Dan Hickey and Rebecca Itow
On Thursday, June
7, 2012, the Center for Research on Learning and Technology at Indiana
University in conjunction with the Monroe County Public Library (MCPL) in Bloomington, IN put on
a Hackjam for resident youth. The six hour
event was a huge success. Students were excited and engaged throughout the day
as they used Hackasaurus’ web editing tool X-Ray
Goggles to
“hack” Bloomington’s Herald Times. The hackers learned some HTML
& CSS, developed some web literacies, and learned about writing in
different new media contexts. We did some cool new stuff that we think others
will find useful and interesting. We are going to summarize what we did in this
post. We will elaborate on some of these features in subsequent posts, and try
to keep this one short and readable.
WHY
DID WE DO A HACKJAM?
We agreed to do a
Hackjam with the library many months ago. MCPL Director Sara Laughlin had
contacted us in 2011 about partnering with them on a MacArthur/IMLS proposal to bring some of Nicole
Pinkard’s YouMedia programming to
Bloomington. We concluded that a more modest collaboration (like a Hackjam) was
needed to lay the groundwork for something as ambitious as YouMedia.
Our ideas for
extending Mozilla’s existing Hacktivity
Kit were first drafted in a proposal to the MacArthur Foundation’s Badges for Lifelong Learning initiative.
Hackasaurus promised to be a good context to continue our efforts to combine
badges and participatory assessment methods. While our proposal was not funded,
we decided to do it anyways. MCPL initially considered making the Hackjam part
of the summer reading program sponsored by the local school system. Even though
we were planning to remix the curriculum to make it more “school friendly,” some
school officials could not get past the term “hacking.”