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Emoderating: the key to successfully teaching and learning online

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Big Brother learning. Virtuality, simulations. Technology. as a delivery system; ... Australia 56. S. America 32. Cont. W Europe 24. N. America 16. Asia 14 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emoderating: the key to successfully teaching and learning online


1
All of cyberspace's a stage
Dr. Gilly Salmon
2
an exploration of the scripts players in
e-learning
3
Dr. Gilly Salmon
  • Centre for Innovation, Knowledge Enterprise,
    Open University Business School
  • Chair Professional Certificate in Management
  • Visiting Professor,
  • Glasgow Caledonian Business School
  • Director All Things in Moderation Ltd

4
Setting the scene
  • any teacher who manages to usecomputers has
    somehow overcome a host or organisational
    obstacles, political decisions made by others
    remote from the classroom, and difficulties
    associated with the technology itself, including
    mismatches between rampant featurism and the
    teachers practical needs
  • (Cuban 2001 p. 173)

5
Is it all worth while?70 Nobel Laureatesimpact
of Internet over next 20 years
  • 87 positive impact to improve education
  • 91 improve educational opportunities
  • 69 believe they could have done their work
    faster (medicine, physics, peace literature)
  • www.cisco.com/nobel/survey

6
And all the men and women merely players
  • Technology providers
  • Technicians
  • Learning developers
  • Managers
  • Lecturers teachers
  • Researchers/experts

7
And one man in his time plays many parts
  • Traditions of knowledge transmission
    acquisition are challenged
  • neatly packaged client/customersneeds do not
    present themselves.
  • the use of technologies grows in a way that has
    little to do with demographics
  • Terrific opportunities pass us by in a haze of
    commercialism..or a flash in the pan of new
    initiative exhaustion

8
They have their exits and their entrances
  • Commercial investment in technology likely to
    continue
  • Virtual educational institutions consortiums
    in trouble
  • Leaves way open for embedding technology in
    teaching
  • Decisions are difficult- what technologies will
    sustain, be reliable, upgradable, adaptable,
    suitable, make a difference?
  • We can be sure
  • all teachers trainers will need to be
  • Flexible in their approach to teaching
  • Able to work electronically with each other

9
The tragedy happens on the stageThe review
happens in the dressing rooms
  • There is no evidence that e-learners wish to do
    without their human supporters
  • They need support in pacing, timing, learning

10
A solution ? Scenarios
  • look at possibilities
  • creatively explore uncertainties complexity
  • undertake strategic conversations
  • make choices
  • prepare!
  • These scenarios include role of research,
  • technologies, teaching philosophies, assessment
  • role of online teachers/trainers
  • relevance to further education

11
4 e-learning scenarios
Playlet One Contenteous
Playlet Two Instantia
Playlet Three Nomadict
Playlet Four Cafélattia
12
Contenteous
Choices based on media profiles online resource
availability league tables
Transmission model of teaching content rich Big
Brother learning Virtuality, simulations
Technology as a delivery system content
learning management systems, multi
media, Digital radio DVDs, digital cable
TV. standards
13
Contenteous
Assessment Diagnostic tests determine content
pathways reproduction critique frequent
automated testing sophisticated feedback
guidance
Technology very good navigation, multi media
capacity eye into reality simulations virtuality
asynchronicity synchronicity automatic
tracking testing extremely robust excellent
scheduling
14
Contenteous
Economies of scale through reduced interaction
stand deliver
Teaching content experts build online libraries
resource pathways become e-lecturers captivate
big audiences (support of the elite few needs
high level of research)
stand deliver
content is king
15

Contenteous
16
Instantia
Tick-tock
choice Just for me, just in time, just for
now, just enough
Computer based courses from desks learning
centres IT as tools learning objects rule! Speed
of mind absorption speed of technology
E-learning Continuous, applied, Flexible
17
Learning Objects
  • The technology delivered learning of tomorrow
    will be assembled, not authored from large
    reservoirs of content presented to the
    learnerand more emphasis will be on building
    knowledge bases that can be published on the
    fly Elliot Masie
  • Learning objects may be constructed through
    combining several elements, such as HTML,
    graphics, audio, video, documents, Java, to
    provide interactivity
  • Charles Jennings

18
exchanging learning objects
Pauls students
Paul Teaches computing
learning objects repository
19
Frances Cross cultural marketing
Martin Systems analysis
learning objects repository
Report writing
Compare contrast
Compare contrast
Analysing data
Report development
Analysing data
Presenting inf
Equality diversity
Presenting inf
Understanding culture
20
Instantia
Tick-tock
Technology available 24/7/52 sophisticated
metagged data bases easily manipulated highly
reliable and scalable quick easy customisation
assessment authenticity, tracking, links to
performance assessment submittable in different
media
21
Instantia
Tick-tock
Teaching support autonomous learning, available
24 hours a day, synchronously
asynchronously focus on skills development
adoption of in-house knowledge cultures
22
The customised computer
Just for me, just in time, just for now, just
enough
23
Instantia
24
Nomadict
Wearable, portable embedded
technologies PDAs, Palms tops, Tablet PCs
mobile phones with keyboards GPS, wireless
personal national international comms
networks biometrics provide security of identity
truly any time any place learning, learner
chooses style, focused learning components
interact with learners environments provide
pacing,
25
Nomadict
Technology Colleges become server farms Halls
of residents become satellite stations no
tolerance for old style VLEs low cost streamed
learning
Assessment small bites, highly
transferable mainly outcomes, projects student
designed assessments (with helpers) biometrics
provide security of identity
26
Nomadict
Mobile, portfolio teaching work with varying
cultures traditions, create tiny chunks of
learning activities, relate to students without
meeting, promote student ownership of learning
process
27
The props are the play?The mobile phone example!
  • Class wealth impact on ownership BUT not as
    much as other technologies (80 professionals,
    51 unskilled). A way of bridging the digital
    divide?
  • As many 40-50 years olds own mobile phones as
    teenagers
  • 40 over 65s have a mobile
  • 72 of all men have mobiles and use them 66
    minutes a day (53 mins previously on land lines)
  • Women 67, 55 mins
  • i.e. Men now spend more time on the phone than
    women
  • ICM/Guardian Survey Nov 2002

28
E- moderator
cybercollege 2010
29
Nomadict
30
Cafélattia
social context for learning, acquisition,
argument application, find interact with
like-minded others, free expression, intellectual
extension by dialogue reflection, professional
communities, sharing of tacit knowledge assessment
is negotiated knowledge construction
problem solving skills,
Developed Internet (beyond the
browser!) technologies as mediating devices, as
contexts community space, asychronous
synchronous groupware, clicks mortar, hi lo
bandwidth
31
Cafélattia
Technology mediating device between people free
expression through text and voice sharing of
contexual tacit knowledge reflection
creativity tools group work space sophisticated
document sharing
assessment is negotiated knowledge
construction complex problem solving skills,
32
Cafélattia
Tim Berners-Lee had the orginal idea for this
play! Keep the web open
teaching think global, local
action, Partnerships between teachers media
developers Mentoring and expert moderating, build
online Groups communities intelligent
agents, Lead information exchange knowledge
construction processes
33
can caffelattia suceed?
34
Janison
35
spark
invitation
interaction
36
the spark
the invitation
WebCT
37
(No Transcript)
38
Edith Cowan University Perth Australia Blackboard
39
FirstClass
40
Example Cafélattia course in 2002first two
hundred participants
Countries UK 50 Australia 56 S. America 32 Cont.
W Europe 24 N. America 16 Asia 14
Educational Sectors Universities
68 College/vocational 56 Professional networks
38 Corporate 26 Schools 12
Completion? Full (certificate)144 good
28 dropped out (typically 2-3 weeks in) 28
English as 1st language 156 English as
2nd language 44
Reasons for participation strategic 24 Skills 178
41
Make a distinction- find your niche- make a
difference
  • Explore the scenarios disciplines, cultures,
    traditions
  • Be clear about your own (learning teaching)
    objectives) and distinctiive markets
  • Choose based on fit for purpose
  • Learn by doing, share, collaborate

Guide the consequences Choose a scenarios
develop online teaching skills (e-moderating)
42
Changing the actors the scriptwriters
staff as the Solution (not the problem)
professionalism
Hi tolerance
organisation restructure
control
Innovators Adopters (12)
exploration how why
mindset change (2)
teaching Practice/ discipline
funding/ resources
change agents
acceptance
mindsets change (1)
Scale up
operational changes
lo tolerance
implementaion
1 understanding 2 action
Later adopters
43
Get your equity card!Skills for teachers in
the knowledge media age
Prerequisites! Flexibility towards online
teaching learning, Empathy with online
learners, Willingness to be trained developed
Develop fast! online communication group
skills, pacing use of time online, ability to
teach e-moderate cross-culturally value
diversity relate to learners without
meeting assess online
Train online to work online
train
develop
recruit
44
Developing your play
  • its up to you! vision and action!
  • Key choices lie
  • between viewing or authoring,
  • high bandwidth fixed locations or high level
    mobility.

45
Write your own script?
Great mind do NOT think alike!
To make a difference faster focus on the human
intervention not the technology
From Built to Last J. Collins J.I.
Porras HarperBusiness 1997
46
4 e-learning scenarios
What will cue your entrance? Whats your
audience? What part will you play? Which playlet
is for you?
47
4 e-learning scenarios
How will you choose?
  • The Web is not good as a broadcast medium
  • People use the Web for self publishing and
    interaction
  • Look at what your learners use for their everyday
    lives/work use for learning
  • Learning happens with others
  • Learners need strong motivation, participation,
    emotions and time management

some clues!
All the scenarios need E-moderators
48
Time for questions challenge, comment?
Safety curtain
49
You think this is just a fantasy?
  • this telephone has too many shortcomings to be
    seriously considered as a means of communication.
    Western Union memo 1876
  • ...theres a world market for about 5 computers.
    Thomas Watson, Chairman IBM 1943.
  • Computers in the future may weigh no more than
    1.5 tons." Popular Mechanics, 1949
  • ...data processing is a
  • fad that won't last out the year." Editor of
    business books Prentice Hall, 1957.
  • Theres no reason for
  • any individual to have a computer in their
    homes, Ken Olson, Chairman, Digital Corp. 1977
  • 640K ought to be enough for anybody." Bill Gates,
    1981.

the future is here...
50
More?
Thanks for being a great audience
That ends this strange eventful history
  • G.K.Salmon_at_open.ac.uk
  • http//oubs.open.ac.uk/gilly
  • http//oubs.open.ac.uk/e-moderating
  • http//www.e-tivities.com
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