On the influence of context and culture on the design and development of adaptive and adaptable information systems...

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

History. Bi-laterally. Globally?

Today I was participating in a seminar on history teaching materials: http://www.narc.fi/Arkistolaitos/ajankohtaista/tiedotteet/eurhistoria_jky.html
History? Books? This does not fit into this blog? Well, judge yourself...
Colleagues from Germany and France have actually developed the first bi-lateral history book on the 20th century - you can imagine what kind of effort this is...well, I couldnt imagine before how hard it is to write on issues which seem to be rather clear - but there is the national culture, didactic traditions, and most of all different viewpoints...anyway, the event was in Jyväskylä, organized by Finland National Archive, joined by the German and French ambassadors - after the impressive presentations of amazingly engaged people on how different research and teaching is done in the countries involved and the presentation of the even more impressive outcome, I had the chance to fantasize a bit on the future...a summary?
1. Take a really unique book and its digital version
2. Consider to open it up to relevant communities
3. Imagine what could happen now...Finnish colleagues writing about their view on WW2 history, Spanish colleagues providing input on the times between the wars, Russian students commenting on the way of presentation, German teachers showing how the resource works in a German school with a given curriculum, researchers discussing controversially on European history teaching...how many different types of valuable resources could we get in a very short time???
4. Gather and cluster all those issues...isnt it amazing what could come out when you really gather all the related materials?
5. And then imagine the outcome...maybe not a book - but a load of materials from all over Europe ready to be taken and used...great stuff to understand European history!

Well, maybe I should not fantasize about it too much, but it is just such a wonderful example what we could do when collaborating across borders - and utilizing the power of openness...

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