historying

thoughts on scholarship and history in a digital age

Creepy Treehouse

with 3 comments

When pursuing my normal, chaotic trampolining from blog to blog, I was stopped dead in my tracks by the following phrase: “creepy treehouse”. I absolutely love the terminology. After some further investigation, I was fascinated to learn that the phrase has gotten significant play, and has sparked intense discussion across the ed-tech blogosphere. The basic definition covers a range of characteristics, but the one I think is most fitting as it applies to digital scholarship is “adj. Repulsiveness arising from institutional mimicry or emulation of pre-existing community-driven environments or systems.” (For more see History Hacks, Technagogy, and Munkering)

The now-classic example is Blackboard’s attempt to embed an application within Facebook that would connect students to their courses. Great perhaps in theory, but from a student’s perspective, it’s absolutely an example of “creepy treehouse.” There are certain times I will run across well-meaning attempts to utilize digital tools or elements of Web 2.0, but often there is just something “off” about them that smacks of inauthenticity. Some examples that come to mind are the “Chat with a librarian on AIM” feature at my school’s library, or an older example of a well-meaning teacher constructing a webpage for their students to learn from, complete with garish WordArt and animated GIFs, and often hosted by Geocities. I am the first to admit that there is a fine line between the successful incorporation of these tools and the unsuccessful construction of a creepy treehouse. And that line is also blurry, jagged, and constantly shifting. What exactly determines that Blackboard’s Facebook initiative is creepy treehouse, while the both popular and respected iTunes U is a fun, enjoyable treehouse?

One of the major flaws of creepy treehouses is often a heavy-handed, rigid, top-down approach to utilizing technology that is itself inherently fluid, flexible, and often geared towards a bottom-up or horizontal structure. It reminds me of the field of advertising. As recently as a decade ago, the status-quo was for a major advertising firm to come up with a centralized, coherent ad campaign for a product. Now, the industry works within an age of viral marketing, where consumers are invested participants in the entire advertising process. While effective, top-down advertising campaigns are still successful, they are much more vulnerable to the criticisms, critiques, and resistance of a digitized consumer populace. Similarly, digital academic treehouses for students can still be effectively constructed, but they run the increasing risk of being considered, well, creepy.

Written by Cameron Blevins

June 30, 2008 at 12:09 am

3 Responses

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  1. I think your conclusion here is spot on. You said that the problem with a CTH is that it is a “heavy-handed, rigid, top-down approach to utilizing technology that is itself inherently fluid, flexible, and often geared towards a bottom-up or horizontal structure.”

    When educators are already using web2.0 technologies and are themselves naturally active in social networking environments the odds of having built a CTH will be low.

    John Krutsch

    June 30, 2008 at 12:25 am

  2. [...] “Creepy Treehouse”, History-ing [...]

  3. I originally thought “chat with a librarian” was lame, especially on my mostly residential campus, it turns out to be quite useful for troubleshooting technical problems (“why isn’t my interlibrary loan request working?”) or answering pretty simple questions like “how do you cite a blog post in MLA format?” Students with more complicated questions come to the library and sit down for a real chat.

    If librarians started IMing students to ask if they had any questions or asking to be buddies … that would be creepy treehouse.

    Barbara

    September 6, 2008 at 1:23 pm


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