Posts Tagged ‘teaching’

Remix culture vs the Cut and Paste Collective

The more I think about the ways in which students (not all but many) approach learning and hence assignments, the more I wonder about the so-called remix culture. The Remix culture is what students are being exposed to. Snippets from here there and everywhere, linking to this and that. The remix culture is kinda central to the whole notion of the web.

But, and here I get a little fuzzy, this culture is not what learning is about. It brings to mind the notion of feral learning that Nunan hinted at way back in 1996. There seems to be no culture of learning. I’m beginning to think of it in terms of the Cut and Paste Collective. Everything on the web is available for cutting and pasting and it really doesn’t matter who first said it. (There’s a great article by Hess that I have bookmarked on CiteULike that I must (re)read.) Remixing is a cultural phenomena, one that is acceptable within many ‘social’ circles. According to Hess, remixers have a particular style and way of citing their originals. Aurally, the sample is recognisable. Sampling is an accepted practicce. However it is decidedly not acceptable within academia but it’s an argument that I find hard to make and hard to instill in the so-called net generation. But, my recent re-reading of Bruffee kinda lets me into a little secret. It’s the academic culture that we need to bring students to. Like Nunan said about flexible learning: Basically, the argument is that flexible learning (and flexible delivery) is the form of learning carried by the information technologies and that student expectations about teaching and learning and their approach to learning (feral learning?) is increasingly a factor of their experience of using information technologies. So, their experience of the information culture is to cut and paste. Why have it there if it’s not open to cutting and pasting?

The way students come to us, as part of the cut and paste collective, needs to be firmly deconstructed (gee, did I just use that word?). This is my goal for 2007: to investigate the cut and paste collective and to figure out ways to help students to see beyond that.

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More about the wiki

What did I expect when I set out to get students to use the wiki? I dont think I really expected much. The minimum they had to do was create two pages and write at least 1500 words in the wiki (this for 40% of their grade). The two pages consisted on one technical page and one social/business application of technology page. I figured this would be a fair assignment, not requring too much effort, yet getting them involved in both learning processes and creating learning outcomes. They also had to journal their experiences of the wiki with some reflection on their learning (15% of their grade). The third aspect of assessment was styled participation and was to be extracted from the wiki. Participation in this case included every login, every update, every comment, private messages, blog posts, whatever they actually did. It gave a measurable value to their participation, something that I knew I could point to as ‘hard evidence’ of participation rather than the vague and subjective measures of classroom participation in face-to-face classes (I’ve always had a problem with these kinds of measures as students often conflate participation and presence). The only thing the wiki didn’t log was their movement around the site, what they read, etc. This would have given a clear indication of their vicarious participation/interaction which is clearly different from the more active forms of participation that we grade. But yes, the activities in the wiki accounted for 70% of their grades (the other 30% was development of a website, an assessment item I’m considering dropping in favour of a short exam, but I’ll get to that later).

So, I expected at least two pages to be created per student. I figured with the cap for this class to be about 30 students, that would result in probably 60 pages to assess. That seemed manageable, given that actually assessing the pages was something I had no idea how to do at the beginning, particularly given that I needed to be sure what each student was responsible for.

What did I get? Well, instead of 60 pages, I got nigh on 160 pages. Not all of the pages were good content and there seemed to be a tendency for students to ‘own’ them by signing them or in same way linking them to their perceived notion of output (I really need to examine all the pages individually to check this). Assessing the pages became a real headache as some were edited by only a single person while the most was 20, and oh bugger, my excel file has been corrupted. Will continue this anon.

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Testing, Testing

I’ve been playing with my new mac now I’m on holidays. I’ve installed a heap of widgets but the ljpost one would only hold one login at a time. So I modified the code, but only sufficiently to enable a second instance of ljpost to be handled by the dashboard.

I think I really like my new mac.

But I really should stop playing with it and mark that masters thesis.

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Oh … My … Gosh

I haven’t been around much lately. Semester is finally over and assessment of students’ participation in the wiki is about to start. The first student has submitted their journal. I was expecting maybe 5 pages. They needed to create at least 2-3 pages in the wiki.

This journal is 30 pages long (and that’s after I changed the line spacing to single). The student has worked on a total of 28 pages. This has so exceeded my expectation. I hope the others aren’t as dedicated as this student.

I need an analogy for this.

These students have taken to this like ducks to water.
These students have taken to this like starving children.

There has to be a better analogy. Got analogy?

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This is seriously borked!

In a class of their own: teaching tailored for the guys

http://url.edna.edu.au/5t4R

A boys-only kindergarten class at Bowen Public School in Orange is one of the first in NSW and is part of a strategy to tailor teaching to the special learning needs of boys. “It is beneficial to the boys in terms of self-esteem not to have the competitiveness of girls in the class and the ‘miss perfects’ who can often be a threat to boys and undermine their self-confidence,” according to teacher, Steve Jackson.
Sydney Morning Herald, 3 October 2006

C’mon! Don’t they get enough in life? We haven’t yet leveled the playing field and it’s being tipped back towards boys? Seriously!

If they are having boys only classes, where are the girls only classes? What about the research that says boys learn better in mixed classes than girls, while girls learn better in single sex classes? I really can’t understand the need for single-sex classes for boys at the pre-school level. And I’m flabbergasted that girls have been repositioned as competitive because they are quiet! All the talk about getting girls to loosen up, to participate in class and that’s now seen as an attempt to undermine boys?

Sheesh! The world turneth in bizarre ways.

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