Patterns of Peeragogy: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with " '''* Article: Corneli, J., Danoff, C.J., Pierce, C., Ricaurte, P., and Snow Macdonald, L. 2015. Patterns of Peeragogy. HILLSIDE Proc. of Conf. on Pattern Lang. of Prog. 22 (O...")
 
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=Abstract=
=Abstract=


"We describe nine design patterns that we have developed in our work on the Peeragogy project, in which we aim to help design the future of
"We describe nine design patterns that we have developed in our work on the Peeragogy project, in which we aim to help design the future of learning, inside and outside of institutions. We use these patterns to build an “emergent roadmap” for the project. The primary audience we envision for the paper are teams of people who aspire to collaboratively manage their own free/open/libre learning and development projects."
learning, inside and outside of institutions. We use these patterns to build an “emergent roadmap” for the project. The primary audience we
 
envision for the paper are teams of people who aspire to collaboratively manage their own free/open/libre learning and development projects."
 
=Excerpt=
 
From the introduction:
 
"This paper outlines an approach to the organization
of learning that draws on the principles of free/libre/
open source software (FLOSS), free culture, and
peer production. Mako Hill suggests that one recipe
for success in peer production is to take a familiar
idea – for example, an encyclopedia – and then make
it easy for people to participate in building it. We will take hold of “learning in
institutions” as a map, although it does not
fully conform to our chosen tacitly-familiar territory of
peeragogy. To be clear, peeragogy is for any group
of people who want to learn anything."





Revision as of 11:55, 16 February 2017

* Article: Corneli, J., Danoff, C.J., Pierce, C., Ricaurte, P., and Snow Macdonald, L. 2015. Patterns of Peeragogy. HILLSIDE Proc. of Conf. on Pattern Lang. of Prog. 22 (October 2015), 23 pages.

URL = http://metameso.org/~joe/docs/peeragogy_pattern_catalog_acm.pdf

Abstract

"We describe nine design patterns that we have developed in our work on the Peeragogy project, in which we aim to help design the future of learning, inside and outside of institutions. We use these patterns to build an “emergent roadmap” for the project. The primary audience we envision for the paper are teams of people who aspire to collaboratively manage their own free/open/libre learning and development projects."


Excerpt

From the introduction:

"This paper outlines an approach to the organization of learning that draws on the principles of free/libre/ open source software (FLOSS), free culture, and peer production. Mako Hill suggests that one recipe for success in peer production is to take a familiar idea – for example, an encyclopedia – and then make it easy for people to participate in building it. We will take hold of “learning in institutions” as a map, although it does not fully conform to our chosen tacitly-familiar territory of peeragogy. To be clear, peeragogy is for any group of people who want to learn anything."