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Revision as of 20:45, 19 May 2011
Civic Intelligence Research and Action Laboratory (CIRAL)
This page is a meta-table of contents that points to the ongoing work at Evergreen to understand and develop civic intelligence. The site is an archive of past program's studies in the field of civic intelligence as well as a collaborative space for students and other participants.
If you're new to wiki formatting and markup please look through the wiki editing resources below. Creating a personal profile in the profiles section is a good way to get your feet wet and for others to learn a little about you.
Civic Intelligence Examples
Civic Intelligence Enablers
The previous main page has been moved.
Civic Intelligence Open Text Book
Pattern Language Seeds and Suggestions
Anti Pattern Project
Anti Pattern Candidates
at the very least I'd like to see a list of anti pattern candidates here!
Anti Patterns Book (draft)
Student Task Clusters
New/Current Work
CIRAL Database
CIRAL FAQ
Reviews to Review
CIRAL on Facebook Check it out!
CIRAL Email Listserv: CIRAL@GoogleGroups.com
Spring 2013
Spring 2012
- Open Text Book Project FAQ
- Spring 2012 CIRAL Development Group Project
- Remarks in Reed, Purce, Schuler panel on citizen engagement
- Ciral 2.0
- The work of the Spring 2012 Student Think Tank
- Schematic of CIRAL processes
- Civic Intelligence Learning Modules
- Home Office Learning Modules
- Home Office - put your class feedback here!
- CIRAL Overview
- CIRAL Pattern Language
- CIRAL Handbook
- Objectives
- Current CIRAL Tasks
- Suggestion Box
- Who We Are
Evergreen Centers, Programs, and Contracts
- Winter 2012 — Civic Intelligence and Collective Action
- Fall 2011 — Patterns of Intelligence: Beyond the Individual
- Spring 2011 — Civic Intelligence: Theory and Practice
Civic Intelligence
- Workshops and Games
- Civic Intelligence Learning Modules
- Main Civic Intelligence Open Book Project page (this page is no longer the main page to the OTB project)
- Organizations and other efforts that address civic intelligence
- Films that address civic intelligence
- Civic Intelligence Glossary
- Notable People Associated With Civic Intelligence
Resources
- Wiki Editing
- Test Page - Try out text entry, formatting, images, etc., it won't matter if you mess up!
- Pattern Card Links
- Patterns
- Liberating Voices patterns (access to full pattern text)
Miscellaneous
We have tentatively identified several major areas in which civic intelligence plays — or could play — significant roles.
Our plan is to treat each of these chapters in basically the same way.
The basic Plan has four parts:
(1) A Introduction to the perspective
(2) One or more case studies that show different facets of this perspective. Our decision was, as much as it's possible, not to artificially separate thinking and doing. At the same time we do want to present a variety of approaches, some of which will be better suited for think-work and some will be better suited for action (that plays out in the "real" (or material?) world.
(3) Conclusions
(4) Finally, a section that includes text book like end-of-chapter exercises, questions for the student, suggested activities, etc.
Here is the proposed plan for the perspective chapters
Of course we also need to talk about content here!
Ultimately we can preview the case studies here.
We can also talk about why we decided to do things this way.
We need to talk about why we decided to focus on perspectives — and why we selected the perspectives we did. Generally we think they are all fairly broad and important ways of looking at the world. Did we leave any out?