Posts Tagged ‘wikieducators’

I have a solution

It seems that I got so far behind in the Designing for Flexible Learning course that I am finally getting around to Week 4 just as the course is heading into its last week.  I’ve just read the reading[1] and figured that if I really want to experience flexible learning, I should just keep going at my own pace.  After all, part of what Annand (2007) points to is that we need to provide flexibility for students[2].

The question that was posited for this ‘exercise’[3] was

  • How can distance, correspondence and/or online learning create flexible learning opportunities in your context?

Wow.  That’s a big question.  Considering my PhD was partly related to this, I could theoretically write a dissertation on it.  Harking back to that effort, the whole premise of my thesis was that technologies, such as email, can provide added value to a learning situation.  The context of that study was a predominantly distance institution that provided a study guide, a minimalist web page and an email list.  While I didn’t focus specifically on ‘flexibility’ of learning[4], the underlying assumption was that technologies contribute to flexible learning environments and that an online environment (eg a discussion list) was inherently flexible.  One of my stated findings pointed towards the “potential utility of online learning as a highly accessible pedagogic practice”[5].

Turning my attention to my current context, I have realised this semester, that in an attempt to provide flexible learning opportunities for ‘students’[6], I seem to have overwhelmed myself with maintenance activities.  In some ways, I think I have become too flexible and allowing students too much leeway to get things done.  There seems to be a tradeoff between flexibility and accreditation.  The whole notion of accreditation is based on (in part) comparative achievement of a cohort.  If we are to maintain the accreditable outcomes for students, we must forfeit some flexibility.  Learning can (and does) happen anywhere, but accreditation comes with a cost.

So what kinds of flexibility am I providing for students?  I think there are a number of points in the undergrad (Business Informatics) course that point towards flexibility:

  1. separation of skill competencies from critical competencies
  2. linking of skills and critical competencies
  3. collaborative processes and assessments (building on both skills and critical competencies)
  4. a range of activities that are assessable (providing many opportunities for success) and
  5. a detailed structure (and study guide) that links it all together.

While not all students achieve the high level of critical competencies that I’d like, nearly every student[7] increased their level at entry in skills, critical thinking or both.  I’ve often wondered how to base student learning on their entry level, but for accreditation requirements , we need to state the outcomes and measure against a theoretical set of criteria.

The requirements for the course are competencies in Technologies (knowing how to operate a computer via an online skills based system) and in library literacies (an online tutorial about our library), contribution to a collaborative information repository (a mini wiki in BlackBoard), a business analysis using basic functions of a spreadsheet plus writing a report and a presentation for it (but not giving the presentation).  There’s also a fifty percent exam (an accreditation requirement) in which we use the SOLO taxonomy to measure student achievement in two questions about business and topics from the course.

One of the problems I’m encountering from this course is that students who think they know a lot about computers believe the course will not teach them anything and they often fail to become critical users of technology.  Another problem is the desire of students for facts.  They do not like that I do not provide a ‘powerpoint’ presentation with lots of dot points that they can simply remember.  It seems, in some ways, that they do not desire ‘flexibility’.  However, upon reflection, these students are typically straight from school and have perhaps been programmed to accept the memorisation of facts as exhibiting ‘learning’.

I’m tempted next semester to introduce them to Bloom’s taxonomy as the underlying philosophy of the course[8], although I found a really interesting twist on Bloom on Flickr where the triangle was turned upside down.  I like this because it’s really where I’m focussing on in this course, on the so called ‘higher capabilities’.  It’s like I told students at the start of the course:

There are no facts here, just new ways of thinking.

I suppose, getting back to the question, my teaching becomes very much about flexible learning opportunities because the students in my course are so diverse that there needs to be opportunities for success for all of them.  That to, me, is truly flexible.

  1. Annand, D, 2007, Re-organizing Universities for the Information Age, The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, Vol 8, No 3, http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/372/952 []
  2. I’m tempted to stop using the term ‘student‘ altogether in favour of ‘learner‘ as ‘student’ implies enrolment at an educational institution []
  3. I can’t really call it ‘week’ as the ‘week’ was in April and it’s now June []
  4. I just checked, I mentioned ‘flexible’ 4 times []
  5. To read the abstract (with a link to the dissertation in its entirety) go here []
  6. Okay, I’m a learner, but they are students.  I suppose that arises from what Annand highlights as one of the problematics of the current educational paradigm in universities – cohort based learning []
  7. The cohort size was just under 300, so that’s a pretty good achievement []
  8. Thanks to Barbara Dieu for reminding me of this, see http://www.wikieducator.org/ELT_Resources/visual_and_critical_literacy []

Tags: ,

And breathe

Well, that was interesting.

Two weeks left of semester.  All my plans of learning new things with the Designing for Flexible Learning Practice Course and Learning Ruby on Rails have come to naught under the weight of the Wiki Assignment and The Dreaded Excel Assignment.  I’m not sure where all my time goes, but it seems there is way too much spent on managing technology.  I’m even behind on reading my feeds.

But I’ve had a few interesting discussions lately.  One during a web services advisory meeting where we started to talk about video, got on to YouTube and ended up discussing the vagaries of txt spk.  It reminded me of the book I have had in mind to write for a while.  There seems to be a need for something that maps pedagogy onto process onto technology.  I’ve spoken to people about this mentioning mapping technology and pedagogy and seemed to get a negative response.  But the other day, someone at the meeting was talking about how we know what technology supports what kinds of learning and I said “That’s the book I want to write!”  The reply was a very positive: “That’s the book I want to read.”  That’s my plan for the next few months.  I think.  I’m going to try to think about all the things we try to do and all the technologies we currently have (or seem to be appearing on the horizon) and see whether I can come up with ‘flexible’ approaches to using the technology to achieve particular learning outcomes.  Whenever I have time, I’ll post something here to get my ideas down and hopefully next year, get some time off teaching to start putting it together.

The other interesting ‘discussion’ was between Luke (the co-convenor of the two of the wiki courses I teach) and me and we got very vocal and passionate about our ideas when after about 30 minutes we realised we were arguing the same point.  It seems that I know all this stuff about wikis and students don’t [true].   It seems that I need to structure the entry points for the courses better [I do].  Luke kept telling me how I was way up here and everyone else is way down there (picture, if you will, a big burly guy waving his arms up and down).  Meanwhile, I’m trying to tell him that we should modify the WikiEducator tutorials and put them into our course to meet the needs of our students.  I think we’ll be taking the editing and formatting pages and putting them somewhere for the students.  Where Luke and I are a bit vague is how to reward students for this.  They are skills the students need to complete the assessment so it could be worth 5% of their marks to complete them (and creating their own page in Blackboard in the process) or it could be they get access to the space (more wikis – just what I need) to submit their assessment.  I’m in two minds about this (classic sign of a gemini).  On the one hand, they are learning and demonstrating their learning, on the other hand, they will be assessed separately for how they submit their annotations in the assessment wiki.

Perhaps there is a compromise.  Perhaps we need to reward them for learning, but when it comes to the assessment item, detract marks for silly mistakes that they shouldn’t have made if they’ve done the wiki learning task.  That feels a bit like punishing them, but if we start from the assumption that they can do it and they have already been rewarded for achievement, we shouldn’t need to reassess that (except where it makes life difficult for everyone).  Given our recent experience with the simplified wikis in Blackboard, I’m inclined toward rewarding the learning task then detracting marks.  It’s way too easy for them to not care whether they’ve got it in the right place, whether they’ve deleted someone else’s work, whether it’s logical to put information about spreadsheets on a page named word-processors or even if the page name is important.

I suppose this will be a topic for another discussion with Luke.

Tags: , , ,

Fiddling with files

This weekend I’ve managed to install a couple of different applications to help me do what I want to.

The first thing was eXe (which is a bizarre thing to have on a Mac). It’s a small app which assists in the development of learning materials. Without having to know anything at all about HTML, XHTML, XML, CSS or any other acronym. I’ve just about finished organising the study guide for the undergrad course and I flicked the link and the file to Luke who also managed to update that version for the postgrads. Funnily enough the postgrad version seems closer to completion than the undergrad one. Seems he is much better at solving problems than I am. But needless to say, I am quite chuffed at having found that from WikiEducators. (BTW if you’re interested in using wikis for learning, do look it up.)

The other thing I have just installed is MAMP which runs a server so I can finally get around to learning enough to fix this blog. I got the server running and managed to install a local version of wordpress, so I can investigate what I did wrong and find out how to make it right. I still haven’t updated it and it’s already the end of Sunday which is usually my day for play (but I played with work … or worked at play … or something). Hopefully, I will work out enough to redo the design to match the redesigned front page (isn’t it pretty?).

Only time will tell.

Tags: , , ,

Theme by RoseCityGardens.com
Modified by Me!