Stephen Downes

Knowledge, Learning, Community

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Vision Statement

Stephen Downes works with the Digital Technologies Research Centre at the National Research Council of Canada specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. His degrees are in Philosophy, specializing in epistemology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science. He has taught for the University of Alberta, Athabasca University, Grand Prairie Regional College and Assiniboine Community College. His background includes expertise in journalism and media, both as a prominent blogger and as founder of the Moncton Free Press online news cooperative. He is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, has authored learning management and content syndication software, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. Downes is a member of NRC's Research Ethics Board. He is a popular keynote speaker and has spoken at conferences around the world.

A Complete Guide to Bookmarklets
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I use a few bookmarklets I have written myself as part of my newsletter workflow. One sends items to Pinboard to read later. Another (which I am using as I type this) provides a direct way for me to write these posts right from the article I'm reading in my browser. This article is, as the title suggests, a guide to bookmarklets. This article discusses bookmarklets that change the style of the web page by altering the cascading style sheet (CSS). There are also some links to cool bookmarklets, like this set of web development bookmarklets.

Today: Total: CSS-Tricks, 2026/02/25 [Direct Link]
New Coursera report shows that 95% of students and educators are using AI on campus - but only a quarter of educators worldwide feel prepared to use it effectively
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I've mentioned this before but as things get increasingly fluid using 'students' as your survey population may become increasingly misleading. I think that's partially the case here. In addition to the generally positive remarks about AI (95% are using AI tools) we read, "students report that AI is enhancing their learning - rather than replacing traditional study methods." That's exactly what you would expect to hear from students, Properly So-Called. They are uniquely those people who have been able to access and succeed in higher education institutions. But what about the rest of the world? The report (30 page PDF) is behind a spamwall but you can access it without filling out the form here.

Today: Total: Jack Moran, Coursera Blog, 2026/02/25 [Direct Link]
Bridging technical and emotional skill gaps: AI-enhanced adaptive learning and emotional intelligence in project management education
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According to this article (20 page PDF), "AI-enhanced features, such as real-time feedback, simulations, and reflective prompts, enhance understanding of project management concepts while fostering EI capacities such as empathy, collaboration, and conflict resolution." The mixed methods study is based on an online survey with 152 responses collected. Some interesting observations about personalization: "Meaningful personalisation depended on user input. While adaptive tools can tailor content, their effectiveness hinges on learner engagement. As one participant observed, 'Personalization? It's about how you prompt it. If you're vague, you get vague'... Participants noted that precise, iterative input was essential for meaningful, context-sensitive feedback."

Today: Total: Kristen Karmazinuk, Jim Helik, Research in Learning Technology, 2026/02/25 [Direct Link]
The Future of Computational Social Science
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This is from a couple of years ago and published behind a paywall so I didn't get to see it until a search unearthed an open access PDF. The concept has been around for a while, at least since Lazar's 2009 article, and probably longer. It describes social science in terms of massive data sets, agent-based simulations, digital records of human behavior, connections and networks, data text analysis, new modalities (audio, video, images, GIS, sensors), and archival data. It is understood theoretically as a process of mapping signals and known constructs to each other, though I think there's room for new approaches here. Good article, clearly written and accessible. 31 page PDF. See Katherine Ognyanova's website for a lot more related work. Also see Lazer Lab, "based on the idea that how people and organizations are connected together is critical to understanding the functioning, success and failure of actors and systems."

Today: Total: David Lazer, Katherine Ognyanova, 2026/02/25 [Direct Link]
Taking action against AI harms
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A bit of a theme has emerged in today's newsletter, and it has to do with the ablative effects of AI (Anil Dash does not write about this, but I'm getting to it). In statistics, there's this idea of 'regression toward the mean', which in writing becomes 'regression toward the bland', or as Claudio Nastruzzi terms it, semantic ablation. Well, that's not me. But... why? It wasn't simply protection from AI, because when I was growing up, AI wasn't a thing. But what was a thing was television. Except - I hardly watched it all either as a child or a youth or even through most of my years of university. I would put on some headphones and read or write or code. I was a very serious and studious young man, and very socially inept. Still am. But I also have insights into the world (that I think are) worth having that weren't ablated by relentless commercial media. But now I read Anil Dash (as I finally talk about the article) describing how to protect children from the harms of AI. And - fair enough. Protect them from exploitation and manipulation and regression to the bland. Keep them off X/Twitter (and Meta, and TikTok). Stop schools from using LLMs (not just chatGPT). And - let's see if you can do this for them and for yourself - turn off the television

Today: Total: Anil Dash, 2026/02/24 [Direct Link]
Cannes Declaration on the Sovereignty of the Mind
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This article describes The Cannes Declaration on the Sovereignty of the Mind, which was signed by a coalition of experts at the World AI Cannes Festival. 3 page PDF. So OK. It reads, "We ask for the conditions under which innovation can remain compatible with democracy and fundamental freedoms, including a firm boundary against systems designed or used to manipulate thought at scale or to evade human thought and reflection." Sure, their focus is on the potential uses of AI, and I get that. But it strikes me that commercial media and advertising (also synonymous with Cannes) have been responsible for large-scale manipulations of thought and beliefs. I have often said "advertising is the original fake news." I should also say "advertising is the original hallucination." But these experts (pictured) don't see the world the way I do.

Today: Total: Dataethics, Dataetisk Tænkehandletank, 2026/02/24 [Direct Link]

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

Copyright 2026
Last Updated: Feb 25, 2026 2:37 p.m.

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