Posts Tagged ‘learning’

Passion: 3 things

I was watching the TED videos the other day.  I finally got around to setting up an RSS feed for them and ended up with 357 items in my reader.  I love the TED videos and often use one or two in my classes.  They seem to say things in more compelling ways than I can, and grab the attention of students.  But one of them got me thinking about an issue that has been plaguing me for some time – somewhere in the vacinity of 5 years.  That talk was Tony Robbins: Why we do what we do, and how we can do it better. From reading the comments, I get that people either love him or hate him.  I’ve heard the name before, but had not really paid attention.  The thing that got me was that this talk connected to me at the level of that 5+ year old issue – the issue of what I really want to do with my life.  I keep thinking that I have lost the passion for things, but the problem isn’t that I don’t have passion, it’s that it’s very diverse and in the moment.  Things affect me NOW and I latch onto that – sometimes following through, sometimes not.

So I suppose I’m really at the stage of working out what issues are really important and which are worth my time.  What things do I want to focus on.  The video allowed me to contemplate that.  This post is an attempt to qualify that – to give shape and form to the things that really matter. Read more of Passion: 3 things

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Shifting teaching and learning

Now that it’s the end of one semester and there is a large break til the beginning of the next, I really want to think about what I want to achieve in teaching and learning over the next year.  I have so many ideas, some based on the work I do with Luke on wiki learning environments, some based on pod and vodcasting and some based on online testing environments.

There are a number of things I have to do to get the first year students more engaged in learning about new technologies.  I got the same kind of feedback I normally get from the last group, specifically, I don’t teach them facts that they can regurgitate so I must be a poor teacher.  Admittedly, my evals have improved even if I still don’t focus on facts.  Part of the reason for the improvements were not really my doing, but are the results of imput from another colleague into the structure of the assessment details.  The document we now have is a good pro forma for future years with everything laid out in a clear manner.  Thus students cannot and do not complain that they do not know what they have to do.

Limited attendance

But I still have fairly limited attendance at lectures.  The course is always given the biggest lecture theatre which doesn’t really make for a good learning environment and students expect to be lectured at and are often surprised when they are also entertained.  Which is probably where the perceived lack of facts originates.  All the facts are bound up in stories, so much so that the often don’t realise they are learning until the exam.  But, I know there will always be this small cohort of students who don’t want to be entertained, who equate learning with boredom.  So, I’ve been thinking of attempting to video a short lecturette around the ‘facts’ which students can download and watch but still do the longer entertaining lecture for the majority.  It has the added bonus that I don’t have to bore myself and those in the room with me.

Idea 1: short videos about the ‘topic’ of the week without all the entertaining and contextual information.  I will probably need to convince my HoD to give me a new, better computer.  Wish me luck with that one.

Competency development

I don’t care what anyone says – we do not have net saavy students in Australia.  We do not have tech saavy students in Australia.  We do have many students from different cultural backgrounds who have rarely, if ever, interacted in a constructivist/constructionist environment.  We need to develop competencies in both the technologies and the learning environment.  Herein lies some of the disengagement of local students and much of the confusion of international students.  We have two competencies in the course

  1. Technology/computer competencies
  2. Research competencies.

We have been using an external provider for the tech/comp competencies, but I’m not altogether happy with that.  They have take so long to fix some of the bugs that we found two years ago, while they were busy updating for Vista compatability, all the while ignoring any lip service to Mac compatability that I really don’t know that I want to continue subjecting students to it. The alternative would be to develop my own competency online test within the facilites we have.  This would align the tech/comp competencies with the research competencies that are provided in house.  I think initially I would need to provide a test case based on filtering out students who are competent with computers. If they pass this in house competency test (at 80 or 90%) then they do not have to fight with the external providers version. At the moment, all students have to do the competency and this does seem to annoy the few students who are saavy.  It would also allow us to focus our attention on the students who need more help.

Idea 2: Develop a pre-test for tech/comp competencies

I think I’ll leave the wiki reflection for another time.  I have to unpack the differences between the limited wiki and the full wiki and see where the engagement happens.

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Reflecting on Collaborative Assessment

I’m about to start the dreaded task of marking the wiki for Mobile Workforce Technologies.  I struggle with this every time.  I want to encourage student collaboration, but, when it comes to marking it, I want it easy to work out who did what so I can award a ‘mark’.  It’s something that becomes quite nerve wracking at some levels.

For each page in the wiki, there is a main player, the person who started the topic, and put in much, if not most, of the effort.  They have vested their learning in it.  They deserve the recognition for it.  But then, there’s the minor contributors.  They have seen opportunities for expanding on work, for adding to the totallity of the topic.

In previous years, most pages were single author, partly because Luke and I struggled with the notion of collaboration almost as much as the students do.  The eternal question becomes “how will you know who did what?”  We always say that we refer to the history of each page and can work out who contributes what.  So we have a kind of objective way of measuring what’s been going on.  But, it makes the marking so fraught with decisions.  How much effort did each contributor put in?  Is it directly related to the number of edits? The amount of each edit?  How thoroughly do we go through each page to extract the amount of work each student does?

The history does overcome the traditional group work problem of the free loader.  There are no free loaders here.  And, if there are, they are easy to find.  We know who has contributed, who has participated, who has engaged with learning.  We can find them and this becomes evident in the participation mark (this will deserve a post of its own when I get to it).

But the contribution of each student, the measure of their learning, this is where we have our work cut out for us.  How much did each student learn about the core concepts of both the topics and the values of collaborative work environments?  That’s what we’re really measuring. And that’s what we have to find.

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Mobile Workforces – Technology to change the world!

I’m just preparing for the last class of Mobile Workforce Technologies and am trying to reflect on what came out of it this year.  Each time we run this course, it’s different.  But I don’t think we have fully achieved the aim of building the text book for the course, yet.  It’s getting close.  I think there are a few more pieces of structure that need to be in place for it to happen.  I hesitate to add too much structure, because it’s the very unstructured nature of the course that can be so powerful for student learning.

The table of contents concept that I’ve used for the last two versions of the course has started to come together, but it’s still a fairly incoherent attempt by students to organise the information.  I think it may be that as it’s currently structured, deciding on a topic and getting the information seems to be the limit to what students produce.  The contents page ended up as an alphabetised list of topics until I put a bit of structure onto the page and students started filling in the blank.  I need to come up with a way of getting students to undertake the task of organising what they make.

Perhaps the process, the assessment, could include marks towards organising information whereby students must contribute to the contents page and provide a summary for at least one article as well as contributing to a discussion about how best to structure the topics.  This is a possibility, but I’m concerned that a few committed students would take on the task before anyone else had a chance.

Or, what if there was a forum where multiple people could write a synopsis for a page and then everyone vote on the best one, which then gets added to the contents.  This would give students opportunity for creating the synopsis and engaging with other student’s work in a deeper, more reflective way.  Hmm, will have to see how I can put that in the requirements.

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Crazy roller coaster ride to success

Yesterday was the due date for my undergrads big assignment.  Online submission, three files, many requirements.  Like always, there was many many many last minute panics.  Everything from pdfing files (not required) to clicking submit before uploading files.  I told students I would try to respond within 30 minutes and for the most part, I did, but some students felt that was too short and used other communication channels so I had messages coming from every direction (including a phone call from the help desk, following from their email about a student (who had aready emailed me and to which I had already responded) to which I had already responded (both the student AND helpdesk)).

I’m now convinced that students do not read.  Period.  All the information was there (and I suppose I should give credit to the 50% of students who didn’t need help), but seriously, how hard is it?  The explanation is there, there’s a downloadable file, and there’s the printout we gave them 9 weeks ago.  It’s shocking to have to keep a whole day clear because some students don’t listen.

But I digress.

It’s over, that’s what counts.

Now to get on with my research while my tutors mark. Or maybe put that aside as well and enjoy the seven days before my daughter flies to Canada to embark on a new career (not to mention life and climate).

Dang, and now the drummer has started up.  I just wish he’d focus on his sense of rhythm, which I’m lead to believe is really important for drummers.

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