Personal tools

Research base: Difference between revisions

From Oneville Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(10 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Notes by Mica Pollock  
Notes by Mica Pollock  


''After many years focusing on face-to-face communications supporting student success in diverse public school communities, I’ve just finished two years engaging people of all ages in exploring the potential of low cost/commonplace technologies (cell phones, computers, free software) for connecting students, educators, families, and community members in youth support efforts in the diverse community of Somerville, MA.  
''At the beginning of the OneVille Project, we decided that as PI of the overall project, one main role for me was Chief Learner. After we had six projects going simultaneously, I was indeed the only person who got to learn from every piece of the project. I learned constantly from everyone I met throughout this work and continue humbly to learn!


''I wanted to offer some citations to previous research and some ideas'''/<font color=red>¡Ahas! </font color>''' I've personally been chewing on as PI of the OneVille Project, in conversation with literally hundreds of people featured or mentioned on this website. (You'll see '''<font color=red>¡Aha! </font color>''' written throughout this website. It means a moment when we figured out something useful about improving communications in education.)
''After many years focusing on face-to-face communications supporting student success in diverse school communities, I still entered this work as a novice -- as a person newly trying technology to support necessary communications in public schools. I'm an equity person first, a communications person second, and now, a tester of technology when it helps get both done. Moreover, I entered this project as a total novice at participatory design research; I typically had watched the world as it is, never worked with others as a co-researcher to actually test solutions.


''I've come at all this work as a scholar of equity and diversity in public education -- a person newly trying technology to support necessary communications in diverse education communities.
''All of us will continue to write and speak about what we each learned. Here, I wanted to offer some initial ideas, '''<font color=red>¡Ahas! </font color>''', and prior research that I've personally been thinking about in conversation with literally hundreds of people featured or mentioned on this website. (You'll see '''<font color=red>¡Aha! </font color>''' written throughout this website. It means a moment when we figured out something useful about improving communications in education.)


'''<font color=#0000FF>Click here to read an article I’ve drafted that grapples with many of my own ¡Ahas! on the project in a concise way. It's called "It Takes a Network to Raise a Child."  
'''<font color=#0000FF>This first article shares some of my own ¡Ahas! on the project and cites some research that for me undergirded some of this work. It's called "It Takes a Network to Raise a Child." Click below to read it.


[[File:PollockIt Takes a NetworkSPRING2012finaleditforsharingpdf.pdf|PollockIt Takes a NetworkSPRING2012finaleditforsharingpdf.pdf]]  
[[File:PollockIt Takes a NetworkJuly2012finalforpublication.pdf|PollockIt Takes a NetworkJuly2012finalforpublication.pdf]]  


[[Image:Onevillesocialnetworkslide.jpg|Onevillesocialnetworkslide.jpg]]
[[Image:Onevillesocialnetworkslide.jpg|Onevillesocialnetworkslide.jpg]]

Latest revision as of 10:06, 16 July 2012

Notes by Mica Pollock

At the beginning of the OneVille Project, we decided that as PI of the overall project, one main role for me was Chief Learner. After we had six projects going simultaneously, I was indeed the only person who got to learn from every piece of the project. I learned constantly from everyone I met throughout this work and continue humbly to learn!

After many years focusing on face-to-face communications supporting student success in diverse school communities, I still entered this work as a novice -- as a person newly trying technology to support necessary communications in public schools. I'm an equity person first, a communications person second, and now, a tester of technology when it helps get both done. Moreover, I entered this project as a total novice at participatory design research; I typically had watched the world as it is, never worked with others as a co-researcher to actually test solutions.

All of us will continue to write and speak about what we each learned. Here, I wanted to offer some initial ideas, ¡Ahas! , and prior research that I've personally been thinking about in conversation with literally hundreds of people featured or mentioned on this website. (You'll see ¡Aha! written throughout this website. It means a moment when we figured out something useful about improving communications in education.)

This first article shares some of my own ¡Ahas! on the project and cites some research that for me undergirded some of this work. It's called "It Takes a Network to Raise a Child." Click below to read it.

File:PollockIt Takes a NetworkJuly2012finalforpublication.pdf

Onevillesocialnetworkslide.jpg