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Title: 14112009 Slide 1


1
e-Learning technologies an overview
Bob Bell
HE in FE Co-ordinator Northern Region
2
Priority Areas
  • Key Priorities for HE in Fe
  • Foundation Degrees
  • Work-based learning
  • Negotiated Learning
  • Employer engagement
  • Achievement of HE standards by Staff and Students
  • Fullest use of available information
  • Staff awareness of sources and dissemination to
    students
  • On-going staff development

3
Technologies
  • Key areas that projects could address
  • e-Portfolio
  • e-Assessment
  • Tools to support collaborative working and
    personalised learning experiences
  • Other areas
  • e-Administration
  • Enhanced use of learning spaces
  • Access to online resources

4
How might technology help ?
  • Foundation Degrees
  • Personal development
  • e-portfolios
  • Work-based elements
  • Evidence collection systems
  • Collaborative projects
  • Communications tools
  • Fullest use of available information for HE
    delivery
  • Staff awareness of sources and dissemination to
    students
  • Content catalogues, object tagging and evaluation
  • On-going staff development
  • Learning objects and on-line training
  • Mobile technologies
  • Podcast menus

5
e-Portfolios
  • e-Portfolios.are personal online spaces for
    students to access services and store work. They
    will become ever more useful as learners grow up
    and start moving between different types of
    learning and different institutions.
  • Secretary of State for Education and Skills,
    January 2006

6
e-Portfolios overview
  • Learners create different kinds of portfolio, for
    a range of purposes, permitting a range of
    interactions, e.g
  • Presentation / showcase portfolio
  • Selected material for application for admission
    to study or job, induction, appraisal or
    assessment
  • Qualifications / evidence portfolio
  • Evidence gathered for formal qualification
    validation
  • Development or progress portfolio
  • Personal and reflective, to guide and develop
    learning over time, in formal education, training
    and employment

7
JISC e-portfolio work
  • Presentation portfolio
  • showcasing work in particular disciplines,
    applying for university and jobs, cv builder
  • Qualifications / evidence portfolio
  • Presentation of work for professional
    accreditation
  • Negotiated Learning, outcomes and evidence
    management
  • e.g. the UfI tool Learning through Work
  • Development portfolio
  • Reflection on skills with respect to career or
    educational aspirations support for development
    planning sharing of reflections with mentors and
    peers, including employers supporting students
    as they move from a high support environment to a
    low support environment
  • E-learning tools VMAP, SPWS, Petal, e-Pet,
    Horus, interactive log book, SHELL-FISH

8
UfI Learning through work
  • A partnership between Ufi and 9 HE providers
  • A means of gaining HE level work-based learning
    qualifications (or credit), supported through a
    sophisticated web-based environment.
  • Learners (or groups) undertake individual
    programmes to meet their own and their employers
    needs
  • Blended learning - work-based projects, taught
    courses, on-line modules, in-house courses,
    practical research
  • Web environment incorporates on-line learning
    content but is also a resource for the
    development of tailored learning contracts

9
UfI Learning through Work
  • More than 2000 learners have registered and
    developed contracts.
  • 550 plus have graduated to date
  • 38 individuals, 62 part of employment-based
    cohorts
  • 62 undergraduate level, 38 postgraduate level
  • 80 business based cohorts
  • 81 have all or part fees paid by employers
  • 550 employers engaged, 33 in SMEs
  • Now UfI want to scale up the offer and make it
    more widely usable

10
UfI Learning through Work
  • LtW has almost reached capacity - and has an
    architecture that is becoming out-dated.
  • It is primarily designed to be used in a fairly
    linear way, the resources all accessed from the
    learning contract.
  • The re-development will result in a versatile,
    robust and scalable web-based set of resources
    for institutions to use to support the
    development and delivery of work-based blended
    learning programmes.
  • The redevelopment is due to be completed by April
    07.
  • We also aim to expand the delivery network of
    HEIs and FECs (initially those with significant
    HE level provision).

11
JISC e-portfolio work
  • Data transfer
  • ioNode middleware
  • Standards ePortfolio
  • CETIS Portfolio Special Interest Group
  • Legal issues
  • Data protection, IPR, data retention
  • Accessibility
  • ACCLIP
  • Tools and software
  • E.g. reflective blogs, Moodle, LUSID, ePet, Petal

12
e-Assessment overview
  • Improving the quantity and quality of e-learning
    is irrelevant, however, if it is not done within
    the context of curriculum development. It is
    crucial that we fully examine the potential for
    technology to modernise the curriculum and its
    assessment. ICT supports assessment playing a
    more formative role assessment for learning,
    not just for judging. And we want to see pilots
    of a wide range of applications of e-assessment
    immediate feedback to learners and teachers,
    online tests, personalised diagnostics, online
    assessment and accreditation of e-skills, and
    inclusion of e-skills in the assessment of all
    curriculum topics. QCA has the lead role in
    ensuring that we develop a curriculum which
    prepares learners for life and work in the 21st
    century.
  • DfES e-Strategy, March 2005

13
e-Assessment JISC work
  • Tools development and testing
  • ASAP Automated System for the Assessment of
    Programming
  • Set of application services to automate part of
    the assessment process for the teaching of
    computer programming languages
  • ASSIS Assessment and Simple Sequencing
    Integration Services
  • Tools for teachers to browse, search and preview
    and select assessment objects from question banks
  • Open Mentor
  • Provided a learning support tool for teachers in
    FE and HE to help them provide reflective
    comments on their assessment and feedback of
    student assignments and coursework
  • TOIA
  • Advanced online assessment management system
  • Serving Maths
  • Developed open source software tools to address
    issues around the use of mathematical expressions
    in assessments

14
e-Assessment JISC work
  • Mapping the terrain
  • IBIS Item Banks Infrastructure Study (2004)
  • Put forward a proposal for a distributed bank
    system suitable for use in UK FE and HE
  • FREMA
  • Reference model for systems in the e-assessment
    domain
  • Will help in the development of further services
    and promote the re-use of existing ones
  • E-Assessment roadmap (Sep 2005-Apr 2006)
  • Aims to provide an overview of the current
    drivers and barriers to e-assessment in Post-16
    education
  • E-assessment glossary (Apr 2006)
  • A glossary of assessment and terminology for
    schools, post-16 and higher education sectors,
    jointly funded by the QCA
  • REAP
  • Funded by the Scottish Funding Council as one of
    their e-learning transformation projects.
    Investigating innovative approaches to
    e-assessment across 3 HEIs

15
Tools to support collaborative working overview
  • Technology based tools that enable greater or
    enhanced collaboration through space or time are
    becoming more numerous
  • Flickr (sharing photographs)
  • Del.icio.us (sharing bookmarks)
  • Blogs (online journals)
  • Wikis (allows for collaborative editing)
  • Instant messaging
  • VLE tools e.g. Moodle
  • Potential to change practices in a range of
    education and research activities

16
Tools to support personalised learning experiences
  • DfES e-strategy 2005 identifies personal learning
    in two of the six priority areas
  • Integrated online personal support for children
    and learners
  • A collaborative approach to personalised learning
    activities
  • Flexible, personal learning environments owned
    and managed by the learner, allowing learners to
    carry out a wide range of learning-related tasks
    in their own environment, no matter which course
    or institution those tasks are associated with.
  • E.g. use of reflective blogs to support personal
    development planning
  • Interactive Logbook software that helps
    learners to set targets, record activities and
    organise electronic resources, related to ALL
    learning

17
e-Administration overview
  • e-administration in terms of the context of this
    call is
  • the use of technology to enhance administration
    processes that are involved in the learning
    process, i.e.administrative tasks of learners and
    teaching practitioners

18
e-Administration examples
  • Use of technology and assisted business processes
    to provide a more seamless transfer for learners
    between different learning providers on a course
  • E.g. SHELL (single sign on for students at the
    University of Plymouth based in partnership
    colleges)
  • SUNIWE (a portal based on the NIIMLE work for
    students providing access to MIS and course
    information and access to University online
    resources)
  • P4P Pathways for Progression mapping curricula
    to facilitate student progression
  • Supporting flexible and learner centred provision
    (particularly for learners in the workplace)
  • E.g. providing learners with more control over
    the scheduling of learning and assessment
  • VLEs remote submission of assignments

19
Learning spaces
  • Adapting learning spaces to provide enhanced and
    innovative pedagogical learning models.
  • Embedding technology into learning and teaching
    spaces can involve
  • Mobile learning mobile phones, digital cameras,
    pdas
  • Connected learning wireless networks, wireless
    enabled laptops etc.
  • Visual and interactive learning voting devices,
    video conferencing
  • Supported learning assistive technologies, video
    recording facilities
  • 21st learning spaces should be
  • Motivational
  • Collaborative facilitating social interaction
    and collaborative activities
  • Personal 24/7 access to digital resources e.g.
    through VLEs
  • Flexible mobile and wireless technologies
    supporting a wide variety of pedagogical
    approaches

20
Learning spaces example
  • University of Strathclyde InterActive ClassRoom
  • Issue with low achievement and attendance in the
    Department of Mechanical Engineering
  • Lectures were replaced with 2 hour active
    learning sessions questioning and discussion
    replaced knowledge transfer as the delivery model
  • Supported by an electronic voting system to help
    students test their understanding of concepts.
    Collaborative discussion before and after voting
    established as an integral pedagogic approach

21
Access to resources
  • Access to resources, for example those in HE
    institution
  • E.g. library resources, VLE, e-portfolio / e-PDP
    system (e.g. TransPortALL)
  • remote access to equipment and resources
  • Flexible access and support
  • Supporting learners in the workplace
  • Access to study skills resources e.g. eLISA
  • Advice and guidance

22
Ways to look at a bid
  • Describe and prototype a tool which addresses an
    important area not currently served by any
    solution
  • Evaluate one or more of the developments from
    previous JISC funded projects and take forward a
    plan which further develops (perhaps through
    pilot work or implementation) the tools or
    services provided by the original project
  • Take an existing proprietary system and achieve a
    full implementation of that system with an
    emphasis on case study preparation, guidance and
    dissemination
  • Undertake the project work in collaboration
    either sharing the work or with participants
    having different roles (e.g. one developer and
    multiple evaluators)
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