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Axio Learning Conference

The Power of Connection

29-30 September 2010

Kansas State University Alumni Center

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The fifth annual Axio Learning Community Conference focuses on the power of connection in the online classroom & the special role Axio Learning can play.

Keynote speaker

Keynote speaker, Michael Wesch
Dr. Michael Wesch
From Knowledgable to Knowledge-able in a Digital World: What's at stake

New media create new types of conversation, exchange, and collaboration. But the promise of such developments are not without disruption and peril. Familiar long-standing institutions, organizations, and traditions disappear or transform beyond recognition. And while new media bring with them new possibilities for openness, transparency, engagement, and participation, they also bring new possibilities for surveillance, manipulations, distraction, and control. The negative side of this ledger seem especially eminent in the face of widespread ignorance about the uses, misuses, power, and (sometimes unintended) consequences of new media. If we do not quickly raise our digital literacy rates we stand to lose much more than we gain from the promises of new media. This presentation will explore what is at stake, what is possible, and how we need to create new learning environments that allow our students to move beyond simply being knowledgeable to bring knowledge-able (able to find, sort, analyze, criticize, create, and collaborate) in new media environments.

Biography

Dubbed "the explainer" by Wired magazine, Michael Wesch is a cultural anthropologist exploring the effects of new media on society and culture. After two years studying the implications of writing on a remote indigenous culture in the rain forest of Papua New Guinea, he has turned his attention to the effects of social media and digital technology on global society. His videos on culture, technology, education, and information have been viewed by millions, translated in over 15 languages, and are frequently featured at international film festivals and major academic conferences worldwide. Wesch has won several major awards for his work, including a Wired Magazine Rave Award, the John Culkin Award for Outstanding Praxis in Media Ecology, and he was recently named an Emerging Explorer by National Geographic. He has also won several teaching awards, including the 2008 CASE/Carnegie US Professor of the Year for Doctoral and Research Universities.