E-Learning or E-Teaching? What - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

E-Learning or E-Teaching? What

Description:

Although ICT can enable new forms of teaching and learning to take place, they ... It is very easy to teach inappropriately with ICT ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:397
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: kirk8
Category:
Tags: ict | learning | teaching

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: E-Learning or E-Teaching? What


1
E-Learning or E-Teaching?Whats the Difference
in Practice?
  • Linda Price and Adrian Kirkwood
  • Programme on Learner Use of Media
  • The Open University
  • UK

2
Our Background
  • E-learning Evaluation and Research
  • Large-scale quantitative studies
  • Smaller-scale qualitative studies
  • A long-term perspective on media use in education
  • Professional Development for e-Learning
  • A workshop programme for OU staff
  • Workshops presentations for the wider academic
    community

3
Our Approach
  • We concentrate on the educational and pedagogic
    issues NOT the technical details
  • In this session we start with some of the
    underlying principles associated with e-learning
    .
  • Then discuss some of the practical issues

4
  • Although ICT can enable new forms of teaching
    and learning to take place, they cannot ensure
    that effective and appropriate learning outcomes
    are achieved.
  • Just because you can do something does not
    necessarily mean that you should do it.

5
Why Use ICT? What are the Benefits?
  • For the institution? For teachers? For
    learners?
  • Is it just a quick fix in response to economic
    constraints.
  • Or an opportunity to rethink educational
    practices for different learning contexts?

6
What Models of Teaching can ICT Support? What
Models of Learning?
  • The application of ICT per se does not change the
    model of teaching
  • It is very easy to teach inappropriately with ICT
  • Is the pedagogic model suitable for the learning
    outcomes (regardless of the medium used)?
  • Use of ICT in itself does not change the model of
    learning in a particular context
  • If learners have inappropriate expectations of
    learning, these must be explicitly addressed

7
A Holistic View of Course Design
  • We need to appreciate
  • Differences in learners
  • Differences in teachers
  • Different media affordances
  • Engaging students while using media technologies
    involves
  • Balancing these factors
  • A complicated design process

8
Engaging Learners
  • What is understood by the term student-centred
    learning?
  • Are learners well prepared and supported for
    working independently?
  • Learners need to know not only what they are
    supposed to do, but also why they are expected to
    do it how engaging with activities and/or
    resources will help develop their learning

9
Engaging Learners
  • Materials must be transformed for the Web to
    enable effective pedagogical use with ICT, e.g.
  • Avoid materials looking like books on screen
    difficult for learners often printed out
    (costly!)
  • Exploit the interactive and dynamic potential
    reduce linear presentation
  • Supporting Transmissive or Constructivist
    pedagogy?

10
Increasing Use of ICT for Education
  • Educational institutions need to achieve more
    with less
  • Many educational institutions are attempting to
  • Attract a more diverse range of students
  • Encourage lifelong learning
  • Extend the participation of non-traditional
    students

11
Increasing Use of ICT for Education
  • Increased use of ICT in teaching and learning
  • Largely as a supplement to existing practices
  • Much remains to be done in terms of exploiting
    ICT for
  • Rich pedagogical use, and
  • Serving learners in different target groups
  • (e.g. Collis and van der Wende, 2002)

12
Changes in Learner Characteristics
  • Blurring of distinctions between
  • Full-time and part-time learners
  • Studying on-campus or at a distance
  • School leavers, mature entrants and lifelong
    learners
  • Work-based learning, professional development
    and community learning

13
Changes in Learner Characteristics
  • For an increasing number of post-school learners,
    studying is not their primary concern
  • Many are in part-time or full-time employment
    domestic responsibilities
  • Studying has to be fitted in
  • Learners need to develop and apply
    self-management skills, e.g.
  • Time management strategies
  • Self-direction and motivation
  • Prioritisation and selectivity

14
Contexts of ICT Use
  • Innovations should not driven by characteristics
    of technology, but by
  • The pedagogic models and processes they have to
    serve
  • The contexts within which learners engage with
    ICT
  • Educational purposes and pedagogy must provide
    the lead

15
Determine Learners ICT Experience
  • Learners with ICT experience from other contexts
    are likely to exhibit fluency in ICT use in their
    studies
  • Those without such experience will expect course
    providers to demonstrate the potential and guide
    their use of ICT

16
Determine Learners ICT Experience
  • Few learners will have high levels of competence
    across a wide range of applications, e.g.
  • Familiarity with e-mail does not imply expertise
    in rigorous on-line debate and discussion
  • Familiarity with a Web search engine like Google
    does not indicate sophisticated information
    handling skills

17
On-line Communication
  • Electronic communication can support both
    academic and social integration helping overcome
    independent learners feelings of isolation
  • For contact with tutors and with fellow students
  • Developing a learning community sharing
    understandings experiences

18
On-line Communication
  • Asynchronous communication offers learners the
    opportunity to consider and reflect upon
  • A posted question or statement their own
    response to it
  • The responses of fellow students
  • A record of the dialogue and of how it developed
  • Synchronous communication needs to be more highly
    structured for novice users as there is limited
    experience of its use in society in general

19
Tutoring On-line
  • New skills are required for both tutors and
    students
  • Professional development is necessary not just
    for the technical aspects
  • An understanding of the educational practices
    appropriate for e-learning is even more important

20
Tutoring On-line
  • Dependence or independence in learning?
    Individual or collaborative learning?
  • What is the pedagogic purpose?
  • Is it explicitly stated understood?
  • Students and tutors need to have explicit and
    realistic expectations about
  • The frequency of contacts made (when how often)
  • The response time that is reasonable

21
In Conclusion
  • What educational outcomes are learners expected
    to achieve?
  • Why as well as how
  • Process as well as product?
  • Students are unlikely to use materials and
    activities unless they are embedded in the course
    pedagogy
  • Constructive alignment of learning activities,
    assessment methods and learning outcomes

22
In Conclusion
  • Materials that are not linked to the assessment
    strategy are unlikely to be used and the
    potential benefits remain fallow
  • Educational benefits that students perceive as
    gains from using ICT are more significant than
    the intrinsic characteristics of the technology
  • What really matters is how ICT is creatively
    exploited for teaching and/or learning

23
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com