Shirky’s
Cognitive Surplus
Heidi
Hopp
November
2011
Shirky
begins his examination of our abundance of free time by painting a picture of a
drunken city of London
in the 1720s. People were coming to the
city looking for work. The gin drinking
helped ease people and transition them from a rural to an urban industrial
society (Shirky, 2010, p. 1-2). He
further draws a parallel to what is happening in our society today. People are still getting “drunk,” but not by
alcohol. Instead, we have become
addicted to the technology available to us today, and we choose to spend a good
deal of our free time with technology. How
we spend our available free time in a way that is enjoyable to us is what becomes
known throughout Shirky’s book as “cognitive surplus.” What is our “gin” today? We have moved from sitcoms, to the Internet,
and to other forms of social media that are commonly found across homes,
schools, and businesses worldwide.
Why
are people spending more of their free time with social media tools? According to Shirky, we need to have means,
motive, and opportunity to do so. He
discusses each area in the next chapters of his book.
The
“means” are quite obvious and readily available. Shirky (2010) calls media “…the connective
tissue of society” (p. 54). People want
to reach out and communicate with each other.
They want to stay in touch with others and keep up with the latest news
and information. Whether it is via a
computer, an iPhone, an iPad, or an iPod, people want to participate and be
informed. You can find the Internet in
almost all homes and people viewing websites or checking emails daily. Anyone who wants to have their voice heard
can. According to Shirky (2010),
“Publishing used to be something we had to ask permission to do…” (p. 46). Now if you have something to share, you can
do it easily and cheaply.
The
“motive” to participate has a personal, intrinsic value. Humans have “…the desire to be autonomous (to
determine what we do and how we do it) and the desire to be competent (to be
good at what we do)” (Shirky, 2010, p. 75).
Deci’s Soma puzzle experiment proved that some of the participants
worked to figure out solutions to the puzzle just because they wanted to get
better at it and gain new skills, often working through their breaks (Shirky,
2010, p. 72). After reading this section
of the chapter, I wondered how we can instill that sense of intrinsic, inner
motivation in our students. Is this
something that can be taught in school, or is it something that should be
addressed mostly at home? Certainly it
is modeled at school, but I’m not convinced that the ideas carry through. I work with several students with behavior
issues who work for rewards and shopping.
Is this an effective motivator that changes and shapes their behavior
for the better? I’m not certain that I
could say one way or the other.
Social
motivations can be felt “…only when we are part of a group.” These motivations focus around “connectedness
or membership” as well as “sharing and generosity” (Shirky, 2010, p. 78). Sometimes we want to know that there is
another person out there in this world who is going through something similar
to what we are experiencing. It is
comforting to know that information, and it makes us feel better. Shirky (2010) describes Katherine Stone’s
observations about the website Meetup.com where women who are suffering from
postpartum depression can go online and share their experiences and realize
that there is support, there are other people like them, and there is hope that
they will overcome this and feel well again (p. 79).
"Opportunity" must be present as well
if we are to make sense and use of cognitive surplus. Shirky (2010) argues that opportunities need
to be “…communal; we must combine our surplus free time if it is to be useful,
and we can do that only when we’re given the right opportunities” (p. 97). The phrase, “Many hands make light the work.”
ran through my mind as I was reading this section of the chapter. Take for instance the million dollars the
Grobanites rose by pooling their efforts and resources together (Shirky, 2010,
p. 98). An individual or small group
effort would not have come close to what this large group did.
I
was fascinated with Shirky’s aspect on how generations differ. It was after this section that I said to
myself, “That’s it, that’s why I have noticed differences in my students and
even older family members.” Shirky
(2010) makes two valid points. First,
generations are different. Second, the
opportunities offered to generations differ (p. 121). It was at this point that I thought about my
grandma. She was always quick to say
things sure were different when she was growing up. Indeed they were. But what she didn’t take into consideration
were the opportunities presented to her.
They were different as well. She
didn’t use the Internet, iPad, or even a cell phone. But maybe she would have if these
opportunities had been made available to her while she was growing up. It was at this point in the book that I
realized that similar differences exist between my students and me. I grew up being primarily a consumer of
knowledge, not an active participant or an author. This may explain why I am a little more cautious
and guarded online when it comes to openly sharing things about my own personal
life. My fourteen year old niece, on the
other hand, is much more open and less guarded.
She has over 240 “friends” on Facebook.
I can’t help but wonder if these are true friends or just
acquaintances.
“Culture”
is the final piece that Shirky takes a look at.
He argues that, “Knowledge is the most combinable thing we humans have,
but taking advantage of it requires special conditions.” These special conditions include, “…the size
of the community, the cost of sharing that knowledge, the clarity of what gets
shared, and the cultural norms of the recipients” (Shirky, 2010, p. 140). In other words, the more people that have
knowledge means more sharing will go on with very little, if any expense. One such area where people turn to each other
to share their personal experiences is in the area of medicine. Websites such as patientslikeme.com convey
this sense of caring. Here people can
openly share their life stories and offer support to each other (Shirky, 2010,
p. 155). A few years ago my mom was
diagnosed and treated for breast cancer.
Looking back I wonder if she wouldn’t have benefitted from visiting such
a site and reading about what other people were going through. I often tried to offer her support and listen
to how she was feeling, but it was rough.
I wished that she had somebody to talk to who truly understood what she
was experiencing. It has become evident
that we have the ability to share our resources and knowledge. Whether it is for personal, communal, public
or even civic reasons, our ability to pool, collaborate, and share is becoming
more and more common (Shirky, 2010, p. 173).
After
reading our third book, I stopped and thought about the important ties all
three books have. Nye’s book, Technology Matters, leaves us asking
several important questions about technology.
Carr’s book, The Shallows,
examines what the Internet is doing to our brains. Shirky’s book, Cognitive Surplus, looks at how we spend our abundance of free
time. All three books have something in
common; the choice is ours with how we use the technological tools and opportunities
that we have today. The raw materials of
free time and social tools aren’t enough.
Shirky (2010) states that, “The fusing of means, motive, and opportunity
creates our cognitive surplus out of the raw material of free time” (p.
184). Shirky leaves us with the notion
that we will be “looking for the mouse.”
We have the means, the motive, and the opportunity to pool together our
cognitive surplus and to be connected.
The question is what will we do with it?
References:
Carr,
N. (2010). The shallows: What the internet is doing to our brains.
New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Nye,
D. E. (2007). Technology matters: Questions to live with. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Shirky,
C. (2010). Cognitive surplus: Creativity and generosity in a connected age.
New York, NY:
The Penguin Press.
I was interested in what you were saying about getting kids to do things for rewards. It was a major basis for the at-risk charter school recently disbanded at RHS, and now that I work with a preponderance of kids from that school, I have to say that if any group lacked intrinsic motivation or depended on external rewards, they do. They mostly don't lift a finger without a reward, and have a sense of entitlement to rewards -- but I see that on some level they also despise them. There's a place for rewards, for sure -- but I like keeping them more as a celebration of things accomplished rather than as a quid pro quo for cooperation. It gives the dynamic a very different feel, and partially removes the power differential and the judgment aspect. Rather than my being the all-powerful dispenser of rewards, we have a shared goal and a shared celebration when it is met.
ReplyDeleteI also feel the same way about the opporunities that are offered to different generations. As a young adult, I know that I have had the opporunity to use multiple forms of technology. However, my students are always excitied to jump at the next form of technology. Shirky does make many good points about always seeking technology and being very technological driven. The discussion that you and Kat were having also plays a huge impact on the students of today. I feel as if the technology we implement instills the idea of having a reward for doing something. One example I can think of is a reading program I use called RAZ KIDS, as the kids read they earn prizes. Would they still want to read?
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with what both of you are saying about rewards and incentives. What about the kids who do good work and behave most of the time? Often they do not reap external rewards, but yet they continue to succeed. This leads me back to my original question...how do we foster and build that intrinsic motivation for our students?
ReplyDeleteI agree about being “guarded” when it comes to online sharing. Sometimes I really question what I see on You Tube or read on Facebook. It really makes me cautious about what I post because I don’t want to “be like that”.
ReplyDeleteWhen my brother-in-law was diagnosed with Leukemia, the Internet (caringbridge.com) was our daily means of communication with him and my sister because they were so far away. In his final days, he spoke at the Relay for Life about how even though we were far away in miles; we were there for him every day.
ReplyDelete