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This post is for Week Two of #rhizo15.

Typing Hands Type What They Can

Over the last week I’ve effectively been teaching myself Zurb’s Foundation website framework as part of using it to make a prototype website for an information architecture course. Participating in #rhizo15 has primed me to really notice how the process mixes aspects of playful discovery with more structured “learning” outcomes.

If I were to measure this as a learning process, I could count:

More interestingly, and to address this week’s question of “What can we count that isn’t learning?” I could count:

This list hews close to learning, but nevertheless feels as though it remains just adjacent to what we normally conceive of as “learning” when we focus on outcomes rather than processes. I wonder whether one might discuss zones of proximal affective engagement in addition to zones of proximal development? Enumerating the things in that zone would be a strange approach—but one that might let us dance just enough of that ‘ol defamiliarization/distantiation rag to truly consider affect and learning in new ways.

Affect isn’t quite countable, as it’s not discrete. It rapidly varies in intensity and mutates into inarticulable mutants of frustration, delight, and anticipation. This is something that we know as educators attentive to pedagogy, but it would be fascinating to find new ways to capture this process. Although this capture is not quite “counting,” it feels something other than the negative space around what is countable. Learning, affect, countable and non-count aspects all seem to flow through each other when we examine closely enough.

…An Extended Aside on Git and Open Humanities Notebooks

Git is version tracking software that allows users to annotate, compare differences, or roll back any changes that they save in text documents. It’s primarily used for software development, but as the Chronicle of Higher Education’s ProfHacker series on GitHub attests, Git and GitHub have a lot of potential for humanities and other forms of writing. For instance, if you were the curious type, you could see how many times I’ve edited this post after it went live. Typos are pesky and thoughts don’t stop arriving just because you’ve press a button.

Franny Gaede started an excellent Twitter discussion on “what a lab notebook for the humanities would look like”:

I’m still super interested in what a lab notebook for the humanities would look like… what tools could we build or adapt? #arcs20105

— Franny Gaede (@mfgaede) April 27, 2015

…which led John Russell to share an illuminating post on open humanities notebooks, particularly history notebooks, by W. Caleb McDaniel.

@foureyedsoul @mfgaede @wcaleb writes about this very thing for history: http://t.co/tPfUgvfMKQ

— John Russell (@uohistlib) April 27, 2015

Although W. Caleb McDaniel doesn’t discuss Git’s potential in explicitly rhizomatic terms, his post makes clear many of the ways that Git helps document the messy process of assembling thoughts, evidence, discoveries, language, guiding questions, argumentative writing, and the other things that go into and get edited out of humanities writing.

I’m going on this extended aside on Git, GitHub, and open notebooks in part just to document what I’m learning at the moment and in part to tie this post back to my #rhizo15 post from last week, in which I mentioned that one of my learning subjectives for the course would be to share things a little before they’re ready. By directing people to Git, I’m highlighting the actual process of learning. I could then annotate it with all the subjective, affective, experiential, etc. aspects of the process adjacent to learning as I’d like and language allows.