October 28, 2009

Digital Learners in Higher Ed Report Released

The Phase 1 report of the Digital Learners in Higher Education research project concludes that there is no empirically-sound basis for most of the claims that have been made about the Net Generation. The study reviewed the net generation literature and research and surveyed a random sample of BCIT second year students. The findings show that there are no meaningful differences between Net Generation and non- Net Generation students at BCIT in terms of their use of technology, their behavioural characteristics and learning preferences.

Read the full report.

October 26, 2009

Factors for Successful Implementation of Online & Blended Learning

I participated on a panel of postsecondary administrators at the The Future of Online and Blended Learning conference this morning. My contribution focused on the key factors for implementing online and blended learning in campus-based institutions that is sustainable, strategic and programmatic as opposed to ad-hoc and experimental. The factors I identified:

1. Institutional culture
Teaching must be valued and online and blended learning must be part of the strategic direction of the institution.

2. Support
There must tangible support that integrates pedagogical and technical and face-to-face and online. There needs to be a balance between centralized and school-based support.

3. Program and Course Development Processes
These need to be consistent and program design needs to be based identified needs.

See my presentation for more details of these three factors.

October 21, 2009

Open Ed Tech 2009: A Call to Action

An official communiqué has now been issued by the Open Educational Technology 2009 summit. The Call to Action provides the context for the summit and the final action items. Interestingly, the eight action items agreed to by the participants have been reduced to five.

1. We must encourage the reuse and remixing of rich media. In order to achieve this, it

must be easier to find, use, and cite pieces of media, especially for educational

purposes. Contextual tools that perform these tasks, co-developed by students as the

end-users, must be created and made available to all. We must also develop ways to

translate rich media, not only between languages, but also between modalities, such

that content produced in a certain geographical area and medium may be accessed

and reused in other places and in other forms. Portability of rich media is key; content

must not be tied to a certain platform for delivery, nor to a specific medium or

environment.

2. We must embrace the full promise of mobile devices as learning platforms. Mobiles

— not simply phones, but all kinds of handheld and portable devices — are a

powerful tool for learning because they are controlled by the holder. With mobile

devices, users can direct their own learning experiences, accessing information where

and when they need it. It is critical that we effect a paradigm shift toward recognizing

mobiles as a primary platform for delivery of educational content — not content that

is translated for use on mobiles, but content that is designed for such use from the

outset. We must actively encourage development practices that remove platform

independency. Likewise, we must advocate for a global mobile network that is as easy

to use, as inexpensive, and even more ubiquitous than the web.

3. We must award credentials based on learning outcomes. It is time to recognize the

learning that occurs outside of courses and beyond classroom walls. The model of

awarding credentials solely on the basis of participation in established programs must

give way to a more flexible design that separates credentials from coursework and

recognizes mastery regardless of where or how it is attained. As more learners choose

alternate means of education, including non-university programs, mentoring,

apprenticeship, and other informal or innovative options, we must accept and

recognize their achievements as equivalent to those gained in more traditional ways.


4. We must enable a culture of sharing. Recognizing that the sharing and reuse of

scholarly work is a key component of the university of the future, we advocate

building a culture of sharing in which concerns about intellectual property, copyright,

and student-to-student collaboration are alleviated and the model of proprietary work

dissolves in favor of a more open one. To this end, we must establish reward structures

that support the sharing of work in progress, ongoing research, highly collaborative

projects, and scholarly publications of all kinds, including reputation systems, peer

review processes, and new models for citation of such content. We must empower

students to share knowledge with one another in ways that are viewed as

collaboration rather than cheating. Assessment models must change to support these

practices. Ultimately, we see a culture of sharing as a crucial piece of the infrastructure

of a scalable educational system that can support the millions of learners who will

participate in it.

5. We must take care that open resources include the context that will enable its use and

understanding. Content out of context is at best easy to misconstrue, and at worst,

too difficult to use. Producers of open content must consider ways of attaching

pedagogical narratives to content that will help provide necessary context. One

approach is the notion of “pedagogical wrappers” — specific guidelines and processes

that can ensure the content is placed in an appropriate context — or in the case of

broadly useful topics, a variety of appropriate contexts. Such wrappers would ensure

that the focus remains on learning objectives and process, rather than on the

technology used to deliver the learning materials.


Read the full communiqué.

Open Education 2009

Action Steps Towards Open Access Higher Education

The second Open Educational Technology Summit wrapped up yesterday with the adoption of eight action steps or goals that define a vision for open access education. The event brought together 40 participants from around the world with expertise in different areas of education. We we worked in teams of ten to brainstorm around four themes:
1. Access to high quality education for all, and the role of open content
2. Informal learning, and the role of the mentor in choice making
3. Personalized learning, and learning standards that work across borders
4. Applications of digital video, mobile devices, social media, and the global network
The idea was to think about how these themes could be incorporated into a hypothetical new post-secondary institution with a mandate to provide high quality education in an environment of open access. The event was organized by the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya and the New Media Consortium.
The summit settled on eight action steps:
1. Annotate, index and share rich media
2. Move to a paradigm of mobiles as personal learning devices/environments
3. Base credentials on outcomes not seat time
4. Enable cultures of sharing
5. Develop pedagogical wrappers for content
6. Support leadership that takes risks
7. Extend multiple literacies/digital literacies
8. Create sabbatical experiences for learners
I think it is probably more useful to think of these as the key themes of a vision for this new institution rather than concrete action steps. Clearly each needs some definition to be meaningful as they have multiple interpretations. They each emerged out of the small group brainstorming so they are based on some specific ideas. Over the coming days, the action steps will be elaborated and defined.
More information about the Summit is available from the Open Ed Tech 2009 Wiki

October 20, 2009

Medbiquitous: blueprint for medical ed tech

A lot of time, effort and money goes into developing learning objects for healthcare education. Learning repositories such as MedEdPortal provide the space for objects to be shared. However, differences in formats and platforms create technological barriers to sharability.

Medbiquitous is a group creating a technology blueprint for healthcare education so that universities, healthcare providers, governmental and commercial groups can share healthcare-related learning objects across platforms. They are specifically focusing on:
  • healthcare learning object metadata
  • SCORM for healthcare
  • Virtual Patients
  • Medical education metrics
  • activity reporting
  • competencies
MedBiquitous adheres to the principles of openness and due process for its standards development activities. Educators and industry alike collaborate to develop standards and exchange ideas about innovative uses of Web technologies for healthcare education and communities of practice.

ETUG conference - Cloudworks

Today is Day 1 of the ETUG conference - all day workshop focussed on learning design led by Grainne Conole, using Cloudworks: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/index.php

Google Wave and teaching and learning

The future is here... or perhaps not....

Google has sent out 100,000 invitations to testers around the world to test Google Wave. Is this the future of communication? How will this tool impact teaching and learning? How will it influence collaborative work and collaborative learning design?

This blog post reflects a bit on some of these issues.

October 19, 2009

Desire2Learn Training Session Survey

Have you participated in a Desire2Learn training session this Fall (September-October 2009)? If so, we would love to hear from you!

To assist us in making the training sessions as useful to you as possible, please take a few moments and fill out the survey (linked below). Note: ALL surveys are anonymous. Your feedback is GREATLY appreciated.

Click Here to take survey

October 13, 2009

Journal of Learning Design and Educational Topics Exchange # 1

For those of you interested in the topic, the Journal of Learning Design is an open access publication and describes itself as:  
A venue for the dissemination of valuable and significant works by educational and training practitioners that have resulted in enhanced learning outcomes for students and learners. 

The most recent issue covers a range of instructional design topics from an international perspective.  This is a good starting point if you're still hunting for an article to talk about at our first Educational Topics Exchange being held today from 1130-1230.  Meeting place is in the big atrium in the Town Hall building.

October 9, 2009

Future trends for Canadian higher-education institutions

Higher-education adviser Alex Usher stirs some thought on a few future trends for education: from the now harsh reality of government cuts to the growing significance of open content with global and international characteristics. Have a look at his article in University Affairs:

Back to the future: Imagining the future of Canadian post-secondary education

October 6, 2009

Insidious Pedagogy

Here's an interesting article that argues that most instructors rely on the built-in instructivist pedagogy of course management systems rather than exploiting the more creative possibilities. Lisa Lane argues,

"most college instructors do not work or play much on the Web, and thus utilize Web–based systems primarily at their basic level. The defaults of the CMS therefore tend to determine the way Web–novice faculty teach online, encouraging methods based on posting of material and engendering usage that focuses on administrative tasks. A solution to this underutilization of the CMS is to focus on pedagogy for Web–novice faculty and allow a choice of CMS."

Insidious Pedagogy: How Course Management Systems Impact Teaching

Professional Development Opportunities in October

Fall Workshop: ETUG
Registration is now open for this fall's ETUG (Educational Technology User Group) workshop series. The theme is "Learning Design" and the event will take place October 20 and 21 at the Segal School of Business at Simon Fraser University.

The 2 day event is $50 + GST and includes breakfast, lunch, and refreshments.

  • Day 2: Grainne will give the opening plenary which will be followed by an exciting lineup of speakers on the following topics: learning space design, designing for engagement, large scale learning design, and collaborative learning models.
For more information about the workshop series go to: http://etug.ca/

The Art of Teaching: Oct 19-Nov 6, 2009

Facilitators: Neil Smith and Nancy Randall

Each week of this 3-week seminar will be launched with an Art of Teaching video and live discussion in Elluminate (http://tinyurl.com/9m668l)

Week 1: Intro, Bridging, Outcomes
Elluminate session: Monday, October 19, 10 - 11:00 PDT (your time zone)

Week 2: Pre-assessment, Participation
Elluminate session: Monday, October 26, 10 - 11:00 PDT (your time zone)

Week 3: Post-assessment, Summary
Elluminate session: Monday, November 2, 10 - 11:00 PST* (your time zone)

This discussion will begin October 19, 2009.
* Note, there is a change from Pacific Daylight to Pacific Standard on November 1, 2009


The Future of Online and Blended Learning: Strategy, Policy, and Practice

Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 24-26, 2009

This conference will address the current and future impact of online and blended (hybrid) learning on institutions of higher education. We expect a lively discussion inspired by successful practitioners of these new forms of post-secondary education, as well as by senior administrators of institutions that are making the transition to online and blended learning.

A keynote address by Chuck Dziuban will set the tone for the conference. Dr. Dziuban is the Director of the Research Initiative for Teaching Effectiveness at the University of Central Florida, an institution widely recognized for its success in adding online and blended learning to its traditional face-to-face offerings. There will also be an expert panel of successful practitioners, as well as a panel discussion by senior administrators who are working to adapt their institutions to the future of online and blended learning.

The conference will also feature a number of concurrent sessions and poster presentations.

This conference is sponsored by the Canadian Society for the Study of Higher Education (CSSHE), the Collaboration for Online Higher Education and Research (COHERE), and the Centre for Higher Education Research and Development (CHERD). It ends as the E-Learn 2009 conference http://www.aace.org/conf/elearn/ is beginning just a few blocks away.

October 5, 2009

Open Access Week October 19-23, 2009

Athabasca University is hosting a series of five noon-hour webcasts exploring major issues and opportunities presented by open access.

The purpose of AU's Open Access Week is to promote understanding, adoption, use and production of open access resources for formal and informal teaching and learning. All the sessions will be offered via Elluminate web conference. These promise to be interesting.

October 4, 2009

Effective Practice in a Digital Age

Effective Practice in a Digital Age is an excellent guide to designing instruction with a particular focus on the integration of learning technologies. The practical design advice in the guide is grounded in four perspectives on learning that are explained clearly and related to underlying assumptions and pedagogical perspectives.

Effective Practice in a Digital Age is a publication of the British higher education organization, JISC and is available for download.