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I was hoping the Turtle speed learning would be more about reflection and making sense of it all. Sometimes the turbo charged learning seems a little out of control: lots of new ideas but maybe short on consolidation and coherence. I often feel that I have 3 dozen balls that I've thrown up into the air and now I have to run around and try to catch them all. If I had a drawing now, I might prefer a staircase to a spiral (or, maybe a spiral staircase) but with ample treads for each step so we can comfortably support ourselves on something that feels solid before reaching for the next step. Maybe Christine Martell can draw this.

I like these diagrams Michelle, and the mental image of the turtle made me chuckle a bit. Is the next problem we need to face at the turbo-charged level, the "burn-out", how to manage more efficiently the flood of information coming past us, so we don't suffer from old technology/new technology overload? It can be an amazing stream of stuff - emails, RSS feeds, blog alerts. How do we sift through it in a meaningful fashion, sort the wheat from the chaff as it were, and respond actively to the exciting new ideas?
On my blog I've been over at the Economist.com debate today about whether/if/will social networks make an important contribution to education. On first view, the question really seems a no-brainer, but perhaps we should ask ourselves if it is here to stay, or just until the next new thing comes along?

What about a tree image.....with roots and branches?

Betsy--I hear you on the reflection piece and I probably should have spent more time on that. I actually agree with you that there's a huge need for reflection, which is one of the reasons I blog. I think that blogging actually makes it easier in a way to reflect because you can so easily incorporate and synthesize all of the stuff you're reading into blog posts--much easier than doing that offline. I do think that it goes back to having the habits of learning and then how social media can help propel those learning habits forward.

Related to that, Kerrie, I think you're right that part of the challenge is then figuring out how to somehow control that flow of information coming in to you. I think that with things like AIDE RSS( http://www.aiderss.com/ ) and having feeds to your network's del.icio.us tags you can start to get a better handle on that, but it's still a constant challenge.

A tree . . . that's a thought, Christine--could help get at the idea that there are foundational skills/tools and then you can branch out in different directions.

In the classic How To Read a Book, one learns to read actively. For me, blogging started out as a way to process and remember the books on parenting and education that I'm constantly consuming (and forgetting.)Slowly, I'm building a community and this adds a rich dimension to our understanding of the subject.

Thank you for giving me some insight into the wired learning process.

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