The Sprout Fund receives $500,000 grant from MacArthur Foundation to launch Hive Pittsburgh

Reposted from the Sprout Funds Remake Learning blog

Written by Barbara Ray on February 8, 2013

Pittsburgh Hive Learning Network /

 

Pittsburgh was asked to join New York and Chicago in becoming only the third Hive Learning Network in the nation.

With a $500,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Pittsburgh’s many youth-serving organizations, school districts, mentors and educators are coming together in a coordinated way to create a seamless set of learning opportunities across the city for kids and teens.

Teens are returning to libraries to use new digital media tools in The Labs @ CLP , learning webmaking, and media literacy at Pittsburgh Hack Jam. At Makeshop, kids and adults are making things together. The Oglebay Institute is creating arts-based science education that integrates left and right-brain thinking. The Pittsburgh Youth Media is turning aspiring storytellers into cub reporters, while at Hip Hop on L.O.C.K., teens are taking a spin at music making while also developing leadership skills. And under the Hive, all these efforts will be connected and integrated so tweens and teens can use the city as a big game board for learning.

Hive Learning Networks advance the principles of Connected Learning, a framework for linking young people’s academic achievement, peer social networks, and personal interests so that they can learn “anytime, anywhere.”

The support of the MacArthur Foundation will enable Pittsburgh to develop a model for learning that expands the boundaries of learning beyond the single institution of the school and incorporates other important community institutions like museums, libraries, afterschool programs, and community centers. The first Hive was launched in New York City in 2007, followed by Chicago in 2009.

“The Pittsburgh region is a leader in rethinking learning to prepare young people for the challenges and opportunities of the digital era, and just the right location for the third Hive Learning Network.” said Connie Yowell, Director of Education at the MacArthur Foundation.

“We have long-standing relationships with some of Pittsburgh’s most renowned institutions, but our investment in the Sprout Fund represents a much broader partnership with the many organizations working together on a new vision for learning.”

The Sprout Fund, a Pittsburgh-based nonprofit organization, will administer the Hive Learning Network and make grants to spur new connected learning projects and programs for tweens, teens, and young adults in the greater Pittsburgh region.

“This is a tremendous opportunity for our region,” said Cathy Lewis Long, Executive Director of The Sprout Fund. “Launching a Hive Learning Network in Pittsburgh will help us provide even more remarkable learning experiences for youth in our region.”

A Late Valentine Gift: The Learning Labs Pop-Up at NYSCI

I spent Saturday representing Hive NYC and Mozilla Webmaker at the New York Hall of Science’s Learning Lab Pop-Up and it was wonderfully surreal at times. I spent five transformative years at NYSCI. I worked on some incredible projects, sharpened many of my ideas about digital tools in education and worked with a plethora of talented, warm and dedicated people.

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In Hive, we talk about networked learning constantly. At times it can seem ephemeral and elusive, but at NYSCI I experienced a heady and visceral example of how it works on the ground. I experienced the network both from an individual view (cross-pollination of jobs, people and ideas) and how it works beyond individuals (diffusion of ideas, pathways for people and expanded participation).

Let me see if I can map this a bit. The event was part of NYSCI’s IMLS Learning Labs Grant. The Learning Lab idea is an attempt to spread the YOUmedia idea and practice. Here alone we see a network: Ideas and programs funded and championed by MacArthur’s Digital Media and Learning and including thought leaders like Mimi Ito (Hanging Out, Messing Around and Geeking Out), Nichole Pinkard (Digital Youth Network/YOUmedia) that have now manifested in two Hive NYC organizations (DreamYard YOUmedia, NYSCI) and inspiring others (Brooklyn Public Library’s Info Commons Space).

The event format, the “Learning Party” or “Pop-UP” was remixed by NYSCI from the model that Hive NYC and Mozilla have developed. The model is inspired in part by the professional hack jams and the informal learning practices Hive embodies. It wasn’t lost on me that we basically used the same space and staff that Jess Klein and I did when we collaborated on an early iteration of this model for the NYSCI/Hive Earth Day Hack Jam three years ago. Add to that the NYSCI team leveraging Hive NYC members and friends like World Up, Pixel Academy and Scratch, and it felt exactly what the Pop-Ups are supposed to feel like: A Hive Learning Network experience compressed into one physical space and a set amount of time that then feeds learning experiences back into the ecosystem.

All of this was housed in NYSCI’s new Maker Space which itself is a manifestation of a web of opportunities and energy, like being the east coast host/driver of World Maker Faire (of which Hive NYC has participated each year) and NYSCI’s commitment to a Making as Learning ethos.

The Maker Space itself is incredible and embraces a wide definition of making that feels deeply participatory. It also sits squarely on their exhibition floor, not separated or siloed from other experiences people are having in the science center (in this case a very cool, youth culture/interest-focused Tony Hawk Rad Science of skateboarding exhibition, you should definitely go and see it.)

The NYSCI Maker Space Buzzing

The NYSCI Maker Space Buzzing

One place where Hive NYC has not been as successful as we had hoped, is in charting network provided pathways for youth to navigate and grow from experience to experience. Ideally these pathways are both self directed by youth and guided along the way by educators, mentors, teachers, organizations and parents. Saturday I saw an example of how these pathways are beginning to emerge and be represented by connected youth. Three teens who were involved in the Pop-Up were all Hive NYC Super Users! We need to surface and nurture more stories like these:

Ben learned about the event because he follows our various communication channels. Ben is a member of Rev—’s Pop Squad, and came with us to help Hive NYC be awesome at MozFest 2012. He jumped right in to help me facilitate Popcorn Maker mentoring at the Pop-Up. He even wrote about his experiences that day on the Maker Space blog.

Valeria, a long time NYSCI Explainer (I met her for the first time when she was 12 and was in our NYSCI podcasting after-school program) and lives in the local Corona, Queens community NYSCI sits. She was also on the first Hive NYC youth council which gave Hive our name (now a global brand), and on the planning committee for the third Emoti-Con Festival.

Sharon has participated in Hive NYC organization programs at Girls Write Now, Eyebeam, and Global Kids while also being on two youth councils, volunteered for Hive at Maker Faire, was our first Huffington Post Teen blogger and has done other youth reporting assignments for Hive NYC. She is now a Freshman at Columbia University and works at NYSCI on their awesome Explainer TV program.

Valeria, Ben and Sharon, Hive NYC Super Users!

Valeria, Ben and Sharon, Hive NYC Super Users!

The event was Connected Learning in action. The various activity stations were all programmed with themes that interest teens: hacking, music, games, making, viral videos, animation and all without a predetermined “path” or dictated way to choose which experiences to do. Some floated and then settled, some made a point of experiencing each station, and some like Philip, stayed at one station deep diving on “popping” an upcoming video game release video for almost four hours using Popcorn Maker.

Philip is popping some corn!

Philip is popping some corn!

There was hang-out spaces that were comfortable and inviting. There was pizza, drinks and music. It was fun. Socializing ruled the afternoon, friends and siblings came together, new relationships were built (“I am in Manhattan but can use the subway, can we exchange Facebook pages so we can hangout?”) and it was truly a party.

The room was stocked with multi-generational adults from college-age mentors to informal educators to teachers and parents. Some of these were helping to run the Pop-Up and some were participants. I talked and interacted with public school teachers, parent volunteers, researchers, after-school community leaders, informal educators, makers and young adult mentors. It was the most visceral example of the Connected Learning Principles and the Mozilla Mentor Community that I have experienced recently.

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So let me wind this up by saying that I am sure all of us experience confusion and doubt as we embark on this work. Are we making a difference? Are we talking and championing the right ideas and strategies? How do we stop talking about it and start doing it? By Friday afternoon I was sort of in a mini-existential crisis mode about all of this (aren’t we all by Friday at 6:15 PM?) and the NYSCI Learning Lab Pop-Up was just the bucket of cold water my soul needed to pick myself up and get back into the fight. So thank you Learning Labs Pop-Up for my late Valentine gift!

A Hivesque Network of Educators

This is re-posted from Mozillian Laura Hilliger‘s blog, Zythepsary. You can also follow her on Twitter @epilepticrabbit.

This past week Doug and I attended the European Children’s Universities Network‘s conference (co-hosted with SIS Catalyst) #Technucation. Children’s universities, museums, YMCAs and other youth focused groups and organizations make up the very Hivesque EUCU network.

This is a network of over a hundred different organizations all over the world. It’s called the European Children’s Universities Network, but I met educators from Colombia, the United States and Kenya as well. This network shares resources and playtests each other’s ideas. They share and collaborate and navigate the tricky waters of EU funding together. These people enhance children’s lives through engagement and experimentation. They run live events in organizations all over the place. In the serendipity and good fortune that lead the EUCU to the concept of Open Badges, they’ve now been introduced to a much broader concept that they would like to explore, the concept of Web Literacies (and by extension Webmaker).

Misconceptions run rampant in a community of educators that haven’t learned much about the web. I don’t mean that they haven’t learned about the importance of digital literacies in the education of their students. They know that ICT and the responsibilities surrounding its use form more than integral learning objectives for their classrooms. But what they didn’t know is that making the web isn’t as hard as they think it is (in fact, it’s easy). They weren’t entirely aware of the wider implications that surround the open source community. They didn’t know that writing the web is just as important as reading and thinking critically about the web’s content. They are struggling with a variety of questions that they don’t have to struggle with. We, the technologists and educators that make up the Mozilla community, can help them. They are eager and willing to learn. And we can learn from them as well, and we should. Webmaker is in a unique position to narrow the gap between the academic community and the tech community.

Doug and I ran a workshop on Sustainability of the EUCU through badges. And like any Mozilla workshop, we channeled Aspiration guru Gunner for a truly inspirational and participatory experience centered on the needs of the participants. We were so interested in helping the EUCU envision a badges ecosystem for their network, that we hacked our own agenda when we realized that we could help in outlining that ecosystem. We’d planned to introduce them to Webmaker in a more in-depth make session. Of course we introduced Webmaker, but we didn’t demo tools or even click through webmaker.org. We made badges, and I talked about the rest of Webmaker outside the workshop (incessantly over dinner and in combination with the Mozilla Mission, open web, why I love open source. Oh yeah, and how sexy Popcorn is.)

It was in those dinner conversations that I realized that even a seemingly traditional network of educators is looking for the collaborative support and expertise that a community like Mozilla has to offer. The only reason they aren’t busting down our doors is because they don’t know about us yet.

Half the people I talked to didn’t know the name “Mozilla” until I said “Firefox”. And even then, they understood Mozilla as a global tech company, not a non-profit fighting for the good of the web, not a global community of idealistic do-gooders, not people, real people working to spread web literacies and help educators level up their own tech skills.

But I didn’t have to convince anyone that Mozilla cares. I only had to tell the truth. I am Mozilla. We are Mozilla. You can be Mozilla too.

Here, have some Kool Aid.

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