Personal Website for Tom Hayden

Harambee #hbee Conference 2010 & Social Networks SIMPLEX!

I just returned from Durham, North Carolina where I was at the Harambee 2010 Social Networks for Educators workshop.* I was there wearing two hats: 1) as someone who is qualified to talk about teaching a social networks course (using this text) and  2) as a teacher interested in using social networks to get high school students interested in social networks.** There were about 40 other academics there interested in using social networks in education, from all sorts of disciplines: computer science, communications, sociology, and education mostly.  The goal of the conference was to assist educators in 1) developing new courses using social networks, 2) finding ways to implement social networks into existing courses and 3) help students develop better critical thinking skills.

I came into the conference with the following thought: the teaching of social networks can be divided into a simplex like below, where a class is somewhere along the boundary.  This leads to classes which are a combination of sociology, mathematics and engineering.  The study of social networks is a discipline in itself and each field has its own approach.

In retrospect, I was thinking too narrowly.  Rather than being a discipline in itself, social networks are a great pedagogical tool to reach some other learning goal. For example, for students early in their CS education, social networks make a great introduction to algorithmic and game theoretic thinking. For sociology students, social networks are a great introduction into statistical analysis and complex systems.  Rather than teaching social networks as an end in itself, there are much broader goals that can be accomplished.  This is definitely a skill I can take into a K-12 classroom in the fall; I conjecture that high school students certainly know about social networks (i.e. Facebook) and are vaguely familiar with the concept of network.  This can be leveraged with good examples to help students develop critical thinking skills: many things can be modeled as networks: economies, ecologies, supply chains, etc.  Recognizing networks is a skill that every person in our modern society should have, they’re so pervasive.

A couple random highlights of the conference:

Ben Shneiderman’s inspirational talk about how the future of CS is modeling computational AND human behavior.  His NodeXL project is really impressive and would work great for an introductory networks class.

Jon Kleinberg‘s keynote talk at the end of the conference.  He concisely summarized what I was trying to say the day before, when I spoke about teaching a course using his book.  It was nice to hear another CS theorist talk at the conference, I felt a little lonely in CS theory-land at times.

That summarizes my Harambee adventure this year. Hopefully, next year, I’ll get invited back to talk about my experience using social networks to encourage high school students.

* – The conference was sponsored by the NSF CNS-0722288. Thanks NSF!

** – I am a NSF GK-12 Fellow, so I will be spending my fall in the classroom with a teacher! Thanks again NSF!

Tags: , , , , ,

3 Responses to “Harambee #hbee Conference 2010 & Social Networks SIMPLEX!”

  1. Kara Says:

    Really enjoyed this post, Tom! Social networks can also be applied, as a way to evaluate an organization. I’m using social network analysis for my dissertation, and will be analyzing social networks in a high school (based on which other students and teachers the students interact with) and connecting it with a bunch of other psychological and educational variables. I’m looking at it theoretically as a way to connect some unanswered questions in educational psychology, but I’m also using it as an assessment tool for the school. I’ll be showing sociograms of the school network to the administration, color coded by race & ethnicity, gender, ability levels (by GPA), by which learning community the students are a member of, and many more. The school can use this data to try out new policies and to see if their policies enhance interaction between particular groups. Let’s talk about my data sometime if you get a chance, I know you would have some good ideas for analysis!

  2. Tom Hayden Says:

    Hey Kara! I’m glad you found it useful. Your dissertation work sounds awesome! I’m amazed that you are allowed to conduct these kinds of experiments. I always thought that it would probably require a mountain of IRB forms, no? Experimental research is super interesting if you can get the data!

    You should try to come to the hbee conference next year; it was super useful and very interdisciplinary. People were there from all sorts of fields: education, computer science, information and sociology mostly.

    We’ll have to grab some coffee next time I swing through Ann Arbor or if you visit Chicago.

  3. T Says:

    car http://wantiqueiwjgddv.copious-systems.com/tag/T+305+Kit+car/ : 305…

    305…

Leave a Reply

Links

My Blog - I finally gave in and created a blog where I can post about whatever I like.

My Professional CV - This site has all of the relevant professional links about me; go here if you're interested in my academics.

Fun SI Projects Using Bidding Networks to Search for Exposure in Auctions - Auction 73 Case - This is some work I did in Fall 2008, as a final project for my Networks course at SI. I'm currently trying to see if this is publishable.

Technological Diffusion with Compatibility - This is based off of a model presented at one of Umichigan's STIET lectures this year.