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"OK Bill"

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Edited by Sharif Al-Rousi, Friday, 7 June 2013, 15:32

Reflections on engaging with online content in the Open Design Studio in H817

No, I wasn’t thanking Bill. I don’t know a Bill anyway.

That was what I typed, in a frenzied moment when, during our ODS team’s latest Google Hangout, I at last understood what tasks I had to do by the next one. I had meant to type “OK Brill”.

Our online team meetings, whether via Elluminate or Google Hangouts (broadband connection allowing) keep me sane and connected to both the activity and the task team.

I’m disheartened by the fact that I’ve not enjoyed the majority of this learning block, not least because it’s the part of the module that attracted me most to it in the first place. Some practical experience at playing around with design tools was what I really wanted; something that gave me some practical confidence as opposed to isolated academic knowledge. As yet, it has not come to pass.

It’s only now that I feel even slightly motivated to try and reflect on the actual activities, in the attempt to extract some learning from this process.

There’s been insufficient scaffolding for me to engage purposefully in this learning block. From the beginning, elements of it were fragmented across different online environments, several of which were new to me and took much time (weeks really) to get comfortable with. Herein lies one similarity with the MOOC experience.

From my point of view, an improvement here would have been a clearer overview of the whole task, with some imagery of what it would look like over the course of the weeks to completion. From here, there could have been step-off points into the other areas. No doubt some learners on the course will feel the detail on the H817 weekly pages and forums were sufficient for this. They categorically were not sufficient for me.

Bizarrely, that which looked to be the most practical learning block, that which sought to integrated theory and practice, has not done so for me. I would even go so far as to say that I have picked up little of either. I just haven’t had the opportunity to ‘play around’ with the tools, which is what I wanted to do. I’ve lost that motivation to do so as well. It’s no longer enjoyable. The moment I click into the ODS site, I’m put off. It’s not easy to shrug these feelings off.

The online team meetings at least enable me to learn from my peers. Although I am doing this from their blogs, I seem strangely unable to do this from the ODS site activity materials. By that I mean, when something is packaged up in the templates we’ve been offered, I lose the ability to interact with the material. It’s featureless, untextured, and uninteresting as a result. When we talk about it during our meetings the life comes back into it. It is almost as if I am unable to learn from them if I can’t experience activity alongside my fellow team members. Is the nature of legitimate peripheral participation inhibited by our lack of ‘real’ contact? Although I was able to engage and learn from virtual communities of practice (the online forums, my fellow learners blogs, the Twitter H817 MOOC community), there was more thinking and less ‘doing’. Perhaps something here is more task based?

What is it that I find so difficult about engaging with these materials in the ODS site and on the Google+ community? I want to understand this, because it is going to have implications for how I engage in projects in an online collaborative community. My ability to learn from others seems diminished by both the volume of activity, the rush, and grappling with the medium, but basically, I ain’t learning coz it ain’t fun!

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Characteristics of a MOOC and mapping my MOOC experience

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Edited by Sharif Al-Rousi, Tuesday, 16 Apr 2013, 16:28

Characteristics of a MOOC:

After reading McAuley, et. al. (2010) I produced this quick map to help me characterise a MOOC.Mind map of MOOC characteristics

In addition:

  • Publicity is generally via social networks
  • Enrolment and registration takes place at a central web-address, acting as a “nexus for support and communication” (McAuley, et. al., 2010, p4). This nexus acts as an anchor, connecting the learners own Personal Learning Network (PLN) with the MOOC course. However, other ties, of varying strength develop between the learner’s PLN and other individual learners, groups of learners or learning objects (OERs), within or beyond the MOOC (such as on Twitter, as I have done with the #h817 community), at the behest of individual learners.

Mapping my MOOC experience:

Map of my PLN of MOOC participation

Key:

I’ve attempted to show the relative level of my engagement with these arenas, by showing their distance from my online learning identity is most present (in my OU blog).

My level of contributory activity is shown by the relative size of the blocks.

McAuley, et. al. suggest that the network itself is at least, if not more important than the topic of a MOOC. However, negotiating the network if more problematic than most structured courses, and is often experienced as frustrating, with which, as a novice I absolutely concur.

 

The current map is a snapshot of my PLN on the 5th week of the MOOC. Since the first week, the h817 blog aggregator has shrunk, and is racing away from the centre like some star being flung from the big bang. The MOOC Forums are in danger of going the same way. Meanwhile, the H817 Forums have swollen in the last couple of weeks as I have diverted energy from the MOOC environment back to the group of learners I connect with on H817. Twitter popped into existence, pretty much where it is on the first week, but is growing steadily in size. The OU blog is consolidating as the central venue for my thinking and thought sharing.

McAuley, et. al., describe the MOOC as 'open and invitational', and that an individual's level of participation is negotiated (McAuley et. al., makes the connection to Wenger's Legitimate Peripheral Participation [1991]). My current level and pattern of engagement in the arenas above is a result of becoming more selective about the times I want to access the views of the wider MOOC learner mass. I'm using my own reading and reflection to set my agenda, then dipping into the MOOC forums when I feel I want to sense-check what I'm saying with others. The H817 forum is the safe-place cum critical friend group that I feel more confident in sharing my deeper thoughts with. A little like coming home to the wife, and sharing the ups and downs of the day's experiences, in order for your loved-one to offer some perspective. Twitter is my latest distraction, but in a constructive way. It's not the new mistress that threatens the H817 forum wife!

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