Edmonton New Media Roundup 23

The past little while has been heavily IRL for me — I spent a lot of time at events, talking to people in real life, as opposed to reading or listening to their stuff online. But every one of those opportunities had its seeds in connections made on Twitter, so there’s the new media angle (or what will have to suffice as one).

EdCamp Edmonton, an unconference organized by teachers and held at Lillian Osborne Senior High on Nov. 5, was all I had hoped it would be. I attended to learn more about teaching, as I find myself doing that a fair bit now, both at MacEwan University and at the Edmonton Journal media lab. I was not disappointed. We learned too much to convey here, but you can get a sense of it from this Google doc compiled by the participants. I used Storify to curate the day’s Twitter chatter. If you want the whole stream, check out #edcampyeg.

- The Advertising Club of Edmonton brought Leslie Ehm in for the second installment of its Cultivate speaker series at the Art Gallery of Alberta on Nov. 3, and I was lucky enough to be her warmup act. She gave a funny, perceptive talk exploding several myths around the idea of creativity. To sum up: Creativity is not magic, or a gift you’re born with; it’s a process, and you can participate fully in that process if you free your mind from judgmental, safe thinking that holds you back. You’ll find the highlights on the Twitter stream at #cultivate.

- Ehm’s talk was especially enjoyable because of all of the serendipitous connections to other discussions I had participated in that week. Douglas Merrill, the former CIO of Google, spoke about what it takes to innovate and win in the Nov. 2 keynote at ICE, the tech conference organized by CIPS. Just like Ehm said, it involves getting messy. Merrill’s advocacy of embracing failure gave Owen Brierley and me a nice lead-in to our little session on “Fail often, fail fast” later that afternoon.

- I also had the pleasure of participating in a salon organized by Andy Grabia on Oct. 29, a lovely evening of conversation among a small group of clever and interesting Edmontonians, many of whom connected or at least reconnected via Twitter. Andy’s salons are conducted under Chatham House rules — what’s said in the room stays in the room. But he did release this snapshot of the evening, created by Fish Griwkowsky. In other Andy news, the display he curated of Gilbert Bouchard’s comic-book collection, which I wrote about earlier this year, opens Nov. 18.

- Next up on my agenda is WordCamp Edmonton, to be held Nov. 18 and 19 at the Shaw Conference Centre. At $40, it’s a very reasonably priced opportunity for professional development and networking among those who use WordPress (or want to, for that matter). Read co-organizer Mack Male’s post if you need more convincing. I’ll be giving a session on the Saturday called “Beyond Bloggers vs Journalists,” a discussion of what mainstream journos can learn from bloggers, some examples of collaboration, and some experiments we’re working on at the Journal media lab.

Wow, new record for shameless self-promotion. Enough. Here’s what some other people are doing:

Tamara Stecyk has been blogging again, which is a good thing. She did her first Storify this week to go with a post on the surprising reaction she got to a tweet about man caves.

— I neglected to hail Felicia Dewar for her gargantuan and ultimately successful effort to win $100,000 towards the development of Brintnell Park. Anyone who follows Felicia knows how hard she worked to win the Schneiders Picnic Anywhere contest, and it’s nice to have a happy ending to the story.

— Urban planning student Paul Giang has a thought-provoking guest post on the Royal Alberta Museum debacle on The Charrette. He argues that it would be best to leave the RAM where it is, thus solving the funding squeeze.

— I know way too many people participating in Movember this year. Anyone got a good way to decide who to give to? You can keep track of some local Movember goings-on here.

— November is also National Novel Writing Month, and Marty Chan is conducting his marathon-writing project in public. What an amazing writer-in-residence he has been for the Edmonton Public Library. He will be a very hard act to follow.

KikkiPlanet.com, Kathleen Smith’s online magazine, has a new issue, featuring two Twitter power couples: Kari Skelton and Ryan Jespersen, and Rene and Kari Mayer.

You can always find more new (and old) media news on Mack’s Media Monday, and his weekly Edmonton notes are a good way to catch up, too. You can talk to me on Twitter or Google+, or in the comments below.

Edmonton New Media Roundup 15

 

George Couros, by Kevin Jarrett
It’s back-to-school season in our house. The kids return to class on Thursday, Trustee Spencer’s meetings have resumed, and I am preparing to teach (!) reporting and news production in the journalism diploma program at Grant MacEwan University. So I’m in an education frame of mind for this week’s roundup.
 
In many ways, the Internet has disrupted education as much as it has disrupted journalism. As with journalism, there are some in education who resist the change, pine for the good old days and are certain things are going to hell. And then there are people like George Couros, who embrace change and see all the good that can come of it.
 
I haven’t met George, but I’m a fan of his Twitter feed and find myself increasingly drawn to his blog as I work on turning myself into an educator. He is a principal in Stony Plain and now holds a newly created position as division principal in charge of innovative teaching and learning in the Parkland School Division, which covers several communities west of Edmonton.

George has exactly the attitude I want to see in anyone involved in teaching. He considers it part of his job to turn students into “strong Digital Citizens,” and he models that behaviour by being one himself. He also created Connected Principals, a group blog where school administrators from all over share what they’ve learned. From where I sit, Parkland is pretty lucky to have him.

What networked teachers inspire you? Let me know in the comments, on Twitter or on Google+.

Rounding up some other new media stuff from the past week:

— Speaking of networked education, registration is now open for EdCamp Edmonton, a one-day unconference on learning. It will be held Nov. 5 at Lillian Osborne High School. I’m planning to be there.

— Which reminds me, plans are underway for another MediaCamp Edmonton. The first one was held in May 2010, and it felt like a success, but then life got in the way of working on the next one. Efforts are now resurrected. An organizational meeting will be held at Guru Digital Arts College at 6:30 p.m. tonight (Aug. 29). Minutes will be posted here.

— My own education efforts this fall will be centred on guiding students through the production of West Edmonton Local. MacEwan grad Mathew White has done a bang-up job keeping the site going through the summer, and he’ll be helping me and Lucas Timmons turn it back into a learning experience for the next group of MacEwan journalism students. If you have any suggestions for improvement, let us know.

— In other news, Andy Grabia has launched a new photo project called My Edmonton, documenting the beautiful buildings in our city. As Andy points out, there is a lot of talk about how ugly our architecture is, and while much of that criticism is deserved, it obscures the fact that we have lovely and striking architecture here as well. He’s looking for suggestions, so be sure to chime in.

(Addendum: Also on the theme of beautiful things about Edmonton, see Sharon Yeo’s post on Edmonton Transit’s historical tour.)

— Speaking of Andy, a fierce opponent of the proposal to build a new arena for the Oilers downtown, the discussion continues in Edmonton’s blogosphere in light of the city’s new proposal to fund the arena through an expanded community revitalization levy. Of note are Alex Abboud’s call for downtown development with or without the CRL, Ryan Batty’s skeptical look at CRLs, and Mack Male’s coverage of the proposal to expand the CRL boundary. For more commentary and links to what mainstream media and others are saying about the arena, keep an eye on the edmontonian.

(Addendum 2: Looks like the edmontonian is hanging up its cleats. Nooooo!)

For more on media new and old, check out Mack’s Media Monday.

(Image of George Couros courtesy Kevin Jarrett, taken Jan. 30, 2011)