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Can we improve the future with lessons from our past?

This invited keynote presentation addressed the nature of online life and how it makes sense for learning and identity. "My roots are England, my reference point is the moon and my sense of belong is to join the global society of humankind" was my riposte to Jacques Delors concerns about globalisation. The explosion of information and interpersonal relationships that Web 2.0 and social software enables demands that we think ‘outside the box’ about these five issues - creativity, attention, space, identity and authority, and this presentation examines the concerns of stakeholders at the levels of government, organisation and individual with respect to learning and the new opportunities offered by online technology.  

Richard Millwood

2008

This invited keynote presentation addressed the nature of online life and how it makes sense for learning and identity. "My roots are England, my reference point is the moon and my sense of belong is to join the global society of humankind" was my riposte to Jacques Delors concerns about globalisation. The explosion of information and interpersonal relationships that Web 2.0 and social software enables demands that we think ‘outside the box’ about these five issues - creativity, attention, space, identity and authority, and this presentation examines the concerns of stakeholders at the levels of government, organisation and individual with respect to learning and the new opportunities offered by online technology.  

http://blog.richardmillwood.net/2008/07/01/keynote-broadcast/

http://blog.richardmillwood.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/rsc-sw-keynote-richard-millwood.pdf


JISC Regional Support Centre South West Summer Conference





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Richard Millwood


Brentwood




  • idibl2
  • Richard's PhD



"The library is not a shrine for the worship of books. It is not a temple where literary incense must be burned or where one's devotion to the bound book is expressed in ritual. A library, to modify the famous metaphor of Socrates, should be the delivery room for the birth of ideas - a place where history comes to life." — Norman Cousins, 1954