MACARTHUR ANNOUNCES $2 MILLION NEW DIGITAL MEDIA AND LEARNING COMPETITION
CHICAGO, IL, August, 14, 2007 – The John D.
and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced today a public
competition that will award $2 million in funding to emerging leaders,
communicators, and innovators shaping the field of digital media and
learning. The competition is part of MacArthur’s $50 million Digital
Media and Learning initiative that aims to help determine how digital
technologies are changing the way young people learn, play, socialize,
and participate in civic life.
“An open competition is an
excellent way to identify and hopefully inspire new ideas about
learning in an increasingly digital world,” MacArthur Foundation
President Jonathan Fanton said. “We do not yet know how much people
are changing because of digital media, but we hope that this
competition will help support the most innovative thinking about
learning, the formation of ethical judgments, peer mentoring,
creativity, and civic participation, all of which are increasingly
conducted online.”
Awards will be given in two categories:
Innovation Awards
will support learning pioneers, entrepreneurs, and builders of new
digital learning environments for formal and informal learning. These
innovations might range from a teacher add-on for MySpace that allows
for safe assigning of a class group discussion, to a platform
co-developed by teachers and students to facilitate digital literacy
and peer-mentoring between college students and high-school drop-outs
earning their GED degrees, to a digital learning festival for the
leaders of a worldwide youth environmental campaign.
Knowledge Networking Awards
will support communicators in connecting, mobilizing, circulating or
translating new ideas around digital media and learning. For example,
a team of teacher bloggers who already reach hundreds of thousands of
readers may now seek to provide multimedia coverage and translation of
MIT Professor Henry Jenkins’ recent white paper on media literacy.
The
open competition will be administered by a network of educators and
digital innovators called “HASTAC” (the Humanities, Arts, Science and
Technology Advanced Collaboratory). HASTAC was founded and is
primarily operated at two university centers, the University of
California Humanities Research Institute and the John Hope Franklin
Center at Duke University. HASTAC has a network reaching more than 80
institutions globally. The choice of HASTAC, one of a new breed of
“virtual institutions,” reflects MacArthur’s goals in promoting
next-generation learning.
“We are already teaching a
generation of students who do not remember a time before they were
online,” said Cathy N. Davidson, John Hope Franklin Humanities
Institute Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at Duke University and
co-founder of HASTAC. “Their social life and informal learning are
interconnected. They don’t just consume media, they customize it.
These students bring fascinating new skills to our classrooms, but they
also bring an urgent need for critical thinking about the digital world
they have inherited and are shaping.”
As part of their
prize, awardees will receive special consultation support on everything
from technology development to management training. Winners will be
invited to showcase their work at a conference that will include
venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, educators and policy makers seeking
the best ideas about digital learning. Applications are due Oct. 15,
2007, and prizewinners will be announced in January. Detailed
information on the competition is available online at
www.dmlcompetition.net.
“With the digital media and
learning initiative, the MacArthur Foundation is playing a leading role
in reshaping both institutional and informal learning practices,” said
David Theo Goldberg, HASTAC co-founder and director of the University
of California’s Humanities Research Institute. “Traditional learning
practices are being supplemented and supplanted by new digital media,
which both enable and extend their reach through virtual institutions
like HASTAC. This is a natural partnership.”
This HASTAC
competition is supported by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation to the University of California, in collaboration
with Duke University. The University of California Humanities Research
Institute and Duke University's John Hope Franklin Center are the
principal administering bodies for this grant on behalf of HASTAC.
###
About the MacArthur Foundation
The
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is a private, independent
grant making institution dedicated to helping groups and individuals
foster lasting improvement in the human condition. More information is
available at www.macfound.org or www.digitallearning.macfound.org.
About HASTAC
A
consortium of humanists, artists, scientists, social scientists and
engineers from universities and other civic institutions across the
U.S. and internationally, HASTAC is committed to new forms of
collaboration for thinking, teaching, and research across communities
and disciplines fostered by creative uses of technology. More
information is available at www.hastac.org.
CHICAGO, IL, August, 14, 2007 – The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced today a public competition that will award $2 million in funding to emerging leaders, communicators, and innovators shaping the field of digital media and learning. The competition is part of MacArthur’s $50 million Digital Media and Learning initiative that aims to help determine how digital technologies are changing the way young people learn, play, socialize, and participate in civic life.
“An open competition is an excellent way to identify and hopefully inspire new ideas about learning in an increasingly digital world,” MacArthur Foundation President Jonathan Fanton said. “We do not yet know how much people are changing because of digital media, but we hope that this competition will help support the most innovative thinking about learning, the formation of ethical judgments, peer mentoring, creativity, and civic participation, all of which are increasingly conducted online.”
Awards will be given in two categories:
The open competition will be administered by a network of educators and digital innovators called “HASTAC” (the Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Advanced Collaboratory). HASTAC was founded and is primarily operated at two university centers, the University of California Humanities Research Institute and the John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University. HASTAC has a network reaching more than 80 institutions globally. The choice of HASTAC, one of a new breed of “virtual institutions,” reflects MacArthur’s goals in promoting next-generation learning.
“We are already teaching a generation of students who do not remember a time before they were online,” said Cathy N. Davidson, John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at Duke University and co-founder of HASTAC. “Their social life and informal learning are interconnected. They don’t just consume media, they customize it. These students bring fascinating new skills to our classrooms, but they also bring an urgent need for critical thinking about the digital world they have inherited and are shaping.”
As part of their prize, awardees will receive special consultation support on everything from technology development to management training. Winners will be invited to showcase their work at a conference that will include venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, educators and policy makers seeking the best ideas about digital learning. Applications are due Oct. 15, 2007, and prizewinners will be announced in January. Detailed information on the competition is available online at www.dmlcompetition.net.
“With the digital media and learning initiative, the MacArthur Foundation is playing a leading role in reshaping both institutional and informal learning practices,” said David Theo Goldberg, HASTAC co-founder and director of the University of California’s Humanities Research Institute. “Traditional learning practices are being supplemented and supplanted by new digital media, which both enable and extend their reach through virtual institutions like HASTAC. This is a natural partnership.”
This HASTAC competition is supported by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to the University of California, in collaboration with Duke University. The University of California Humanities Research Institute and Duke University's John Hope Franklin Center are the principal administering bodies for this grant on behalf of HASTAC.
###
About the MacArthur Foundation
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is a private, independent grant making institution dedicated to helping groups and individuals foster lasting improvement in the human condition. More information is available at www.macfound.org or www.digitallearning.macfound.org.
About HASTAC
A consortium of humanists, artists, scientists, social scientists and engineers from universities and other civic institutions across the U.S. and internationally, HASTAC is committed to new forms of collaboration for thinking, teaching, and research across communities and disciplines fostered by creative uses of technology. More information is available at www.hastac.org.