Stephen Downes

Knowledge, Learning, Community

Select a newsletter and enter your email to subscribe:

Email:

Vision Statement

Stephen Downes works with the Digital Technologies Research Centre at the National Research Council of Canada specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. His degrees are in Philosophy, specializing in epistemology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science. He has taught for the University of Alberta, Athabasca University, Grand Prairie Regional College and Assiniboine Community College. His background includes expertise in journalism and media, both as a prominent blogger and as founder of the Moncton Free Press online news cooperative. He is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, has authored learning management and content syndication software, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. Downes is a member of NRC's Research Ethics Board. He is a popular keynote speaker and has spoken at conferences around the world.

Stephen Downes Photo
Stephen Downes, stephen@downes.ca, Casselman Canada

Skills Transcripts at Scale: Why The ETS & MTC Partnership is a Big Deal
76599 image icon

Just a note on what the reform crowd is up to. The Mastery Transcript Consortium "provides a mastery transcript that replaces traditional high school transcripts. Instead of a list of courses and grades, learners share competencies with colleges and employers." ETS (formerly Educational Testing Service) companies "deliver learning and assessment solutions around the world." The real big deal in this space will be when AI performs skills and competencies assessments based on real-world data and nobody is needed in the middle to own the process.

Today: 213 Total: 213 Tom Vander Ark, Getting Smart, 2024/05/15 [Direct Link]
Generative AI is Doomed
76598 image icon

"We're experiencing an epochal shift in technology, on the order of magnitude of the Internet's commercialization," writes Eric Goldman (19 page PDF), "but this time, the regulators are intervening early, in a massive and unrelenting way." Hence the prediction in the title. Regulators will misunderstand the technology while seeing to control and censor the outputs. It doesn't help that incumbent technology companies are seeking to preserve their advantage. "Misdirected or malicious Generative AI regulations jeopardize all kinds of algorithmic activities, from personalized content to algorithmically sorted search results - things that we rely upon many times a day." Related: audio interview with Goldman about the talk.

Today: 202 Total: 202 Eric Goldman, SSRN, 2024/05/15 [Direct Link]
Google is redesigning its search engine — and it’s AI all the way down
76597 image icon

During the playoffs I like to keep track of the scores, so I do a search. P{roblem is, there are four games, but Google only displays three results. It's so frustrating. I have to scroll way down to get a link to the actual website that displays all the scores. If Google has its way, I might never get to that website at all. As Kottke summarizes, "it's better/cheaper to provide potentially wrong answers to keep you clicking within Google than it is to send you away for the right answers." And an answer doesn't have to be incorrect to be wrong. It just has to be something I don't want. Like incomplete scores. Or summaries instead of sources.

Today: 302 Total: 302 David Pierce, The Verge, 2024/05/15 [Direct Link]
The problem isn’t AI, it's the zero-sum future we're being sold
76596 image icon

I agree with this part of the post: "There is a tendency here to imply a zero-sum principle to humanness: the more the tech can do the less it means to be human. This feels wrong to me and isn't helpful in an educational context." But I don't agree with what I think is the main point, which is to focus on human creativity as the differentiator. We'll find, I think, that we can't think of human activity in the age in a nice neat Bloom's taxonomy package. We'll be looking at completely new human activities outside the domain of the taxonomy - valuate, maybe. Or obviate. Whatever. When it's not zero sum, it means we're adding something that wasn't there before. And that's what I expect.

Today: 205 Total: 205 David White, 2024/05/15 [Direct Link]
Student and Faculty Perceptions of Ineffective Teaching Behaviours
76595 image icon

So of course we want to know what the list is, but by the time we get to it on page 7 we find the list is actually derived from another paper (Liu et al., 2020, which compares them between Chinese and U.S. based instructors) and this paper measures Canadian faculty and student rankings of them (there's also an appendix with each practice described in more detail). At the top of the list is "students' and faculty's shared contempt for disrespect", otherwise, I feel (based on my reading of the two lists) faculty emphasizes unprepared teaching while students stress ineffective teaching. 18 page PDF.

Today: 80 Total: 390 Lynne N. Kennette, Morgan Chapman, 2024/05/14 [Direct Link]
Can citations fight misinformation on YouTube?
76594 image icon

I think this is a useful exercise that should be watched by educators. "We wanted to come up with a method to encourage people watching videos to do what's called 'lateral reading,' which is that you go look at other places on the web to establish whether something is credible or true, as opposed to diving deep into the thing itself," says Amy X. Zhang, one of the authors of a paper (20 page PDF) describing the project. Creating the mechanism is only the first step, though, as the authors need to consider things like bad actors and circular citation networks.

Today: 72 Total: 313 Stefan Milne-U. Washington, Futurity, 2024/05/14 [Direct Link]

Stephen Downes Stephen Downes, Casselman, Canada
stephen@downes.ca

Copyright 2024
Last Updated: May 15, 2024 9:37 p.m.

Canadian Flag Creative Commons License.