Reading/Watching List [Sept. 8, 2011, 9:43 p.m.]
(Bold=Finished)
Books
How to Read a Book by Morton J. Adler
5 Minds for the Future by Howard Gardner
A Brief History of Everything by Ken Wilber
DIY U by Anya Kamenetz
Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
University of the 21st Century by Hannes Klopper
The Uses of the University by Clark Kerr
The Roving Mind by Isaac Asimov
What Technology Wants by Kevin Kelly
48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene
Theory U by Presencing Institute
Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill
Higher Education by Andrew Hackner
The Third Teacher by Christian Long et. al.
Rework by Jason Fried
Critical Path by Buckminster Fuller
100 Best Business Books of all Time by Jack Covert
Games People Play by Eric Berne
Engines of Innovation by Holden Thorp
Igniting Inspiration by John Marshall Roberts
Facilitators Guide to Participatory Decision-Making by Sam Kaner
The Experience Economy by Joseph Pine
This is the link to my goodreads profile where you can see what I've read, am reading, and will read. I haven't written any reviews, but will for some of the books in this learning plan by blogging responses to them.
Documentaries/Video
Sep 1. Waiting for Superman
"Every morning, in big cities, suburbs and small towns across America, parents send their children off to school with the highest of hopes. But a shocking number of students in the United States attend schools where they have virtually no chance of learning--failure factories likelier to produce drop-outs than college graduates. And despite decades of well-intended reforms and huge sums of money spent on the problem, our public schools haven't improved markedly since the 1970s. Why?"
Sep. 8. Garbage Warrior
"Imagine a home that heats itself, that provides its own water, hat grows its own food. Imagine that it needs no expensive technology, that it recycles its own waste, that it has its own power source. And now imagine that it can be built anywhere, by anyone, out of the things society throws away. Thirty years ago, architect Michael Reynolds imagined just such a home - then set out to build it. Shot over three years in the USA, India and Mexico, Garbage Warrior is a feature-length documentary film telling the epic story of maverick architect Michael Reynolds, his crew of renegade house builders from New Mexico, and their fight to introduce radically different ways of living. A snapshot of contemporary geo-politics and an inspirational tale of triumph over bureaucracy, Garbage Warrior is above all an intimate portrait of an extraordinary individual and his dream of changing the world."