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NMC Horizon Studies

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On reading the 2015 NMC Horizon study it seemed to me to be a sound assessment of the way technologies are heading in education but some areas seemed to lack ambition. This could obviously be down to the fact that education is well known to be slow on the uptake of new technologies, and the writers did not have the luxury of hindsight. One area which struck me was adaptive learning technologies which in the 2015 report it was pitched at 4 to 5 years and by the 2017 report is a year or less, these technologies in some way are already being used in education, in this way I think the report was being conservative, much like education itself. The internet of things was part of the 2015 report and again in 2017, on the same timeline moving from 4-5 years to 2-3 years. This one is very hard to gauge in my opinion as the term encompasses such a broad area who is to say when the uptake of these technologies really happen, some institutions would argue now Virginia Tech and The University of New South Wales for example, as mentioned in the report. I would imagine we will see a slow proliferation of these technologies making their way into institutions.

A couple of technologies that really interested me from the 2017 report was Artificial intelligence and next generation VLE's, these are both areas that have the capacity to have a profound effect on education and these are areas that could well work together. There are already applications coming to market that use AI capability one such application is seeing AI by Microsoft, this application uses the camera on a phone and describes the world around it. It is described as being designed for the low vision community. The adoption timeline for the next generation VLE's is 2-3 years and Artificial intelligence 4-5 years, if the desire is there I'm sure these timelines could be on the pessimistic side as the technologies are in place already, the need is definitely there in both areas especially as there is a general acceptance that students need a more personalised learning experience.

A technology that is missing from the reports in my opinion, and a technology that I have spoken about at some length is blockchain technology. This could have a profound effect on education and specifically the measurement of achievement and dissemination of research (a discussion of the form in which this may take place this can be found at http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/10187). A site called steemit came on the scene in 2016 that also utilises blockchain technology and encourages users to post content and in return are given tokens, depending on the popularity of the piece, each post can be upvoted, so more votes, more rewards. With regards to measuring achievement a platform is being developed at appii.io that is utilising blockchain technology to securely keep records of achievement but also connect students and employers to maximise student's strengths and preferences with employer needs. I am surprised that blockchain technology has never made it into the report, the authors may have their reasons for this but in my opinion this technology will change the educational landscape and beyond in profound ways and I would place this at the mid term of 2-3 years.

Am I too optimistic? 





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Three Little Monkeys

Already on the PLE Highway?

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Edited by Andrew Brooks, Saturday, 15 Jul 2017, 14:41

Personal Learning Environment

I don’t think it would be too controversial to say that the use of some kind of PLE in education is becoming more commonplace as people start to make use of technologies in various areas of their life. Where is this all heading? If we can accept that students learn in different ways and what is good for one student may not be good for another then we have to accept that a one size fits all system is not optimum either. As Weller points out in the Sclater/Weller (2016) podcast that students do not want to use an inferior system in their studies than they are using in their leisure time, they’re are some great free tools out there that work very well, but as Sclater counters that students need to be able to interact so they must be using systems that allow this, although it is a red herring to suggest that a good reason for not partaking in the use of different technologies in the form of a PLE is in case of technical failure, of course any platform can fail but if your environment is distributed then it is much less likely your whole environment is down at the same time. It is true that there needs to be some consistency for ease of communication, but at the same time students needs and preferences need to be taken into account for optimum learning potential, after all there are a vast range of technologies waiting to be exploited, along with a vast range of preferences. How would this work? Some kind of hybrid system? Maybe it is fair comment from sclater to suggest that far from the VLE being put out to pasture it could become more of a back end system. This is the direction I see for the PLE. We do need to give students ownership over the tools they use if they are to get the most out of their learning as they possibly can, but their needs to be a route for the students to maintain fluid communication. This currently does not happen with the VLE either, forums are not instant or fluid enough and the whole system is a little restrictive when compared to the tools that can be utilised in everyday life. What would be better and a potential direction is for students to choose the tools that they wish to use and have a system that interacts with these platforms giving students the flexibility of using their PLE whilst keeping the ability to communicate, of course there may be situations that need to be kept in a closed forum or at least desirable, but a more flexible system is surely more beneficial for all. Is this fanciful? Is education heading down the PLE highway? Its already on it, where to next?

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