티스토리 수익 글 보기
Blog-a-thon Sensemaking
BLOG-A-THON live capture by Visual Thinkery
It’s a BLOG-A-THON…
What is a blog-a-thon? And can we make sense of it on one page?
That was the challenge that presented itself at this week’s ReclaimOpen online conference. I hadn’t quite appreciated the format until it started to unfold before my eyes – but essentially, a blog post was syndicated via the conference site every hour, with a chat available for people to comment alongside the post. This was interesting for a number of reasons. As it was an online conference, people were in all the timezones. This meant that I could come back the following morning and have a look at the posts that I missed. I could take my time, skim over some, re-read others, jump down a rabbit hole… This felt like the web that was when speeds were slow and we weren’t in the rush to make or consume content like we are today.
The blogs were all on a loose theme of rewilding the open web and I’d already created artwork for the conference having absorbed some dialogue from the organising team. I tried to capture a landscape of the blogs as they appeared, attempting to take each title, and from the blog post get a steer on what I should draw.
This was a different sense-making challenge – like making a patchwork quilt of meaning from random squares of written thought…
Combobulating the Wild by Visual Thinkery for Combobulating in the #WildDS106 by Sarah Honeychurch et al.
Montaigne and the open web by Visual Thinkery for Things change (or, Montaigne and the Open Web) by Doug Belshaw
My website is a junk drawer by Visual Thinkery for My website is a junk drawer by Laura Hilliger
Blogging as a superpower by Visual Thinkery for Blogging as a professional practice superpower by Maren Deepwell
Bozos on the bus by Visual Thinkery for I Think We’re All Bozos on This Bus by Mark Corbett Wilson
Designing student build teams by Visual Thinkery for Designing student build teams by Pete Rorabaugh
Lessons from rewilding landscapes by Visual Thinkery for Lessons from Rewilding Landscapes… in the Wild by Alan Levine
We’re not computers, Sebastian by Visual Thinkery for We’re not computers, Sebastian, we’re physical by Jim Groom
Open web zines by Visual Thinkery for Open Web Zines by Pilot Irwin
A backwoods CMS adventure by Visual Thinkery for A backwoods CMS adventure by Taylor Jadin
Take back your privacy by Visual Thinkery for Take Back Your Privacy by Chris Blankenship
Read next
Here are some other projects you might be interested in.
AI and the Future of Education (webinar)
AI and the Future of Education (webinar)
I had the pleasure of live cartooning a webinar on AI and the future of education. facilitated by Doug Belshaw and Laura Hilliger of WeAreOpen Coop. They were joined by fellow thinkers Helen Beetham, Bryan Alexander, Ian O’Byrne and Karen Louise Smith.
The conversation was harvested in real time, using the hybrid approach of capturing ideas on paper during the webinar, and then developing them further afterwards on an iPad.
Some ideas came from the panelists directly, whilst others originated from the chat.
You can use these illustrations under a CC-BY-ND licence. 🙂
Rear View Mirror by Visual Thinkery
Ethically engaging by Visual Thinkery
The AI Cognitive Amplifier by Visual Thinkery
Behind the scenes of AI by Visual Thinkery
Distinctively Human by Visual Thinkery
Cognitive Development by Visual Thinkery
Safe Spaces and Walled Gardens by Visual Thinkery
An Educators Repository of Ethical Statements by Visual Thinkery
Read next
Here are some other projects you might be interested in.
Visually recording a conversation
Visually recording a conversation
Most of what I create has its roots in conversation.
Open conversation sits at the heart of Visual Thinkery’s “10 ideas” process. Usually I’m able to record it and then go back through and visually harvest the conversation for visual ideas. However, I employ the same tricks when capturing live conversation in a sketchnote. Drawing anything can seem like a conjuring trick – and there’s definitely something to be said for that magical feel. I take a messy conversation as it wisps through the air and I lay it out in a visual landscape for others to wonder at, both during and after the event. An artefact is created from a unique set of people and their thoughts at a single point in time.
Watching it unfold
Both online and in-person, it’s possible to display what is being captured in real time. But displaying the visualisation of a conversation as it’s being conjured changes the nature of that conversation. People can point to where a previous part of the conversation left off – and add their penny’s worth. Have you been in a meeting where you realise you have a great bit of insight, but the conversation has moved on? Having a visual map allows you to go back, insert a piece in the emerging puzzle and jump back to where the conversation is. It can be a really useful feature when capturing a conversation of a large group.
There are a lot of knobs to twiddle when thinking about visually recording a conversational event. Some of which might be fixed depending on the intended output whilst others may be flexible.
Here are a few things to consider:
Setting – Where are people? Does the technology enable everyone to have an equitable input to the conversation?
Voices – How may people will their be? What does this mean for the quality of the conversation?
Openness – How open is the conversation? Will it be a one-way monologue (like a keynote address)? or sequential monologue (like a webinar)? or multi-way dialogue?
Facilitation – How guided with the conversation be? Is there time and persmission to explore tributaries and cul-de-sacs?
Structure – Is there a certain bunch of material that we need to step through? Or certain themes and topics that need to be covered?
Context – How much context do I need in order find meaning in the conversation (or even facilitate it). Can I play the curious idiot or do I need a PhD?
Audience – Who are we ultimately creating for? An internal or external audience?
Form – Where is the priority: to create something pretty? or create something meaningful?
Granularity – Are we trying to capture all the things? Or should we focus on a nugget if come across it?
Humour – a cartoonist’s greatest weapon – how will the conversation encourage the possibility of humour?
Here are a few examples
Facilitated conversation between a group of social activists about what they have in common.
Setting: offline Voices: some Openness: dialogue Audience: Internal Form:ideas
Panel discussion at all day event.
Setting: offline Voices: a few Openness: sequential monologue Audience: external Form: art
Keynote at OER24 conference on Open Education (Cork, Ireland)
Setting: Theatre Voices: one Openness: monologue Audience: external Form: art
Keynote at OER24 conference on Open Education (Cork, Ireland)
Setting: Theatre Voices: one Openness: monologue Audience: external Form: art
Internal Project Brainstorming conversation
Setting: online Voices: a few Openness: dialogue Audience: internal Form: ideas
If you’d like to talk more – please get in touch!
Read next
Here are some other projects you might be interested in.



































