Bios
About Orient Lodge
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 09/15/2010 - 09:55Orient Lodge is an eclectic news site focusing on Politics, Technology, Media, Social Networks, Marketing, The Arts, Connecticut News as well as stories missed by more traditional outlets.
About Aldon
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 08/12/2004 - 10:48Persona is a function of context, and my online persona is multifaceted. Instead of trying to present a single coherent online persona, I have instead copied bios from different sites into this site. By looking at all the entries in the 'Bios' category you can form a more complete view of who I am.
The earlier version of this is available at Aldon's Bio
#rhizo15 Part 1 – Uncertain Learning Subjectives
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 04/15/2015 - 21:19Today, #rhizo15 starts. It is tempting to put it into some nice sort of box, with learning objectives about learning how to better create online courses, but that seems incomplete or misleading. Learning Subjectives – designing for when you don’t know where you’re going provides a better starting point.
The idea of jumping off into the unknown has long been appealing to me. It is part of the reason I like unconferences, like the upcoming Podcamp Western Mass. Get together with a bunch of bright people around an interesting topic and see what happens.
So, what do I hope to get out of #rhizo15? I’m not sure, but I find a good starting point to be a paper presented at the 1999 International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations (ISPSO), Our Best Work Happens When We Don't Know What We're Doing.
In keeping with our own thinking and with the specific context of our own work, our version of Bion's assumption about the effects of exposure to truth is that learning comes from working at the edge between knowing and not-knowing. The core activity linking our organizational research, consultancy, management and teaching - namely, 'learning', or 'growth of mind' - involves exposure to truth-in-the-moment. This depends on the capacity to stay at the edge between knowing and not-knowing.
This also provide a good opportunity to introduce myself to people finding this post through #rhizo15, or for that matter, to people who have become readers of my blog over the years, without having a good sense of where I am coming from.
For the context of #rhizo15, I will highlight some areas I hope to explore, and skip over other areas which are less important. I’ve been on the Internet since 1982. If you know where to look, you can find stuff I wrote online in 1982 which is still online today. I worked for a while on Wall Street, which is where I came in contact with organizational consultants, including ISPSO and the work of Wilfred Bion in Group Relations. I’m particularly interested in how various thoughts about objects, fit together in various psychoanalytic traditions include Freud, Klein, Winnicott, Bion, and Lacan. I’ve participated in various online experiential learning based groups centered around the work of Bion in the past. This may be a blog post or two of its own.
During my years on Wall Street, I also did a little bit on artificial neural networks. I’m particularly interested in the relationship between artificial neural networks, social networks, how this relates to group dynamics, rhizomes, and for that matter the singularity This may be another blog post of its own.
In 2003, I helped write some of the social media software for Gov. Dean’s presidential campaign. I later worked in technology and social media for other campaigns, and have run for office myself. How does or could rhizomic learning and MOOCs relate to politics and governance? Another fun topic to explore in a later blog post.
I was the first person in Connecticut, according to reports I’ve seen online, to be on Twitter, and have I was one of the first people with Google Glass in Connecticut. I’ve been an early adopter and been involved with research on many innovations in computer mediated communications. I’m not sure what else I have to say on these topics, but there may be another blog post in all of this as well.
These days, I work as a social media manager for a nonprofit health care agency focused on providing primary care with a special focus on underserved populations. I have set up a Moodle for the agency and have recently taken a MOOC on teaching with Moodle, I may have written about this some in the past, and I’m not sure if there is another blog post in this topic.
And finally, at least for this evening, I’m currently taking a MOOC from Harvard on the poetry of Emily Dickinson. I had taken their MOOC on Walt Whitman a while ago. I’ve taken to sharing more of my poetic attempts online. Originally, I moved to New York City after college to be a poet, but that never panned out. I’m also focused on my religious viewpoints, which are perhaps best described as a socially liberal mix of Anglicanism with a splash of reformed theology.
Where will all of this go? It will be interesting to see.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 12/30/2009 - 10:00Online Social Media Bio
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 05/10/2009 - 08:46Aldon has been using media socially since he shared his coloring books in kindergarten and fought over sections of the Sunday New York Times at the beach house in the Summer.
He’s been online since the 1970s on various bulletin boards, posted on Usenet since the early 1980s, built web sites and participated in virtual environments since the early 1990s.
In 2003, Mr. Hynes helped with DeanSpace a project to build software and websites for Gov. Dean’s 2004 Presidential bid and written chapters for a couple books about the experience.
Since then, he has helped politicians, non-profits, corporations and others use online social media tell their story online.
Mr. Hynes has been credentialed to cover many conferences and events from the 2004 Democratic National Convention to Online Marketing Conferences and Group Psychotherapy conferences. He has blogged about these experiences and many other topics on his blog, Orient Lodge.