Our children are connecting outside the school walls, using technologies that most adults are just getting used to and that most schools have not implemented. Today’s kids flock to Facebook, send hundreds of text messages a day from their cell phones, and stay ubiquitously linked to their friends in ways many adults have little context for. Research is showing that their interactions in these social networks are a different yet important part of their development, shaping the way they think and see the worldLearning networks according to Richardson and Mancabelli are "a rich set of connections each of us can make to people in both our online and offline worlds who can help us with our learning pursuits." (p. 21).These learning networks have become the norm in knowledge dissemination and exchange of expertise. Their importance is well documented in several studies and here are some examples the authors advance in support of the centrality of PLNs in today's education:
Ito et al., (2008). (p. 6)
- 'Online learning networks allow us to create our own global classrooms and collect teachers and other learners around the topics we want to learn about.
- They allow us to self-direct our learning in exciting new ways, ways in which schools are going to find it increasingly hard to compete with.
- As authors Tony Bingham and Marcia Conner (2010) assert, networks “provide people at every level, in every nook of the organization and every corner of the globe, a way to reclaim their natural capacity to learn non-stop” (Kindle location, 319, cited in Richardson and Mancabelli, 2011, p. 22).