The Common Loon

This weblog about facilitating lifelong learning in a digital age is maintained by Shanta Rohse. I created it to support a graduate independent study course I am taking at Athabasca University's Centre for Distance Education in Winter 2005. You can find out more about me from my personal web site.







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A Pattern Language Engaging Minds

Communities of Practice by Etienne Wenger The Ingenuity Gap by Thomas Homer-Dixon

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~ an application of the Tag It! pattern: recently tagged websites via del.icio.us ~

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~ an application of the Extract It! pattern: a real time boolean search via PubSub ~

Why the loon?

It's from an old reading blanket that's incubated many a lifelong learning project.

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Thursday, 31 March 2005
Triangulate **

You want to assess the claims of a particular point of view before relying on it.

***

The sheer volume of online information makes it easy to collect alternative, and even opposing points of view. Such views are vital to the growth and survival of any knowledge domain, but it is necessary to evaluate the veracity of these claims.

Poorly conceived claims can detract from careful consideration of alternative opinions.

***

Therefore, triangulate in other sources – that is, compare the new claims against other independent documents that either support or refute a claim.

The physical difficulty of reading online text online, and of following arguments across various screens, and the ease with which you can click the next link to escape such frustrations will tempt you to give superficial consideration to these claims.

Triangulation is a time-tested technique for assessing the veracity of a claim in the offline world of books and articles.

Make notes in the margins, highlight text, underline salient points, and fold down corners or otherwise bookmark a page are efforts that support more thoughtful attention to a perspective.

***

Triangulation is a trigonometry application in which you find an unknown position or location using two fixed points a known distance apart.

Britt and Gabrys (2001 cited in Candy, 2004) note that ‘corroboration’ has three further uses beyond triangulation: to identify commonly agreed upon perspectives, to locate unique information not included in the source, and to identify information sources that omit important generally greed upon perspectives. This suggests the potential for a cluster of related patterns.

Note: Also see Checklists for Quality.

see pattern map

posted by: Shanta at 08:09 | link | comments
design, lifelong, learning, patterns

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