We Don’t Have the Right Words for What We Do

hackcloud
(word cloud created from G+ discussion referenced below)

I suspect that if I told some of my computer programming friends about what the Making Learning Connected MOOC was up to this past Make Cycle with the “hack your writing” theme, they would get a chuckle, and tell me, “That’s not hacking.” Remixing poetry, shaping odds and ends of writing, moving words into image …. that’s just … writing, right? My computer friends would probably be more narrow in focus, with the act of hacking being working with the code of programs or the inside workings of a computer/network.

Hacking writing?

Check out this discussion that Terry started in our Google Plus community, in which many of us grappled with the terminology of “hacking” and what it is that we were doing. First of all, this kind of rich, thoughtful discussion is exactly why the CLMOOC is so important to us as teachers. Second of all, it surfaces the confusion that many of us teachers and writers and learners are feeling as the idea of composition is in the midst of a pretty sizable shift.

We don’t have the right words yet for what we are doing, and what we are doing when we compose in the digital age, so we reach out for the somewhat familiar. The idea of hacking? While it has come to have negative connotations (black hat hackers), the original concept (white hat hackers) was to tinker and play and make the system run better for everyone. The idea was that when problems arise (with computer networks), the community can solve the problem, collectively, and move the entire technology movement forward. (And of course, there are other meanings — to hack something violently is to chop it up, or the hack worker who does a crappy job at something, or the life hack to make your day run smoother, and more variations of the word than you can shake a dictionary at.)

In some ways, we are slowly returning to this idea of the positive hack (I think/I hope). Look at the Hack for Change movement. You may even have a chapter near you, where programmers, educators, social service agencies, and local government officials spend a weekend identifying problems that need addressing, and then working together as a team to solve them. We have a group in our area, and I have had members come talk to students about what they are doing — about using programming skills and computer know-how for the good of the larger world.

“Hacking” certainly has a cool cache with kids, too. When I tell my sixth graders that we are going to “hack” some websites with Mozilla Webmaker X-Ray Googles, there is a real excitement in the room. They imagine themselves going on some covert operation, dipping into the code of websites, and being a bit nefarious. Of course, I pop their bubble a bit, explaining that we will be hacking websites only through a layer of hack (X-Ray Goggles does not change the original) as a way to understanding some basic coding and to write from a different point of view (such as, revamp the front page of the New York Times and give stories a slanted view of the world – change the lens).

What concepts bubble up when you “hack writing”?

  • Agency of the writer/composer
  • Lens of the reader
  • Word choice/Image choice/Video choice
  • Ownership of content

So, this Make Cycle, I was on the look-out for collective hacks within CLMOOC — ideas that would draw the community into the shared experience, to tap into the groupthink knowledge. I even instigated a comic remix activity that was interesting to watch unfold. I wish there had been more ways to get us to write together, to remix together, to hack together … but I know, too, that being in the midst of the change (such as that which writing/composition is undergoing right now with the digital world)  is like holding on to an umbrella in the midst of the storm — sometimes, it takes all your strength to keep the umbrella from flying away … you don’t have time to offer a dry space to your neighbor.

I write all this inquiry in a positive light, and I am thankful for the facilitators (Mia and Erica) for all that they did to get this Make Cycle in motion and how they nurtured these discussions along the way, in forums and in the Make with Me hangout, Twitter chat and more. We won’t even be able to understand the change unless we get into it and play, and reflect on it. This is the heart of Connected Learning — both the act of trying something new and the connections with colleagues to understand a difficult topic, as well as following our own passions. We may not yet have the right words for what we are doing when we “hack writing” and remix our words, but it is through the “doing” that we can come to better understand the possibilities of what’s ahead of us.

The words will follow …

Sheri created this prezi exploration of “hack” that is worth ending with:

Peace (in the meander),
Kevin

 

7 Comments
  1. Pretty gnarly work summing a week of this work, but you did it. Grand job. Can’t say enough good stuff about this. Make sure this goes over to Digital.Is.

    I came to several conclusions about hacking this week that have almost nothing to do with writing but everything to do with power and process.

    Hacking is both anabolic and catabolic, black hat and white hat. We acknowledge the one but discourage the other, but they both derive their strength from a single source–the need for power and personal agency. And because learning is about power I think we need to not only teach the use of hacking layers like X-Ray Goggles but we need to acknowledge the need that makes tools like that feel so good. X-Ray Goggles amounts to defacing another’s site, Zeegas amount to theft without attribution, animated gifs…well what exactly are they but plagiarizing the commons.

    As writers we owe it to ourselves to empower our readers and part of that is ’embracing the suck’ that we so cavalierly call the dark side. We need to acknowledge that hacking often is quite beyond being ‘a little subversive’ and that if we do empower our learners much as we do our readers, then chaos might be the result. And that won’t work in most of our schools without a wink and a nod from Caesar.

    For some reason I don’t feel obliged to end in a happy light. I am however glad that you do. And grateful that you have done so. But…our tools are what they are. Saying they aren’t, saying that this is just the ‘natural evolution” of language–not buying it this time. Imprecision corrupts, absolute imprecision corrupts absolutely.

  2. “Always two there are, no more, no less: a master and an apprentice.” ~ Yoda

    To Terry, I am still learning from you, the master.

    To Kevin, What ‘bubbled up’ for me were the same concepts you mention: Agency of the writer/composer, Lens of the reader, Word choice/Image choice/Video choice, Ownership of content.

    Always two there are, no more, no less: a purpose and an audience. And that will determine the intention of the hack, or whichever word we use.

    Great reflection on our work this week, with additions to the discussion — Hack for Change. Thank you.

  3. Terry, your description of “hacking” as an effort by a community to “solve the problem, collectively, and move the entire technology movement forward” fits with my own efforts to bring people together to innovate systems of support for youth living in high poverty areas.

  4. Looking back on my comment above I think it might have been more appropriate on my own blog instead of here. Apologies all around.

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