
On Tuesday morning I went to vote in Holland, Michigan. There the first person I met at the polls was checking picture identification under Michigan's new "suppress the vote" law.
But I saw a problem. The poll worker was checking the addresses on the IDs. This is not allowed. The ID is only to prove identity. And there might be many reasons why a person's ID might have an address different from their voting address. This is especially true in a voting precinct that includes many lower-income rental housing units.
So I said to this poll worker: "You are not supposed to be doing that." And I explained why. The response? "You should call the City Clerk." I wanted to just say, "Wrong again, pick up your phone and call, this should not be the voter's responsibility." And I might have muttered it. But I voted, then I went home. Then I called the City Clerk (who agreed that I was right, but didn't quite see much urgency), then I Twittered-The-Vote.
"#votereport 49423 Holland, MI ward 1 precinct 2 telling voters they must vote by affidavit if address on ID doesn't match reg address. Wrong" I Tweeted.
Then I got in my car and headed toward campus. Fifteen minutes later, as I was putting fuel in the car, an email arrived on my Blackberry. It was from a reporter at The Wall Street Journal, which - I need to make clear - seemed mighty unexpected. "Saw your vote report," the email said, "Please call me."
And then I was driving and discussing elections and technology with a writer at one of the world's premier newspapers (I'll admit that no matter how much I disagree with their political views).
And this morning, his report is in The Wall Street Journal.
This is incredible. An obscure voter in an obscure corner of the United States now can make a problem with democracy massively public in a heartbeat. That changes the power structure. That changes our ideas of control of media. In fact - as the power of SMS in many budding democracies has shown - as the power of Barack Obama's new media efforts have shown - that changes lives in huge ways.
And that changes what our students must learn regarding communication.
I've said here before that if you are a traditionally empowered person: wealthy, white, Protestant, English-speaking, "Traditionally-abled," understanding the power of these new media technologies may not be that essential. But if you are the kind of student we typically discuss on this site, the ability to leverage these new technologies will often make the difference between life success and life disaster. This is true at critical moments - elections, confrontations with police, battles for rights in education. And it is true in everyday life - communicating with teachers, employers, and their peers.
If you are not teaching these technologies, you are damaging your students' opportunities for success. Because if you are not teaching the tools of power, you are condemning your students to powerlessness.
- Ira Socol
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
New Media, New Democracy: Power to the Unempowered
Kategori
new technology,
SMS,
Twitter,
UDL,
universal design
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular posts
-
There are two big things going on in the world this week, one fifty years old, one absolutely current, which should keep your students talki...
-
Procter&Gamble has the tagline very wrong, but their Olympics ads explain what is crucially wrong with the argument espoused by those w...
-
It's nice out, and I'm tired of being inside and being angry. The philosophy of education can make my head hurt. And so can the low ...
-
What is "rain"? Is it a word? an idea? a bit of science? something to drink? the thought of being cold? food for crops? For me, fi...
-
A New York Times Op-Ed piece got me thinking this morning... So I began with this quote from one of the great bits of American literature:...
-
Is it the greatest novel written in English? That's open to debate, of course, but there is no doubt that James Joyce 's Ulysses is...
-
" On Christmas Eve 1806, two decades after [ St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church in New York City ] was built, the building was surro...
-
Christmas Shopping, Part 1 Suppose you can spend a bit more than the "under $40 (or free)" gifts I suggested in the first Holiday ...
-
part one part two afterthought Bill Gates is one of the most influential people in American education, by virtue of the way ...
-
I ended up in two big educational debates this past week. One was about "clickers" - those "Classroom Response Systems" ...
No comments:
Post a Comment