
HASTAC and the MacArthur Foundation are mobilizing the field of Digital Media and Learning through a $2 million open call competition, supporting all generations of educators, learning entrepreneurs, and communicators. The Competition supports pioneers who use new technologies to envision the future of learning. We seek innovators developing formal and informal educational environments that inspire creative thinking while informing and providing context to the digital learning styles of people today.
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation launched its five-year, $50 million Digital Media and Learning initiative in 2006 to help determine how digital technologies are changing the way people, especially young people, learn, play, socialize, and participate in civic life. Answers are critical to developing educational and other social institutions that can meet the needs of this and future generations.
The Digital Media and Learning initiative is marshaling what is already known about the field and seeding innovation for continued growth. Initial grants have supported research projects, design studies, pilot programs, and responses to policy implications.
The MacArthur Foundation is supporting the Digital Media and Learning Competition as part of its Digital Media and Learning initiative.
HASTAC (pronounced "haystack"; the Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory) is an international network of educators and digital visionaries committed to the creative use and critical understanding of new technologies in life, learning, and society. HASTAC's dual dedication is to ensure that humanistic and humane considerations are never far from technological innovation, and that education and learning are at the forefront of new digital innovation. HASTAC is committed to the idea that this complex and world-changing digital environment requires the lessons of history, reflection, introspection, theory, equity, and access that the modern humanities (broadly defined) have to offer.
The infrastructure for HASTAC has been largely provided by the John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies at Duke University and the University of California Humanities Research Institute, under the leadership of Cathy N. Davidson and David Theo Goldberg who co-founded HASTAC in 2003. HASTAC has taken an early leadership role in next-generation "net sciences": the computational, social, and humanistic understanding of the role of networked, distributed, digitally-supported relationships that extend throughout education, community-based learning organizations, business, and global partnerships.
Contributing to and supported by the MacArthur Foundation's Occasional Paper Series on Digital Media and Learning, HASTAC has produced "The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age." HASTAC has also been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and the Digital Promise Initiative as well as by the generosity of its member institutions.
The Digital Media and Learning Competition is administered by HASTAC.