Collaboration, Open Source, Presentations/Speeches, and Virtual Community
The University in a Networked Economy and Society
| Title: | The University in a Networked Economy and Society (ID: ECR0703) | | Author(s): | Yochai Benkler (Yale University) | | Origin: | Documents Contributed by ECAR, Presentations (06/12/2007) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | Presentation at the Sixth Annual ECAR/HP Summer Symposium for Higher Education IT Executives, June 11-13, 2007, Boulder, Colorado. When Yochai Benkler's book, The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, came out, Stanford Law Professor Larry Lessig said, "This is -- by far -- the most important and powerful book written in the fields that matter most to me in the last ten years. If there is one book you read this year, it should be this." This work examines the ways in which information technology permits extensive forms of collaboration that may have transformative consequences for economy and society. Benkler's presentation outlines the characteristics of the networked information economy and the roles of collaboration and commons-based production of information, knowledge, and culture, and it suggests avenues to apply these broad trends to education and education-related policy.
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Multi-Institutional IT Collaboration
| Title: | Multi-Institutional IT Collaboration (ID: ECR0702) | | Author(s): | Philip J. Goldstein (EDUCAUSE) | | Origin: | Documents Contributed by ECAR, Presentations (06/12/2007) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | Presentation at the Sixth Annual ECAR/HP Summer Symposium for Higher Education IT Executives, June 11-13, 2007, Boulder, Colorado. In 2006, ECAR distributed three surveys: the first was designed simply to ascertain whether the responding institution collaborated in significant ways; the second asked responding collaborators to describe their experiences, views, outcomes, concerns, and readiness with and for collaborations; and the third asked self-identified non-collaborators in IT to describe the barriers to collaboration they face, the cultural assumptions and beliefs of their institutions, and their views about the possible future for IT collaboration at their institutions. The survey responses offer a rich snapshot of how and when colleges and universities collaborate, the nature of the collaborations themselves, and a sense of the effectiveness of IT collaborations in higher education.
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