Social Design of Network Learning Society
Abstract
EduCities is a network city for educational purpose. At the moment, there are more than 1 million EduCitizens registered in EduCities. 2,000 schools (more than half of schools in Taiwan) have built their EduTowns (smaller version of EduCities) and 18,000 classes are running their EduVillages. But these figures only represent an infrastructure, a bare skeleton, of a future network learning society. Based on our work on EduCities, we shall argue that network learning society will not be a tribal' learning society or a learning ecology, as portrayed by John Seely Brown in his keynote at ICCE98. Instead, it will be a structured' learning society. This structure mimics the current real world society we are used to today. The essence of thepower of network is connectivity connecting people, physical objects, information repositories, almost everything in the world. The question is how we use this network capability to link the old social structure, and from that, cultivate and diffuse learning elements into this structure, and expand the structure to form a larger but connected learning society. These strategies and actions taken are what we call the social design of a network learning society. If network learning is a learning ecology, then it must evolve around an existing structure.
Recommendations
Social Network Theory: A Comparative Analysis of the Jewish Revolt in Antiquity and the Cyber Terrorism Incident over Kosovo
This paper uses social network theory to compare the social network of the Jewish Revolt in 66-73 AD and the cyber terrorist attacks during the Kosovo war in 1999. The goal is to demonstrate that terrorist networks in Antiquity and cyber terrorist ...
Comments
Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.Information & Contributors
Information
Published In
December 2002
ISBN:0769515096
Copyright © Copyright (c) 2002 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. All rights reserved.
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society
United States
Publication History
Published: 03 December 2002
Qualifiers
- Article
Contributors
Other Metrics
Bibliometrics & Citations
Bibliometrics
Article Metrics
- 0Total Citations
- 0Total Downloads
- Downloads (Last 12 months)0
- Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
Reflects downloads up to 18 Dec 2024