That's what a wiki is good for, Mills. Yours are good questions.  
Suggest texts and themes for modules in addition to those in the  
original syllabus.

Howard Rheingold [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://twitter.com/hrheingold
http://www.rheingold.com  http://www.smartmobs.com
http://vlog.rheingold.com
what it is ---> is --->up to us



On Sep 1, 2008, at 7:19 AM, Mills Davis wrote:

>
> What seems under-emphasized in this curriculum for me is a focus on
> the personal and social practices, and best practices. More than a new
> literacy, cooperation and collective action is a performing art. What
> is it about the now emerging techno-socio-economic collaborative
> environment that is such a game changer? What are the ways for us to
> play? What are the options, the strategies?  What values should shape
> our decisions?  And, why those values?
>
> Cooperation is not exactly a new topic for humanity. It has a history
> and pre-history. Individually, we've all been dealing with
> cooperation, collective action, and governance ever since we were
> children. Further, we humans are creatures of tensions.  We deal with
> cooperation in a context of evolving interests, competition, harmony
> and conflict, development through crises, birth and death, and so on.
> Developmental studies suggest that individually and socially our
> capabilities evolve, that we all start at square one, that growth
> passes through distinguishable stages, that developmental dysfunctions
> may also occur at any stage, that civilizations have centers of
> gravity with respect stage of development, but have statistically
> significant portions of their populations at various stages, and that
> capabilities do co-evolve. In practice, then, there are many, many
> different ways these themes can and do play out in our daily lives.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sep 1, 2008, at 1:08 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>>
>> looks good to go from my perspective!
>> Mark
>>
>> On 8/29/08, Andrea Saveri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
>>> Thanks for putting it up Robert.  I'll comb through my files and see
>>> if there is anything else that might be relevant.
>>> best
>>> andrea
>>>
>>> On Aug 27, 6:38 pm, Howard Rheingold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>> THank you, Andrea and Robert!
>>>>
>>>> Howard Rheingold
>>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]://twitter.com/hrheingoldhttp://www.rheingold.com
>>>> http://www.smartmobs.comhttp://vlog.rheingold.com
>>>> what it is ---> is --->up to us
>>>>
>>>> On Aug 27, 2008, at 4:01 PM, Robert Link wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> CoCos,
>>>>
>>>>> Andrea was kind enough to send me the syllabus for the Stanford
>>>>> lecture
>>>>> series from which CoCo spawned and I have taken a couple minutes  
>>>>> to
>>>>> mark
>>>>> it up for the wiki.  Please take a look and if you find anything
>>>>> that
>>>>> needs correcting, embrace the wiki way and correct it. ;)
>>>>
>>>>> http://wiki.cooperationcommons.com/pmwiki/pmwiki.php?n=Rooms.SHLLectures
>>>>
>>>>> With this in place I'd say we're effectively good-to-go on  
>>>>> inviting
>>>>> others to use this as a spring board and see what can be  
>>>>> developed.
>>>>> That is, I think with this in place we're ready to invite
>>>>> researchers
>>>>> and other folks to drop by, take a look, make suggestions.
>>>>
>>>>> Any opposition?
>>>>
>>>>> rl
>>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> -----
>> Mark Elliott, PhD
>> Director, CollabForge pty ltd
>> collaboration ~ mass collaboration ~ social software
>> http://collabforge.com ~ http://mark-elliott.net/ ~ http://metacollab.net/
>>
>>>
>
>
> >


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