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Potentials and Pitfalls of Graduating Skilled Knowledge Workers Michael Netzley, PhD Social Media in the Classroom
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Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Jan 18, 2015

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Education

Michael Netzley

Sunway University College, Tan Sri Jeffrey Cheah Distinguished Lecture Series delivered on September 28, 2010.
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Page 1: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Potentials and Pitfalls of Graduating Skilled Knowledge Workers

Michael Netzley, PhD

Social Media in the Classroom

Page 2: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

How are social technologies impacting university pedagogy?

Page 3: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Sociology, Not Technology

Social Media refers to not only the technology but the cultural and behavioral traits of people communicating and sharing with one another. Through social networks, people are listening, sharing, creating, judging, and innovating in ways that reshape relationships (e.g., government to constituents or friend to friend), power bases, financial models, and knowledge.

Page 4: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

First Media Age: Greece

Greek alphabet and writing led to one of the most productive cultures in all of history

Page 5: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Second Media Age: Print

Chinese moveable type in 11th century, and Gutenberg's Press in the 15th

century, brought books to the non-elites of society

Page 6: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Third Media Age: Broadcast

20th century broadcasting brought media into homes, and at a low cost, thus increasing demand while decreasing the supply of media channels.

Page 7: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Fourth Media Age: Internet

Everyone becomes their own media company because of infrastructure, Internet, digital technology, and interactive easy-to-use sites.

Page 8: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

We Live in Networks

Page 9: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

“Innumerable confusions and a feeling of despair invariably emerge in periods of great technological and cultural transition.”

Marshall McLuhan

Page 10: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Tan Siok Siok: Filmmaker

http://www.twittamentary.com/

Page 11: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Twittamentary

Page 12: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Weak Ties: Defined

weak ties (acquaintances, not close friends) enable reaching populations and audiences that are not accessible via strong ties.

Page 13: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Crowdsourcing

Page 14: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Solv

e

Pro

ble

ms

Page 15: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Tech Lowers Cost of Making Weak Ties

Page 16: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Exp

and

s Yo

ur

Re

sou

rce

Bas

e

Page 17: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Messages from Peers more Influential

Page 18: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Why Social Media in Education?

I assert that social media’s strengths canalign beautifully with the aims of higher education, and that as educators we should appropriately leverage upon these strengths in pursuit of participant-centered learning.

Page 19: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

A Time for Universities to Lead

Page 20: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Asia Leads the Charge

22% 21% 19% 18% 17% 16% 16% 15%

29% 29% 28% 27% 26% 26% 25% 25%

34% 35% 38% 39% 40% 41% 42% 43%

9% 9% 9% 9% 10% 10% 10% 10%

5% 6% 6% 6% 7% 7% 7% 7%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

North America Europe

Asia, Asia Pacific, and Oceania Latin America and Carribean

Middle East and Africa

Pe

rce

nta

ge o

f W

orl

dw

ide

On

line

Po

pu

lati

on

Source: JupiterResearch Worldwide Internet Population Model (3/08) Steven Noble, Senior Analyst, Forrester Research. Presented Ad-Tech, SG

Page 21: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

ICT Development Index (2002-07)

Economy Rank 2007 IDI 2007 Rank 2002 IDI 2007

Sweden 1 7.50 1 6.05

Korea (Rep.) 2 7.26 3 5.83

Denmark 3 7.22 4 5.78

Hong Kong, China

11 6.70 12 5.10

Japan 12 6.64 18 4.82

Australia 14 6.58 13 5.02

Singapore 15 6.57 16 4.83

Malaysia 52 3.79 50 2.74

Thailand 63 3.44 70 2.17

China 90 3.11 73 1.95

Page 22: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

ICT Access Subindex (2002-07)

Economy Rank 2007 IDI 2007 Rank 2002 IDI 2007

Sweden 1 8.67 1 7.68

Korea (Rep.) 14 7.48 9 6.82

Denmark 8 8.33 2 7.47

Hong Kong, China

3 8.53 7 6.86

Japan 27 6.89 20 5.93

Australia 19 7.24 19 5.97

Singapore 11 8.06 13 6.54

Malaysia 60 4.14 52 2.73

Thailand 63 3.99 81 1.74

China 64 3.87 71 1.95

Page 23: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

ICT Use Subindex (2002-07)

Economy Rank 2007 IDI 2007 Rank 2002 IDI 2007

Sweden 3 5.48 3 2.89

Korea (Rep.) 1 5.85 1 3.21

Denmark 7 5.10 6 2.60

Hong Kong, China

13 4.64 7 2.45

Japan 4 5.41 18 1.96

Australia 12 4.68 15 2.00

Singapore 10 4.83 14 2.01

Malaysia 40 2.26 27 1.09

Thailand 73 0.78 63 0.26

China 71 0.81 74 0.17

Page 24: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

ICT Skills Subindex (2002-07)

Economy Rank 2007 IDI 2007 Rank 2002 IDI 2007

Sweden 9 9.17 3 9.14

Korea (Rep.) 3 9.63 6 9.07

Denmark 5 9.26 9 8.74

Hong Kong, China

62 7.16 65 6.85

Japan 26 8.60 28 8.31

Australia 13 9.05 2 9.17

Singapore 66 7.07 56 7.02

Malaysia 96 6.15 86 6.07

Thailand 50 7.65 67 6.83

China 94 6.21 99 5.53

Page 25: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]
Page 26: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Supply & Demand Reversed

Page 27: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Democratizes Media

Page 28: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Relatively More Diffused Channels

Page 29: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

User-Generated Content

Page 30: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Prosumer

Page 31: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Transfer of Power

Page 32: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Changing Stakeholder Expectations

• Transparency

• No corporate speak

• Listen, respond, and engage

• Your statements must be checked and tested

Page 33: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Used for Good or Ill

Page 34: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Traditional v. Digital Literacy

UncertaintyInsufficient or

missing information

OverloadMasses of data at

the push of a button

Page 35: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Four Stories

Page 36: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Innovation

Page 37: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Twitter in the Classroom

Page 38: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Incr

eas

ed

P

arti

cip

atio

n

Page 39: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Memory

Page 40: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Fee

db

ack to

Faculty

Page 41: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Peer to Peer Support

Page 42: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Harvard MBAs on Classroom Tech

Page 43: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Multi-tasking

Problem

Page 44: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Distractions

Page 45: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Responsibility Rests with

Learners

Page 46: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Sometimes We Excel!

Page 47: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]
Page 48: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Wikitext

Page 49: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Learning within Public

Network

Page 50: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Opportunity of Strong and Weak Ties

Page 51: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Where is the Safe Space to

Learn?

Page 52: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

``If you don't like change, you're going to like irrelevance even less'‘

- Gen.Eric Shinseki

Hat tip to Mitch Joel

Page 53: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Leverage and Efficiency

Page 54: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Twitter & Queenstown

Page 55: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]
Page 56: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

“The most valuable asset of a 21st century institution, whether business or nonbusiness, will be its knowledge workers and productivity.”

- Peter Drucker

Page 57: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Lenovo’s Mary Ma on Education

Regarding the acquisition and integration of IBM, Mary Ma noted how education socialized employees in ways that impacted their job performance for decades. Passive education translated into passive workplace tendencies, and opportunities to improve the M&A process were missed when initiative was not taken.

McKinsey Interview Here

Page 58: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

Social Media in Education!

Social media’s strengths can advance the educational interests of various stakeholders. As educators we should appropriately leverage upon these media in pursuit of participant-centered learning and more productive knowledge workers.

Page 59: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]

My Business Card

Page 60: Social Media in the Classroom [KL Sept 2010]