Sunday, March 27, 2011

michael wesch

thanks to a tweet from @ianchia and a post by Sumeet Moghe  @sumeetmoghe

Media is therefore not just tools and communication - they mediate relationships. Media changes, relationships change and the culture changes.

Our choices are so incredibly broad, you're not born knowing who you are and want to be. @mwesch #ls2011

The search for the authentic self leads us towards self-centered modes of self-fulfillment and disagreement on several things - values, views, approaches. We're more disengaged and more fragmented. The new media revolution is creating the cultural background for this kind of a change.

This deeply matters. We know ourselves through our relations with others. New media is changing how we perceive ourselves and how we relate to each other. We have a cultural inversion today. There's a tension. We're expressing individualism like never before but we value community. We talk independence but we value relationships.

What's important to note is that knowledge is all around us. The classroom is not the place where we should be going for knowledge. As architects of culture, we need to understand this phenomenon and our environment. The walls of the classroom are not the truth. Information is not just a part of these walls. Authority isn't single source. The uncultured project is an example of someone walking out of class to change the world - Shawn Anand's story is truly inspirational.

We need three things:
  • Real world problems;
  • People working together;
  • Leveraging technology effectively

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