Social Media and Peer Learning: From Mediated Pedagogy to Peeragogy
Howard Rheingold offers a glimpse of the future of high-end online learning in which motivated self-learners collaborate via a variety of social media to create, deliver, and learn an agreed curriculum: a mutant variety of pedagogy that more closely resembles a peer-agogy. Rheingold proposes that our intention should be to teach ourselves how to teach ourselves online, and to share what we learn. He will show how the use of social media in courses he has taught about social media issues led him to co-redesign his curriculum, which led to more active participation by students in co-teaching the course.
This lecture is presented by the Berkeley Center for New Media and the School of Information, with support from the Regents’ Professorships and Lectureships Program.
Due to limited seating, we will be distributing free tickets for this event on a first-come, first-served basis, beginning at 4:00 pm at South Hall.
Howard Rheingold is an independent scholar and currently a guest lecturer at Stanford’s Department of Communication. A writer and designer, he was among the first wave of creative thinkers who saw, in computers and then in the Internet, a way to form powerful new communities.
Rheingold’s 2002 book “Smart Mobs”, which presaged Web 2.0 in predicting collaborative ventures like Wikipedia, was the outgrowth of decades spent studying and living life online. An early and active member of the Well (he wrote about it in “The Virtual Community”), he went on to co-found HotWired and Electric Minds, two groundbreaking web communities, in the mid-1990s. Now active in Second Life, he teaches, writes, and consults on social networking. His latest passion is teaching and workshopping participatory media literacy, to make sure we all know how to read and make the new media that we’re all creating together.