Stephen Downes

Knowledge, Learning, Community

Please select a newsletter and enter your email to subscribe.

Stephen Downes spent 25 years as an expert researcher at the National Research Council of Canada, specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. With degrees in Philosophy and a background in journalism and media, he is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. He is a popular keynote speaker and has presented at conferences around the world. [More]

Support OLDaily

OLDaily has been free and open to all readers since 2001. It is a valuable and widely-used resource for educators, researchers, and learners worldwide. Please consider a monthly contribution to sustain the time and resources required to publish it every day.


Here's what's in the latest edition of OLDaily

Game Design + Pedagogy + Leadership = Experiential Leadership
79510 image icon
Not a bad post drawing similarities between game design, instruction and leadership, all leading toward a concept Clark Aldrich calls 'experiential leadership' (because everyone knows new leadership theories are where the big money is). The best bit is the chart comparing aspects and timelines of the three; it's worth a critical look. Today: Total: Clark Aldrich, 2026/07/10 [Direct Link]
Thinking Like a Network 2.0
79508 image icon
I've argued at length over the years in favor of network organization of, well, everything. It's important to understand what this entails. This article offers a good list (quoted): adaptability instead of control; contribution before credentials; giving first, not taking; resilience and redundancy instead of rock stardom; diversity and divergence rather than the usual suspects and forced agreement; intricacy and flow, not bottlenecks and hoarding; self-organization and emergence rather than permission and the pursuit of perfection; shift focus from core to the periphery; from working in isolation to working with others and/or out loud; from “Who’s the Leader?” to “We’re the Leaders!" I know, it's a long list, and your internal sense of value resists mightily giving up power, control and wealth. But ask - who made you value these things? How well are they serving you? Today: Total: Curtis Ogden, Network Weaver, 2026/07/10 [Direct Link]
Before you build AI agents, build your company brain first
79507 image icon
Almost the only resource LinkedIn is showing me these days (as, I think, it tries to make mobile web browsing useless) is some or another claim that your AI model needs structured data (such as semantic graphs or ontologies) in order to work. This article isn't one of the LinkedIn articles (it's an email subscription) but it carries similar advice. I disagree. Yes, you should provide your AI with a lot of context. But the context doesn't need to be structured like computer code. Today: Total: Amar Dhaliwal, valueIQ's Newsletter, valueIQ, 2026/07/10 [Direct Link]
EIU Global Liveability Index 2026
79504 image icon
It should always be understood that indicators such as this don't actually measure, they instead promote a specific agenda and then rank accordingly. Such is the case with the Economist's Most Livable Cities index, which includes access to private health care and access to private education as among its desirable features. This link is too the actual report, not the magazine's (paywalled) summary or some other overview. Today: Total: Economist, 2026/07/09 [Direct Link]
Research infrastructure: why confidence, not technology is the real challenge
79502 image icon
Good article (and not excessively wordy, which is a treat in the current environment) outlining challenges and trends in research infrastructure procurement. The core challenge isn't technology, it's confidence - how can you make major decisions in such a rapidly changing environment? The trend is toward hybrid infrastructure, allowing partners to opt for capability according to their own current needs. Good link near the end to a resource on mapping federation journeys. Today: Total: Sara Moverley, JISC, 2026/07/09 [Direct Link]
Poverty of Attention
79501 image icon
"Who retains the capacity for independent thought, and who controls the conditions under which others get to. The capacity to think clearly is stratifying by nation, by literacy, by wealth." So writes Ian O'Byrne. He's not wrong, but we need to understand that the answer isn't to go backwards - that takes us to a time when disparities were even worse. Still, the question of who gets to have agency, and ergo the education that makes it possible, is a fundamental social justice question. Today: Total: Ian O'Byrne, Digitally Literate, 2026/07/09 [Direct Link]

Stephen Downes Stephen Downes, Casselman, Canada
stephen@downes.ca

Copyright 2026
Last Updated: Jul 09, 2026 12:37 p.m.

Canadian Flag Creative Commons License.