These words are mine. I bought them. Let me explain. I came across the Big Word Project from one of my favorite blogs Ugly Doggy. It is an interesting idea dreamt up by two creative thinkers in Northern Ireland. Their idea was to let people redefine a word by linking it to a particular website.
I chose Intersection and approach because for me they represent the philosophy of this blog. It is an intersection of many ideas and education. It is also about having a different approach to what we do in education. (Innovation and Education were already taken!) Ugly Doggy conducted an interview with the creators.
Here is one of the interview questions and answers...
Are the words pre-approved (you have a list and what is not there can't be used) and therefore finite? Or ANYTHING that is in a dictionary can go there?
- Lee: Not at all, anything that's a real word can be used. We're using the Oxford English Dictionary as reference. We have about 180,000 words on the site but we're missing loads so feel free to suggest more. We're not including places or names (unless the name is in the dictionary).
This got me thinking about its relation to education. If a word can take on multiple meanings and even take on locations on the world wide web, then what else could a word be connected with? A word could be connected with a picture, a sound, a smell, a country, a person, a movie, a song, a poem. If you think about it, this has some pretty powerful implications for education. We are moving from a "there is one right definition of a word" to a "a word can mean multiple things and those things will be specific to each individual." Word and meaning will take on many more meanings and concepts, and those can be individualized from a country, a culture, a group, or an individual.
One right answer for the question "What does approach mean?" or "What does Intersection mean?" is evaporating into links and tags meaning, unique to every person. This is getting very interesting.
Hi, Robert! How could you have know when you first peeped the "Big Word Project" to me through a DM on Twitter? You could NOT possibly have know how intrigued I'd be! Serendipity! I genuinely get your point. You call attention to the "intersection" of print with the unique meaning each individual brings to the text. Interestingly, you approach a fascinating description of "deep meaning" - a unique word knowledge that includes basic definitions expanded by the user's social, emotional, contextual and rational truths. You are all over issues that underpin miscommunication. Do our words ever communicate our precise message? I think not. Not unless the listener "hears" through our unique filter. We'd all improve communications if we spoke and listened with a heightened awareness to "filters." Thanks so much for sharing with me!
Posted by: (Eliza)Beth Holmes | September 20, 2008 at 11:47 AM