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Owen Barritt

H808 Week 2

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Edited by Owen Barritt, Friday, 3 Oct 2008, 21:12
The group discussion task of the drivers for ePortfolios was an interesting experience for week 2.

As I mentioned in my post to the forums reflecting on the activity, I am currently looking into using discussion forums in an online course I administer. I hadn't considered how much extra time you need to allow for online discussion tasks as opposed to their face-to-face equivalents.

John and Mitchell had initially suggested using the wiki to collaborate our efforts on this task. As the task was based around filling in a template, this seemed ideal as it would allow all members of the group to add their thoughts directly to the template.

However, this only highlighted the delays in online discussion, which I feel many of us had not taken into account, as no general concessus was reach over it. In the end as it was getting towards the end of the week and the task would need writing up anyway, I created the wiki page using the contributions on the discussion forum from various members of the group (particularly those of Brian and Colleen).

Mitchell added his additions to the wiki directly later.

As of week 4, the only people who have editted the wiki page for this task are Mitchell and myself. I'm not sure whether this is because the task was essentially done by the time it went on the wiki or whether people are unfamiliar with using a wiki.

Although, it was in some of the introductions, I'm not sure how familiar the rest of the group are with technology. It could be that they are all experts or all complete novices, but assuming there are some people there who are not familiar with wikis, this may have been another factor which slowed getting our work online.

Reflecting on this, I can see that, although it was a useful eye-opener in my experience and so a useful activity for this course, in general, activities using the wiki and discussion forums would benefit, at least in the early stages of a course, from more guidance as to:
  • what is expected
  • how to use the technology
  • how online group tasks differ from face-to-face ones
  • the allowances students need to make as a result
The wiki page containing the drivers template
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Owen Barritt

H808 Week 1

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Edited by Owen Barritt, Thursday, 2 Oct 2008, 21:21
It took a while for me to get started in week 1. Work and issues with having 2 versions of Acrobat preventing me from viewing pdfs via either IE or Firefox slowed the start a bit as I couldn't initially access the course and assessment guides. However, once fixed (I told firefox to open pdfs externally using the latest Acrobat rather than trying to open them in the window) things got started.

The first activity was interesting, in that everyone seemed to approach it from different directions. Some people focused in their posts on the introduction of themselves and why they were taking the course whilst others focused on their thoughts on the team members views on elearning. Not many people went into detail in both aspects. Personally, I was in the former group, but I shall take the opportunity to consider the latter in a separate post shortly.

I found staying focused on the podcast for 30 minutes challenging. My attention drifted off several times. Although the podcast was split into sections it was presented as one file on the website, with no way to easily skip to the next section.

As podcasts historically developed to present radio-style shows, which can be downloaded to mp3 players, I can see that it would seem normally to compile all these pieces into one "show". However, as most mp3 players will happily play a playlist of mp3s and the world wide web has developed to be able to present information non-linearly, there seems no requirement for them to be 1 file.

As it is presented there are 3 ways to access the content of the audio
  • download the mp3
  • listen to the audio on the web
  • download/view the transcription
Having done the later 2, I can see that it would have been a real aid to concentration to have had something to view whilst listening to the audio. Maybe this is an argument for making the streamed content video based, so you could see the person talking in each case also.

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