The document discusses the concepts of micromedia, microcontent, and microlearning. It argues that new technologies have led to information being experienced and shared in smaller chunks suited for mobile and multitasking behaviors. Microlearning reflects how people already learn informally by swimming in a sea of microcontent and microtasks. Designing microlearning experiences involves embedding learning in the periphery of users' attention through signs on screens and knowledge represented as clouds and flows integrated into digital lifestreams.
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What Is Micromedia? Living and Learning in Microcontent Environments.
1. Use These Tools, Your Mind Will Follow Martin Lindner ARC Research Studios Austria Studio eLearning Environments Learning in Immersive Micromedia & Microknowledge Environments
7. From the KAFKA GALAXY into the GOOGLE DOCUVERSE Confessions of a Digital Immigrant
8. 1980 – 2000: 20 years learning and teaching German Literature Case study of a Digital Immigrant
9. Case study of a Digital Immigrant 2000 - 2001: e-Learning „Autor Interaktiver Lern-Medien (CBT / WBT)“
10. Case study of a Digital Immigrant 2002 / 2003: Media Studies Visiting Professor at University of Innsbruck Since 2004: Researcher Studio eLearning Environments
15. ” Da media! So - what is DA MEDIA? A lot of you out dere probably won't even have heard of da WORD!” Media Theorist Sasha Baron Cohen a.k.a Ali G. in Da Ali G. Show , 2000
17. No. Books may be understood as “mediums”, but they are NOT part of “THE MEDIA” in the way of TV, radio, magazines, newspapers … and the Web.
18. Yes. Books do not exist independently from this media environment anymore. In this sense they are “part of the media” …
19. … and the same goes for (formal) e-learning within education institutions but also within “functional” corporate training
20. THE MEDIA is … Here & Now Always On, 24/7 Sensurround, Multimedia A Chain Reaction of Small Perceptual Shocks A Total and Immersive Field
21. “ There is a world of difference between the modern home environment of integrated electric information and the classroom.” Marshall McLuhan on Next Generation Learners (1967):
22. “ Men are suddenly nomadic gatherers of knowledge , … informed as never before, free from fragmentary specialism as never before – but also involved … as never before.” Marshall McLuhan (1964):
23. Today’s child is growing up absurd, because he lives in two worlds …
24. We are not “users”. We are “media beings” - being involved in the “total and pervasive field” of “the media”.
30. Umair Haque (2005), The New Economy of Media Micromedia, Connected Consumption, and the Snowball Effect The explosion of digital micromedia puts an end to Mass Media as we know it. www.bubblegeneration.com
31. Microchunks result from the “unbundling of traditional media goods” like news, albums, books … [and courses]. www.bubblegeneration.com Umair Haque (2005), The New Economy of Media.
32. Attention costs dominate production costs , because technology ends production, distribution, and retail scarcity: The more a microchunk is consumed the more value is added..
33. „ Continuous Partial Attention“ Linda Stone „ Attention Economy“ Michael H. Goldhaber
34. Lev Manovich (2000), Macromedia and Micro-media “ Media technologies seem typically to move in one direction : ‘more’. More resolution, better color, better visual fidelity, more bandwidth, more immersion.” www.manovich.net
35. … but why would people want to play games on a tiny phone screen? or texting? or moblogging?
36. Lev Manovich (2000), Macromedia and Micro-media “ While some media forms get richer, others stay purposefully 'poorer.' A more minimalist kind of media, characterized by low resolution, low fidelity, and slow speeds, is born. I call it micro-media.” www.manovich.net
37. Lev Manovich (2000), Macromedia and Micro-media Micromedia will not go away: “ Given the fact that soon more users worldwide will access the Internet through cell phones than through computers, it will not only successfully compete with macro-media but may even overtake it in popularity.” www.manovich.net
38. “ Cool Media”: Low definition media for casual attention
40. “ We've discovered in the last few years that navigating the web in meme-sized chunks is the natural idiom of the Internet.“ Anil Dash, 2002 Introducing the Microcontent Client
41. … memes : replicating units of cultural information
43. self-contained the smallest units of meaning / communication that can stand for itself elementary individually addressable to be easily re-used and re-mixed appropriate media format appropriately formatted to work as building blocks in different cultural patterns and individual mindsets Dash‘s microcontent definition (paraphrase): Human processed information
44. self-contained [some relation to object-oriented programming] elementary individually addressable to be easily re-used and re-mixed appropriate data format appropriately formatted for integration in different applications and services Dash‘s microcontent definition (paraphrase): Computer processed information
45. The evolution of microcontent is a complex feedback phenomenon – it can not be reduced neither to software nor to humans
47. MICROCONTENT discovered in 2001 GOOGLE SHREDDERING MACROCONTENT PC GOING MOBILE MOBILE PHONES EXPLOSION OF THE E-MAIL INBOX 2000/2005: MS Office exploded MULTITASKING ATTENTION CRISIS LIFE INTER-RUPTED
50. People making use of, or rather swimming in, microcontent are in fact already practicing (informal) microlearning. 1
51. People learning and working with micromedia are learning and working differently. They are swimming, rather than navigating, in a sea of microcontent and streams of microtasks. 2
52. If we want to create microlearning experiences, we have to understand the nature of microcontent-based knowledge work. 3
61. David Weinberger, 2002 Small Pieces Loosely Joined “ The Web is a mess, as organized as an orgy. … a collection of ideas, none longer than can fit on a single screen. … small nuggets pointing to more small nuggets.” www.vanderwal.net
62. “ We’re falling into [processes] that … imperceptibly deepen, like furrows worn into a stone hallway by the traffic of slippers.”
63. “ We’re falling into groups that feel like parties [more than like classes or seminars].”
64. Thomas Van der Wal, 2005 “ Folksonomies” “ Personal Info Cloud ” www.vanderwal.net
65. “ Lifestreams“ vs. the “Desktop“ metaphor David Gelernter, 2000 The Second Coming – A Manifesto www.edge.org/3rd_culture/gelernter/gelernter_p1.html
66. In micromedia environments, knowledge takes on the form of clouds. (Microcontent being something like small drops of vapor.)
67. „… all kinds of information chunks in our digital life take on the form of digital lifestreams“, “ leaving behind a stream-shaped cyberbody, like an aircraft's contrail , as we go”
68.
69. VI. Designing Microlearning / Microknowledge Experiences
81. … but “mobility” has to be understood in a different way as a phenomenon at the intersection of supermodern “non-spaces” & ubiquitous digital spaces
(1) Generally spoken, elearning as we know it has been a failure. (2) Next Generation eLearning is not the „Virtual Classroom“. It is not about „technologically enhanced learning (or teaching)“. It is more like a learning-enhanced media experience. (3) It is about throwing oneself in into a new kind of environment – as a learner, as a teacher, as a designer. (4) The emerging Digital Media Environment (PC/Web-based and mobile) is a MICROMEDIA Environment, consisting of Microcontent Chunks – (very) Small Pieces Loosely Joined. (5) All this has consequences for eLearning. (6) This development is characterized by confusion and contradictions. I do not know how Next Generation eLearning will LOOK and FEEL in five years. But learning from the last 5 years some assuptions can be made how it will definitely not look and feel like.