of the Past


This kodachrome from summer 1978 came to me from the friend third on the left. The visit of our French Exchange students, and another family (Davis) to our home in Beeston, Nottingham. The table, made of sicilian tiles, is still my dinner table in London. The colours have such a 70s emotion ! I still have the silver teapot (bottom centreleft) and indeed it makes my tea most mornings.

Wednesday 16 September 2009

Online kids games what a mess

Looking into a selection of best-in-class interactive websites for target age group 5-6.

What a disaster.

First, the lack of any discriminating and up to date sifted selection. All the SERP returns claiming to connnect you to the best, are ancient rubbish, and they connect you to ancient rubbish or to really unsuitable adult gaming sites.

Then, the pedagogy (when you do find something). So much of it unclear to follow, ambiguous, requiring literacy skills the age group doesn't possess. And geared to making the PC experience repeat or mimic a classroom experience. Don't these guys get it, that we try to sit our kids down to the internet as something different to whole class learning ?

Here's one that's half decent and oriented to making the experience fun:

Victor is a French site, with an English version, where the experience of being online is a pleasure of intuitive, involving celebration of interactivity. Flash based.

The BBC offer is a nightmare by contrast. Try Ceebeebies Little Animals Activity Centre. You can't even get there until you download the latest shockwave (which wants to bundle Norton antivirus "free" pop-up to spoil the rest of your life). And what little you can glean from the "help" shows you this is just another version of teacher knows best - not the message of internet, surely ?

You would aim to sit down with your kid and give them a positive and clear experience, showing that time online can be fun and refreshing... and you would end up pushing a fence-post into your screen with frustration.

Tuesday 4 August 2009

Banned: McDonalds and YouTube

Two things banned here in Tunisia, flip sides of a controlled state.

I can live without McDonalds. I think Tunisians can survive too. I want to congratulate them. Ostensible reason is failure to source ingredients locally but I bet its a simple whack of demagogy.

YouTube is harder. Not because I use it every day. But it means I am cut out of a main channel of expression. People do create useful things on that channel, and it takes away from the full set of applications I need for research. Harder also for people to be aware of what the lack of it means and to evaluate how much they are short-changed.

Would I ever employ, for a creative online task, a team based in Tunisia if they had no access to one of the web's major phenonmena ? No.

Friday 31 July 2009

mobile editing on iphone


Have been learning a super audio gathering and editing tool the Poddio app for iphone which allows gathering broadcast quality sound in wav format and even assembly and basic editing on the tiny pocket screen. Getting it to full balanced mix using the laptop is child's play. This opens up amazing possibilities - really high quality audio podcast production with no equipment, using impulse and spontaneity in the field. A whole new way of reporting and processing experience. To share it with the world, nothing more is required. Hope to embed first cast here soon !

Thursday 30 July 2009

Annual Telecommuting Experiment


Second summer in which I've attempted to maintain a reasonable work out put while being physically distant from normal place of work. The changes over time are instructive.

In 2008 I was using a pay-as-you go local web-n-walk stick and the laptop was struggling with vista. Phone comms had to be by a locally-purchased handset and SIM number for the country. Iphone was crippled by absurd roaming charges. Managed after a fashion to support projects with writing, editing, commenting on sites as build proceeded etc, and client feedback.

In 2009 I am in a different location, with local wifi which makes a big difference, but the changes that have made most impact are that the PC got a memory boost so vista no longer destroys it every hour, and I have an online skype number in London so I can make and take all calls through the PC for next to no cost. The google interface connects me with the London weather and industry news minute by minute, and at last there is an Iphone app that gives me Radio 4 while I work so I feel really quite connected with the same realities as my colleagues.

The fact that I am in reality only a few KM from here (picture) no longer bothers me, or occurs to anyone ! What makes this truly different, is that the element of surprise, personal contact, unexpected twist (all that stuff that makes for interesting and deepening experience) can happen despite remoteness. That old sense that when accessing remotely you were merely turning the handle of a machine, is gone.

Sunday 28 June 2009

What's attention


Contentious argument - "the ability to shape people’s attention is now a more valuable commodity than the things around which our attention is presumably focused" - Richard Lanham, cited by Eric Gordon in an article in latest Digital Humanities Quarterly (thanks to George Siemens for link).

I'm going to use this next week in a set of sessions with MoD training experts. Is their business one where the thing you're trying to learn about is less valuable than the commanding of attention ?

I think he's right but for the wrong reason. This is a truism that has probably always been the case. That's to say, I don't think any but a hard line Platonist would have disagreed 2500 years ago. Nor would any teacher even possibly a religious teacher in the time since. So it's right because it's always been right; not because the digital age has suddenly made it a burning question.

Monday 8 June 2009

Cebrian and the Pianist in the Whorehouse


I haven't read the full text but the extract in El Pais of Juan Luis Cebrian's new book El Pianista en el Burdel makes for compelling insight.

Cebrian takes the story back to the infancy of journalistic writing, the "Gazzetto" pamphlets distributed by Gondoliers in Seventeenth Century Venice.

Cebrian seems not to say much about it, but I think these ancient fathers of daily writing have something to inspire today's online writers. In their brand new medium, they had a total disregard for authority, and a reckless determination to find readerships.

Nevertheless, Cebrian is gloomy about the low returns of digital publishing: in El Pais's summary, "estamos ante una revolución ("y todas las revoluciones se han hecho con sangre") en la que "las costumbres de los lectores cambian más rápido que los modelos empresariales y profesionales de los periódicos". Según Cebrián la sociedad digital es una oportunidad, no una amenaza. Eso sí, el margen de beneficios en el periodismo digital (entre un 2% y un 3%) es mucho menor que en el distribuido en papel (entre un 20% y un 25 %). ¿Y en qué se traduce esa reducción? "En que por ahora se puede hacer menos inversión en capital humano, algo que afecta a la calidad de la información. Sólo hay que pensar en que la guerra de Irak se ha quedado sin enviados especiales".

I wonder if we need to be so pessimistic ?

Africa's brilliant network info system






Here's an elegant information management network which I observed in Senegal's Gares Routieres (Bus Stations) last week. These apparently chaotic and formless empty spaces are crammed with ancient vehicles, beggars, rubbish. Nothing to suggest that any system at all is operating, let alone a textbook network design in gathering and locating information.

A SEPT-PLACES (seven seater) is big car that departs when it is full, for a pre-set fare. Passengers' waiting decisisions are quite simple - they sit there until the seats are all taken, or they buy up other seats if they are impatient. We waited over two hours at Kaoloack, central Senegal, for a sept places to our destination to fill up - and had time to observe how the drivers make their waiting decisions.

Any driver wanting to run any given route writes his car number on this wooden board in a biro. Each car that departs gets crossed off. The driver can see the length of the queue of cars in front of him, make an estimate of how long till his turn comes, and decide what routes they should offer. So far so simple - just a fair queuing system.







The real genius of it is that the number on the board is also an index to locate a much more complex body of information. Working from the number, the drivers can reference someone who is likely to know the route conditions. During the wait, the drivers use the numbers to find colleagues who ran their route sector earlier that day, and get road updates. So the passengers have the benefit of latest information. A driver will always be able to tell you at the start of the journey, how long the previous driver took for that route. It's storytelling, basically, but indexed by geo-location so everyone finds the story they want,

Quality of personal contact - as in all networks - is what makes this system work. For drivers from out of town, there is a supervisor, who has a his own version of the index - a list of all next departures to all destinations written on the back of an unfolded Marlboro box. He can confirm that fairness is applied to all, and suggest routes and predict waiting times. Here he is.



What I like about this network is that the balance between the information recording system, and the roles of the human participants, is very even.

What our digital information networks often miss, is present here: the data system is above all an index to human stories and so it enables us not just to access some factual details, but also to cement networks that start with data, into personal relationships of trust and familiarity.

Also, it's real time. Information more than a few days old is discarded and doesn't clog things up. It successfully exploits the fact that the communication channel is always online.

I'd like to use this system as the basis of solving a problem where suppliers need to exchange rich information in real time. Any kind of sales management or delivery system organised this way would be very effective.

Monday 11 May 2009

Ancient Rant of Punch


Having kids avg age 3, one has the same brain capacity. Therefore the Punch and Judy Festival is ideal. Farts, bangs, silly hidings and seekings are an easy hit. The stories are incoherently bizarre and the techniques are trite at times (thought the slapstick is always great), but there are two things that save the experience. One is the script's aside references to whatever is topical or lampoonable. The stories are so inane that you can add whatever you like in and no one will worry. The other genius is that tiny space. The universe boiled down to so little. Then, everything is possible.

They say Punch has been going strong since 1662 which means he must be very versatile to survive so long

Friday 8 May 2009

Rationing of basic learning

DIUS (Dept of Innovation Universities and Skills) published its "new approach" to the teaching of English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL). See it here

As you'd expect, not one single reference to the practices and people involved in ESOL teaching. It treats ESOL as a process industry with a delivery structure that you tweak to optimize it, like insurance claims processing for example. There seems to be no acknowledgement that giving people language skills is a matter of contact, time, inspiration and good materials used well in good environments. Such a Taylorist approach may well be “new” but can it be effective ?

Also, something troubles me in the underlying assumption that “need” for language learning is a variable function of a deprivation index. Yes it is right to argue that the most excluded should be offered most attention. But No, it surely is wrong to sign up to any political economy with sliding scales of access to a fundamental entitlement like social participation through communication. Those access criteria are going to be set by political processes which may be (already are ?) venal, arbitrary, penny-pinching or hostage to interest-groups. I haven’t completely worked out what the problem is in this approach, but instinctively I’d say, “slippery”. I can’t think of any other kinds of basic education that are meted out on a socially-indexed “need” scale.

Now I expect tomorrow's DIUS proposals will be for restricting English lessons at primary school to only half of the children. And of course the Government will expect praise for setting enlightened access criteria around exclusion.

So what is it about ESOL speakers that makes them suitable for this rationing of opportunity ? Please reassure me that it’s nothing to do with their foreign origins.

Friday 1 May 2009

Macbeth - hairs rising

Revising Macbeth with son for end of term exams. The first time we have looked at Shakespeare together. His first Shakespeare text at school too.

Every commonplace or summary about this text fails and shrivels, beside the electric shock of the original language and the sheer baldness of watching a character self-destruct with his own evil. 14 year olds "get" quite little of the vocabulary and yet the effect is still to compell them to attention and study.

I think that coming to texts of this power is a rite of transmission. I remember my mother reading the Tragedies with me around the same age. It's not an initiation that I would want to give outside the warm security of the family.

RIP

Elderly parishioner Joyce, 89, passed away last week leaving empty pew and a hole that only the very elderly and lived-in of us can fill. In that church for half of the century since its building. A sweet seller in the shop opposite the school, and sweetened to the core by it. The kids and I had visited her lately after church, and even the small and bouncy Eryk was somehow stilled and conjured by the spell of her great age and kindness. He kept on asking to make repeat visits. No more. Although I can't say I knew her well, I will be at the funeral of this person who lived a happy life, with my own happy feeling - sometimes the dutiful respect for an elder is in itself a really satisfying and fulfilling emotion. Traditional societies know this; for modern individualists hooked on personal affinities, closeness and connections it's a more suspect kind of feeling

Sound of Africa


Called to Banjul, Gambia, to book hotel for me and Remy there later this month. Had selected "Ferry Guesthouse" which is opposite the boat terminal on the river, and meant to be bustly and a bit of a dive but with a spectator seat on the tide of humanity. The noise in the background of horns, buses, radios, conversations was full of immense promise of vibrant colourful places. 600 Dalassis a night - God only knows what that is

Friday 24 April 2009

Crisis of Legitimacy

Le Monde Diplomatique's lead article Le Couteau sans-lame de social-liberalisme (Le Monde Diplo Avril 2009 sorry don't have the link) by Eveline Pieiller is the best thing I have read this month. She talks about the collapse of any and all of the old projects of the left and the right, including prosperity, equality, the market, redistribution, democracy and opportunity. And the emerging replacement: a kind of society in which the highest we aspire to is "l'affirmation positive de soi".

Pieiller says we are heading for a culture in which we will aim to celebrate (fetishise ?) our own individualties. We have the machinery to do it. Liberalism and socialism can only aspire to defend a "societe de la particularite" and an "economie de la particularite".

This really opens up a new line of thinking on online culture and networking.

Tuesday 21 April 2009

Acts of Faith and Nausea

Too long an absence from the blog; galvanized by sworn blog-objector colleague Adam Salkeld whose blog opens today here I return.

Today tried to persuade a large motoring organisation to think about drivers in cars as the dream media audience for a service of info based on camera pictures from motorways. With incipient flu I was nearly sick and running for the toilets twice in the meeting. Also perhaps nauseous with the irony of being a sworn car-avoider, bicycle prophet, and doubter of camera-monitoring. Heck, can one commercialise and distribute absolutely any old content in this age ? It seems so. And at what point does the social conscience kick in ? One way to twist it is: learn the techniques so they can be applied to the good. The other: find the frontiers and push them. Good and bad uses will be made of what's discovered.

Religion ! The RC Diocese of Westminster has been having its web relaunch proposals drafted by yours truly. Does any one have any idea whether an online utterance of a prayer or an intercession has any theological value ? Could one do online confession ? If not why not ?

And the Anglican Diocese of Gambia and Senegal is going to take a day's consultancy (pro bono) in May in Banjul. We need to get them any equipment we can find. The African concept of faith's work is probably more tub-thumping and homily inclined than mine would be. Accept that as their way and their offering ? Or try to inject something of humanist value too, eg tie health content or education content into the religious broadcasting ministry they hope to launch with my help. The free work is always the most interesting.