March, 2008

How flexible do we need to be?

This week’s post for the Designing for flexible learning course focuses on the question

  • Do we need more flexible learning, or is all this choice a bad idea?

I’m inspired by this post about choosing to ‘simplify things‘.

There was a great video[1] that we have used in our “Decision Making and Choice” lecture that suggested that too much choice is bad. Barry Schwartz is a psychologist and suggests that “Too many choices undermine happiness.” While this is probably more than we generally offer in ‘flexible learning’, I’m becoming conscious of the impact of choice in learning on students. I’m often asked “But what do I have to do to pass?” In some ways, these students are asking me to take away their choice, to take away the option of failure, to make the decision of what to do. And while I’d love to do that, I know that they need to move beyond their current understanding of whatever it is they’re doing. That’s the whole point of an education, methinks.

So, getting back to the question, I think too much choice is bad. I believe that we may need to provide choice, but only limited choice. Yes, you can study at a distance, you can opt out of coming to class, but you do miss out on things[2]. I try to provide some flexibility, but it’s fairly limited, particularly with the first year students who are only just coming into the academic way.

At my previous uni, there was much much more in the way of flexibility. All course material was presented in either printed version or CD with a complete version often offered online. Students could choose to use what they needed, when they needed it. This was great for motivated students, students who had already chosen to become engage. But for the marginal students, it almost offered a way out of engagement. It almost perpetuated the ‘please tell me what to do‘ mentality.

On the other hand, for some of the lecturers offering more flexible opportunities, it offered them a way out of engaging with students. All of those flexible courses had an email discussion list[3]. Now the beauty of the email lists was that students could ask questions at any time of day, any day of the week (and they did). But, only for the lists where there was more than just a suggestion that the lists would be helpful. The most notable failure of these lists was a course where the it was stated that the list was a ‘self-help group‘. This list was the least used of any of the four that I studied. At the other end of the spectrum was the list that was framed as a ‘way to get answers to your problems‘ and that ‘tutors would be available to answer those questions‘. This list became a repository of answers to common questions and many students engaged very deeply with the concepts of the course (in stark contrast to the ‘self-help group‘). Some of the respondents to my survey were on both lists and contrasted them well. Those who only had the ‘self-help group‘ as a measure of these lists thought they were useless and ‘a waste of time‘.

How does this relate to choice? Well, with the lecturer choosing to leave it unattended, expecting students to help themselves, there was little flexibility in the learning process. There were really no options in getting help (too little choice?). In the other course, where the tutors were checking and responding regularly, there was a choice. Students could choose to ask questions, they could wait to see if someone else asked, or they could study along at their own pace and search the list for answers[4]. It truly was a flexible learning environment even though there was the same set up, the same technologies, the same environment for both lists.

So, it’s our choices, as teachers, as lecturers, as facilitators of learning, that provides the flexibility, not necessarily the options that we give students.

To go back to the video I referenced and to quote Barry Schwarz: Is this good news or bad news?

His answer – Yes! I’m inclined to agree with him.

  1. TED: Barry Schwartz: The paradox of choice, http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/93 []
  2. Point to note here is that my current place of work does not offer much in the way of distance learning, but we are headed toward blended learning, in some ways going away from the idea of flexible learning. It was a failed experiment for us []
  3. This was the basis of my PhD research – investigating how students actually engaged in these options. []
  4. This is where the whole idea of vicarious conversations comes from []

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Defining Flexible Learning

Week 2 of the Designing for Flexible Learning course asked the question: What is flexible learning? The opportunity to really reflect on this may be quite hard. In some ways, most of what I do is in the realm of flexible learning, trying to harness the multiple ways that we can work with new technologies. Sometimes it’s quite successful, sometimes it’s not. But I do try to allow for multiple learning opportunities. In fact, I tell students that their exam (which is mandated by external accreditation of a number of our programs) is an opportunity to learn. Most of them look at me quite quizzically because an exam is supposed to be about testing whether they have already learned anything? How, then, can it be an opportunity to learn?

I firmly believe, and have included this in the exam, that reflection upon what you have already learnt is learning. Writing down those reflections is even more of an opportunity to learn. Sometimes as we’re thinking through what we are writing, we put things together in new ways. Hence, we learn. The secret is to encourage that reflection in the exam questions. I’m seeing some evidence that students are learning, mostly learning that they can think beyond the basic recall that is normally a part of an exam.

But, on to this week’s opportunities to learn: Read more of Defining Flexible Learning

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Catching up

A few weeks ago, I decided it would be nice to participate in an online course in online courses, actually an online course in designing for flexible learning. What I didn’t bank on, and should have, was the beginning of semester during which period, I barely have time to scratch myself. In the light on the long weekend, in which I should be doing screencasts for students to use for their wiki assignment, I am going to try to catch up with that.  I’m supposed to be blogging my thoughts.

The first post was supposed to include

  • who you are and your area of expertise;
  • your reasons for doing this course and what you aim to achieve be taking the course

So, here goes. Read more of Catching up

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Rants

I just had a long rant on my old blog (the Griffith ‘official’ one). I’m not sure why, but that interface really irks me. I seem to continually get annoyed every time I sit down to write something there.

It got me thinking though about the whole web2.0 thing. Web2.0 is supposed to be about use-generated content, about community and involvement, and yet, there seems to be a need for control as well as other issues that are really starting to surface. I noted this morning (via my sister) that the whole web2.0 sharing thing is problematic. It seems (according to the New York Times) that web2.0 site Bebo.com has been sold for a whopping $850 million. That strikes me (and Billy too) as being quite amazing particularly as the whole of the site is based around user-generated content. Apparently, the owner of Bebo wanted to make sure that it was good for artists to put their music on the site, that there wasn’t an implied licence to use stuff perpetually (which a lot of licences state), but how then does he justify making so much of the back of these artists? How does he get to sell something for so much that has little value without the user-generated content? When will we see a licence that states that if (when?) the site is sold for a whopping amount some of that will be returned to some of the artists who busted their guts to get stuff out and some recognition? Why isn’t some of that being returned to the creative people?

It seems to me that we’re setting up a similar system to the old ‘labels’, where they make the money and the artist just gets recognition. Recognition won’t pay the bills, sadly.

There seems to be two kinds of social network system being set up. There is the open resources variety (kind of like Wikipedia and WikiEducator) where the objective is to get more content out there for the benefit of millions, and the other sort, which is supposedly open, but which results in someone making millions while the bunnies trying to make it work in some way to make a living make nothing except an increased reputation. I can easily participate in the former (I do have a job that keeps me going, although for how long given my latest rant), and I have very little to offer in the the latter (yes, I can sing, but it’s just not very pleasurable for anyone else). So how do we get these two different models doing what they do best? Getting things to people who want or need them?

At one level, I suppose that’s one of the differences. People need educational resources, but we want music, we want the cultural value of those other resources, we want to belong even just through the knowing of something that speaks to us. Many of us are willing to pay for that, provided we don’t feel ripped off (think of the time wasted watching all those ‘piracy is bad’ messages at the beginning of movies – we just paid for the frelling thing, but if we rip it, if we break some laws in some places we don’t have to put up with being accused of that which we just did in order to avoid being called pirates).

I just mispelt accused as acussed. I think there was a message in that.

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Convergence Vs Divergence

In the lecture the other day, I mentioned the idea of convergence. We often talk about technology convergence, about how a single device now has many functions. I haven’t looked at phones, but I’m pretty sure you can’t just buy a mobile phone. One that is just a phone. Even the old basic phone I had before scoring the Nokia for our project was not only a phone, but had a calculator and a game and a few other functions. But the latest one I have and many that I see have phone capabilities, cameras (both still and video), games, media players, wireless, bluetooth, webbrowsing, calendar, voice recorder and other things that I still haven’t worked out. It’s not a phone. It’s an almost complete … um … it’s a complete device. It has everything but the kitchen sink. About the only thing it can’t do is wash the dishes. We have everything coming together, converging.

But, at the same time, we seem to be railing against bloat. Software bloat. Our hardware is growing ever more compact and versatile while our software is bloating with features that just slow it down. Why is this so? There was talk years ago about modularity in software. Just picking and choosing the bits you need to get the job done. Whatever happened to that idea? I’d really like to know. It just strikes me that that everything in the software area is becoming more and more one size fits all, in much the same as technologies, but it’s more problematic. Take the dreaded M$ products. All of them are bloated. How many of us need all the features embedded there? Can we turn them off? And then there’s that typical bloatware (b)Lotus. It can actually be configured as a webbrowser. Why would you want to browse in your mail app? Although, by the same token, with gmail and other web-based products, we do use our browser for mail. But i digress.

Why do we cheerfully accept more and more features in our technology, but only accept bloat in software because there’s no other choice? It’s certainly something to think about.

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