vintoncerf.jpg

We don’t need a lesson in history to appreciate the fact
that the web as we know it today was the result of the collective effort of visionaries,
who as early as the 1900s, foresaw a future where the exchange of ideas will
become instantaneous.

That world is now, thanks to the work of these visionary engineers,
scientists and thought leaders; long before Google became the de facto search engine,
long before Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook, and long before you can make
purchases on Instagram.

Another significant milestone came after scientists Robert
Kahn and Vinton Cerf developed Transmission Control Protocol and Internet
Protocol, or TCP/IP that essentially allowed the transmission of data across
machines, systems and even geographic boundaries. Vinton Cerf, who I had the pleasure
of meeting in my previous life as a broadcast journalist.

I met Vinton Cerf in May 2017, an awe-inspiring visionary who, till today is still active in his area of expertise.

But enough preamble, technology has, and will always
challenge the way we do things. Today, I look at how technology is challenging
the traditional practices of teaching and learning, the traditional notion of
expert opinion, and the traditional belief that libraries are the only source
of credible information.

I listen with great interest as David White asks whether the
ideas of philosopher John Locke would have had the same value and resonance had
it been disseminated through a tweet and a blog post, instead of having been
published in a tome. My gut instinct is, no it won’t.

For the simple reason that we live in a world where,
rightfully or wrongfully, your measure of “credibility” is more often than not,
measured by your social media presence. And that, quite frankly, scares me. We
live in a world where being an influencer is more important that being a thought
leader.  

Relics of a bygone era, when communication required such hardware.
(Photo taken at the Palace of Independence in Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam)

So I very boldly state that it is time our educators claim
this space and disseminate their thoughts and ideas through social media. It is
time our educators educate themselves and be digitally literate so they can
take on the learners of tomorrow. So they can educate the thought leaders of
tomorrow. I agree wholeheartedly with Doug Belshaw that gaining digital
literacies is a “lifelong project that all of us need to be involved in”.

As we negotiate our roles on the continuum of visitors and
residents in the online space, I think there is certainly a case to be made for
educators and academics to seriously consider claiming that role of residents
in the online space in their institutional capacity. It will take time, effort
and energy, but I think it will well worth the effort.

In fact, in a world where a terrorist attack can be streamed
‘LIVE’, and a video of that same attack is viewed and shared more times than any
critical analysis of the motivation of such terror attacks, I think it becomes
more important that educators and academics claim that space.

The devil though, as they say will be in the details.

Just like I was part of the evolution from broadcast to
webcast, and video-on-demand, I am excited to now be part of that evolution
from physical to virtual classrooms. The tools are there, we just need to use
them to our advantage.

References:

David White: Visitors and residents (part 1)
David White: Visitors and residents – Credibility (part 2)
Doug Belshaw: The essential elements of digital literacies
Developing digital literacies (2014) JISC guide.

Online Residents in an Institutional Capacity