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New month, new season, new course

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Well, the new month starts tomorrow and it may be just me that thinks of 1st September as the beginning of Autumn but I am just about to embark on a new course - H810:Accessible online learning - and we've been asked to say a bit about our context.

I've taught Level 1 interdisciplinary Arts and Humanities and Level 2 philosophy online for the OU, though I haven't been an AL for a couple of years now. My involvement with education is more likely to be related to developing HE teachers or other types of professional development but it's hard to say anything less vague at the moment as I'm in a transitional phase, moving from one career to another and I'm not sure what the new one holds.

In any case, I've had contact with students with a range of accessibility issues, both as an AL and as a Regional Faculty Manager, which involves organising and overseeing the teaching of 50 or so Arts courses. I'm interested in the individuality of both the problems students face and the solutions they adopt, and fascinated by the potential for innovative ways of improving accessibility offered by new technology. I like what I see as the implications of the term 'accessibility', namely that any difficulties lie not in the content of educational material, still less in the student, but in the gateways via which students access material - provide wide enough, high enough, approachable gateways and everyone can access what's inside.

 

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A highly effective way to promote fair assessment for students with disabilities.

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Edited by Sue Capener, Wednesday, 24 Feb 2010, 20:56

I found this one very interesting because a one-off investment has potentially so much pay off for a significant body of students across almost all disciplines and levels of studey. There is a great deal of scope for development of this project.

 

The University of Nottingham, Disability support in computer-based assessment

 

Context and aim of project

To enable learners with a range of disabilities to be assessed fairly with regard to their subject understanding by reducing or eliminating barriers arising from conventional assessment methods.

The project is focused on summative online examinations.

Level and nature of learners

Medical school students amongst whom 3% have declared a disability.

Training and experience required of teachers

The design of software for providing mitigation for a range of learner needs is carried out by trained software designers with advice from disability officers. An interface is then provided that untrained helpers can use to implement a particular learner’s requirements

Learning design

The format of the exam is publicized in advance to students so that they can feedback any requirements that may need to be accommodated (eg extra time, large fonts, coloured backgrounds). These can then be programmed, evaluated by the student concerned, and adjusted as necessary.

At the point of delivery of the exam, adjustments can be made by staff to accommodate a variety of student requirements. The specification can then be saved in a database and reproduced on any machine the student uses.  

Special equipment and/or facilities

This system is applied to exams taken on computers.

Key benefits

Ensures students needs are as fully met as possible.

Enables testing and adjusting of accommodations.

Once settings are made, they are reproducible for future exams.

Promotes fairness of assessment and facilitate fulfilling legal responsibilities of educational body.  

Key lessons learned

Despite interface designed for non-technical use, IT support staff were needed at delivery end.

Initial design is a lengthy process, mainly due to the range of accommodations that can be programmed in. 

Potential for further development

A similar system for learning via the VLE is in the process of development.

Permalink 2 comments (latest comment by Sue Capener, Sunday, 7 Mar 2010, 13:21)
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A rival to the MAODE?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Wednesday, 24 Feb 2010, 20:15

The next project I’m reviewing is an elaborate one, which is directly comparable to the OU’s own MAODE.

 

University of Hull, On online MEd in e-Learning programme

 

Context and aim of project

To enable collaborative and independent study of the ‘design, development and implementation of elearning’ in the context of professional practice and across national and discipline borders. To exploit electronic mediation rather than replicate the classroom.

Level and nature of learners

This is a Master’s level course for practising teachers in any context, discipline or country.

Training and experience required of teachers of the course

Not discussed in the project report.

Learning design

Teaching via discussion focusing on comparison and contrast with the experiences of other professional, online activities, such as design of elearning activities and resources, collaborative projects and a supervised online teaching practice.

Collaborative and (I assume) individual tasks are assessed

Students produce an edossier of papers on a negotiated topic

Special equipment and/or facilities

Initially, a VLE providing a pathway tool, resource centre, email, text-conferencing, e-portfolio  and blogging.

Later also externally provided tools such as Skype, MSN, wikis and Googledocs

Key benefits

  1. Flexibility resulting from asynchronous communication.
  2. Many students have been promoted in their current job or secured a new job.
  3. Student find the international nature of the student body brings new insights.
  4. Opportunities to collaborate.
  5. Study informing and being informed by professional practice.

 Key lessons learned

  1. For a conventional university, promotion is problematic as it needs to appeal beyond the local market.
  2. Students on the course are not integrated with the main student body and cannot select modules outside the elearning provision.
  3. Collaboration in an asynchronous environment can lead to frustration amongst students caused by perceived or actual inequality of contribution by their colleagues.
  4. Asynchronicity and flexibility can adversely affect students’ (and, I assume tutors’) work/life balance.
  5. A personalized learning environment helps to establish group identity, conducive to collaborative work.

 Potential for further development

CPD for internal staff of the providing institution

Adoption of a new VLE makes possible further enhancements of provision

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Use of podcasting for philosophy teaching

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Edited by Sue Capener, Tuesday, 23 Feb 2010, 20:13

My second review is of the University of Glasgow ’s project on use of podcasting in philosophy:

http://www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/case-studies/tangible/glasgow/index_html1

The contrast with the project I reviewed in my previous post is striking. Here, we have a single individual trying something different for its own sake.  Nothing wrong with that of course but, in terms of our previous discussion of what constitutes true innovation, it lags well behind the Swansea project. Essentially, it's a revision aid for students, an alternative to conventional note-taking.

I'd be interested to know if others agree.

Context and aim of project

This project is mainly motivated by the enthusiasm of an individual teacher. It takes place on two courses in a conventional university environment. No specific aim is stated other than a desire to try out new approaches.

Level and nature of learners

Final year undergraduates in philosophy and, in the case of one course, psychology.

Training and experience required of teachers

None, though technical training was needed for converting audio files into podcasts.

Learning design

Lectures are recorded live and then podcasted via the university’s network. The lectures are described as highly interactive and supplementary discussion and comments appear on the university’s VLE, though these features pre-existed in the live lectures so are not integral to the elearning innovation as such. 

Special equipment and/or facilities

Earlier recordings were made on an mp3 player, and technical expertise was required to post these to the website.

Later, a Sanyo voice-recorder (ICR-S250RM) was used, rendering technical expertise unnecessary. 

Key benefits

1)      Students use the podcasts for revision, to improve their understanding and to access material they missed.

2)      Widening participation – eg an agoraphobic student, wider public accessing the podcasts for general interest.

3)      A high level of both student enthusiasm and successful course results is reported but it is not clear how far this is related to the course and lecturer rather than the podcasting innovation.

4)      Students’ enthusiasm for elearning appeared to increase. 

Key lessons learned

1)      Prompt posting of podcasts is important to students.

2)      It is easy to forget to start recording at the beginning of the lecture, and check that any batteries will last! 

Potential for further development

1)      The project involves only one lecturer. The report strongly implies that it would be advantageous to extend the practice.

2)      Can be used to generate interest in the discipline area and as a taster for potential students.

3)      Posting snapshots of the whiteboards to accompany the lectures.

4)      Facilitating tagging of the podcasts to help students in note-taking and revising

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Collaborative teaching and video-conferencing

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Edited by Sue Capener, Tuesday, 23 Feb 2010, 20:12

I’ve been looking at Swansea University ’s project on collaborative teaching and video-conferencing in Classics (http://www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/case-studies/tangible/swansea/index_html1)

I've evolved my own categories for comparing one project with another. The headings don't necessarily correspond to those on the JISC site.

Context and aim of project

Video conferencing is used to enable a lecturer at one university to teach students at their own and two other institutions. Thus modules could be pooled between the three institutions.

 Level and nature of learners

This is for MA students at traditional universities.

 Training and experience required of teachers

This form of teaching was undertaken mainly by teachers who were already comfortable with the technology, although some training was available.

 Learning design

The sessions were two-hour seminars, apparently fairly conventional in nature, using an interactive whiteboard

Special equipment and/or facilities

Rooms set up for video-conferencing (for lecturer and for students at 3 locations)

Interactive whiteboard

 Key benefits

1)      Greater collaboration and pooling of expertise between teaching staff at different institutions.

2)      Students see academics discussing, disagreeing and resolving scholarly disputes.

3)      Greater variety of modules available to students.

4)      Low resource and economical of staff time.

 Key lessons learned

1)      Training issues, especially for those lecturers only involved for a small number of classes and especially during the initial period of adjustment, need addressing.

2)      Excellent and timely technical support is essential.

3)      Students in small groups who are remote from the lecturer can feel isolated and need local academic support.

 Potential for further development

Involving ‘visiting’ lecturers from overseas and/or key researchers in particular discipline areas.

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Slow progress

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:58

Time to celebrate my first thousand words! They're pretty much the right words though, as Eric Morecambe said, not necessarily in the right order. In fact, the words are going to have to change quite a bit too, I fear. But I'm sure I'll speed up.

I'm doing an evaluation of blogs and vodcasting as my two technologies, and I'm nearly done with blogs for now. There are so many ways of assessing their use so I'm finding it extremely difficult to come to any concrete conclusions. I have to keep on dragging myself back to specifics. The only way to make progress seems to be to pin everything I say down and forget the fact that I'm actually ignoring the vast majority of what has been written on this subject.

Still, I'll be glad when I get on to video as that's what I'm going to do for my learning design, so it's going to be a lot more interesting to assess.

Back to decide on word number 1023 and the other 4977, I guess. It's going to be a long bank holiday weekend!

 

 

 

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Well, it's a start

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:51

Just got going on my ECA (End of Course Assessment, or final project) today and have rewarded myself liberally with a highly unhealthy snack that I'm ashamed to describe.

Two paragraphs of my introduction completed. Writing intro's is wonderful: everything seems so clear and straightforward - I've outlined the picture, now all I need to do is colour it in.

This is, of course, a cruel illusion. Before I finish this work of devastating acuity, insight and creativity, I shall rub out the outlines countless times and re-draw them, having recklessly coloured over the edges, or found I don't have suitable colours to fill some areas in.

Once I actually settle down to write I always wonder why I've been procrastinating. It's actually fun, I rediscover; I'm going to enjoy this! About 1000 words in, I experience mild frustration, at 2000 words crushing boredom; self-hate at 3000 words becomes despair at 4000, and at 5000 words all emotions are subordinate to a grinding determination to reach the target of 6000.

Somehow it will be done!

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TEL - better than a can-opener

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:53

I've just been looking at this video:

http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/avfiles/programmes/elearning_pedagogy/laura.wmv

which sums up better than anything else I've come across how ICT can be integrated into learning.  What epitomized the ideal for me is the word 'handy', which Laura applies a couple of times to different aspects of TEL.  It's casual, integrated into her life, really useful and she wouldn't want to be without it, and combined with this is the fact that it's manipulable and adaptable - she can use it how, when and where she wants to; she's not limited to set paths and techniques.

I've been trying to think of a good metaphor for this approach to TEL. 'Handy' to me suggests something like a can-opener, but that's not right because it's not multi-functional enough and has to be used in a certain way.


Can anyone think of a better idea?

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Why don't students want more IT for learning?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:54

Lots of interesting stuff in the ECAR study of undergraduate students and IT:

http://www.educause.edu/ECAR/TheECARStudyofUndergraduateStu/163283

Most students, it concludes, only want 'moderate' IT on their courses, which seemed quite surprising for largely young (under 25) traditional students. Their reasons are interesting too [my numbering]:

1. The fact that it tends to mean they have to ‘teach themselves’
2. Lack of face-to-face interaction
3. In their eyes, it facilitates cheating
4. Tech problems

There is a quote from one student who said that nothing can replace a face-to-face lecture, though s/he couldn't articulate exactly why. I'm convinced that this difficult to articulate quality is what is behind factors 1 and 2 here. Maybe we just 'switch on' for f2f in a way that we are not wired to do for online? In a similar way it's been shown that reading online is much more likely to involve skimming than reading from hard copy. A bit of amateur evolutionary biology here would suggest that we are 'wired' to respond to human contact, rather than screens and texts. (It is worth noting that 1 and 2 are as much negatives of reading in hard copy as online learning.)

Factor 1 is interesting. Are they being lazy about participative learning (something that afflicts most of us now and agan perhaps)? Or is it a justified criticism? My own observation of students and my own learning suggests that, though it may be a surer route to learning, it's definitely a  much slower one.

3 and 4 may seems easier to solve but behind them, too, perhaps lies something deeper. They both indicate our lack of control of interactions which are technology mediated, and therefore a distancing that many find unmotivating.

Interestingly, it was older and part-time students who were more keen on more IT - a function of convenience, perhaps, but also maybe of the less central role that socialising might perform in their lives by that stage.

Once again, I resolve to pursue this further in the research!

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What really influences teachers’ and students’ choices?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:55

Well, it’s been an interesting week, thinking about students’ and teachers’ approaches to learning, what affects their attitudes and choices and what consequences this, in its turn, has for the use of technology as a learning tool. These are just some thoughts – nothing really worked out at all, so I’m hoping someone reads this and feels able to add some thoughts of their own.

I think I’ll start with the following from Richardson (2009) which kind of sums up a particular view:

‘three factors … [determine] the quality of the students’ experience: communication and support from tutors and other students …. the time available to be devoted to the course …. and the students’ own level of experience and expertise with information and communication technologies’

My own experience (both as a learner and teacher) would suggest that the first two have at least as much influence as the third and that therefore the medium (electronic or face-to-face) is of less importance than the way it is used. Having said that, if ICT is going to be integral to the learning package, then we have a duty to ensure that students have the appropriate expertise and that we don’t just leave them floundering and feeling inadequate if they don’t.

Students' choices

Richardson (2005) referred to five conceptions of learning:

1. Learning as the increase of knowledge

2. Learning as memorising

3. Learning as the acquisition of facts or procedures

4. Learning as the abstraction of meaning

5. Learning as an interpretative process aimed at the understanding of reality.

I can’t see that any of these imply that one mode of learning is better than another. However, his suggestion that demographic factors influence students’ conception of learning, probably does mean that students’ expectations make a difference to how they take to different kinds of media.

Teachers' choices

He also mentions the tendency for teachers to ‘drift’ towards more didactic, teacher-centred methods. I’m sure most teachers would recognize this but I’m not sure I agree with the reasons Richardson identifies. I think it’s less to do with senior staff and student pressure (though a little of the latter) and more to do with assessment pressures and a sense of the need to get through the curriculum. Both online and face-to-face, but particularly online, student-centred approaches are perceived as more time-consuming. (I say ‘perceived as’ because it may be that they in fact achieve more.

Next ....

Anyway, I’ll finish this entry with a resolution – to see if I can follow up some of these points in the literature in order to give some firm grounding to my idle speculation!

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Why go to University?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:57

  • Why go to university for your learning?
  • Why pay a university for your learning?
  • What are learning institutions for?

These are the three questions which round off Week 10a of H800 and I think they are so fundamental it’s worth having a bit of a think about them before moving on. There follow some initial jottings, not at all a worked-out view!

I might consider first, why did I decide to do H800. It’s a course about Technology Enhanced Learning, and arguably, I’d be able to find about this by doing my own research, reading books and articles and asking people. One reason is that it’s a kind of short cut - other people are doing the research for you and pointing you in the right direction. Therefore a lot of time is saved and I can achieve more than would be possible on my own (the old ‘standing on the shoulders of giants’ argument).

The opportunity to participate in a community of learners is a reason that might motivate some students. When I was studying Italian last year, we used a course book that could be purchased much more cheaply than the course but many students took the view that we just wouldn’t be motivated to get through it without the group ethos. If honest, we could probably add that being assessed, both formally and informally, is part of the motivation as well as conforming to a structured study plan.

However, all of these are reasons for doing any kind of course, not necessarily a university course. The extra value we get from a university is being taught by people who are paid to be scholars in their discipline – so people whom we can expect to be up-to-date, critical and active participants in their field. Whether this is important or not is bound to vary with an individual’s reasons for studying.

So, I think this kind of answers the third question, as far as universities are concerned anyway. As to why pay, this is really a political issue, isn’t it? If universities are institutions which consist of people critically engaging at the forefront of new developments in various fields, then someone has to pay their salaries. Whether this should be the student or society as a whole … well, I do have an opinion but this isn’t the place for it.

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Wikipedia's most self-deprecating entry?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:56

I’m trying to follow Alex's (that is, my tutor's) suggestion that we post something on each activity. (‘How long does she think she’s going to keep THAT up?’ says the voice in my head.) Actually, I did this one a while ago and have some notes on my reflections at the time so here - for the benefit of the entire world - are a few extracts from those:

We were asked to read How I fell in love with Wikipedia.

Surprised by the complexity of the editing and checking arrangements, e.g. deletions, PRODS (Proposals for deletion) and how these are decided by discussion in what seems to be a panel. How are the ‘peer-elected’ administrators are elected?

The politics of it (e.g. the inclusion movement and the deletion movement) is really interesting. Apparently, articles can be deleted simply because they are thought ‘not notable’ and other users champion them. I’m with the inclusion movement – otherwise, isn’t it circular? How can something become notable if we refuse to note it?

I barely ever use Wikipedia, and only for things that don’t matter much e.g. might look up my town as a way to waste a few minutes when supposed to be reading H800 course material!

I tend to take the crusty old fogey view and recommend that students don’t use it as a source. I was delighted to see that Wikipedia itself takes a similar view, see the quote below from their article on ‘Citing Wikipedia’, which I’m going to save to pass on to tutors and students.

‘Normal academic usage of Wikipedia and other encyclopedias is for getting the general facts of a problem and to gather keywords, references and bibliographical pointers, but not as a source in itself. Remember that Wikipedia is a wiki, which means that anyone in the world can edit an article, deleting accurate information or adding false information, which the reader may not recognize.’

Deliciously paradoxical, isn’t it – Wikipedia becomes more authoritative, precisely by denying it’s own authority!!

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What is this blog about?

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Edited by Sue Capener, Saturday, 29 Aug 2009, 18:56

Hello to whoever is reading this. If you are an H800 student, you'll have a good idea what this blog is about but if not, you may like to read on.

H800 is an Open University (OU) course (part of the Masters in Online and Distance Education) entitled 'Technology Enhanced Learning: Practices and Debates'. I work for the OU, sometimes teaching but more often working with tutors, and getting involved formally and informally in the development of their teaching, and since the online and distance education is the OU's 'thing', I'm studying the course.

The course has a strong participative ethos and encourages us to try out as many online educational media as we can. Hence this blog!

I have blogged a bit before - again when little short of compelled (I mean 'encouraged' of course) to do so by an OU course. It was Beginners' Italian, so my posts were short and tedious. I'm afraid my posts here may be long and tedious, but I will try to avoid that. Some students and, especially, tutors wrote loads of useful stuff and provided fantastic links, holiday photos and everything - so I did enjoy reading other peoples'.

Mostly then, I'll be posting my thoughts on various things we do as part of H800, and, given time, some tips on useful things I've found.

It's a joy to receive comments, so do please browse through and let me know you're there.

Sue

 

 

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