Re-thinking iEducation: Considerations from Research in the Learning Sciences - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Re-thinking iEducation: Considerations from Research in the Learning Sciences

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A faculty retreat on innovation. Brainstorm suspend ... The inertia of culture: 'That's how we have always done it. ... Breaks passivity & asocial alienation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Re-thinking iEducation: Considerations from Research in the Learning Sciences


1
Re-thinking iEducation Considerations from
Research in the Learning Sciences
  • Gerry Stahl

2
Opportunities
  • A faculty retreat on innovation
  • Brainstorm suspend reactions
  • Technologies to support new modes of learning
  • Research on how people learn

3
Dangers
  • Technology-driven thinking
  • The inertia of culture Thats how we have
    always done it.
  • Disincentives in the reward structures for
    students, instructors, the College

4
A pop quiz
  • As we learn more about something,
  • (a) The questions all get answered.
  • (b) The questions get easier and easier.
  • (c) The questions get more complex.
  • How can we promote deep inquiry by students?

5
Learning sciences research
  • Cambridge Handbook on the Learning Sciences
  • International Journal of Computer-Supported
    Collaborative Learning
  • Research papers at CSCL, ICLS, CHI, CSCW, GROUP,
    etc.

6
Findings of learning sci ed tech
  • Students must be engaged, motivated construct
    their own understanding
  • Lectures are not generally effective as the sole
    instructional mode
  • Asynchronous threaded discussion has serious
    problems (timing, superficial opinions, asocial)

7
Some of my research asynch
  • Phidias - threaded discussion for design
    rationale (1990-1992 RA in computer science)
  • Hermes - asynchronous design environment
    (1991-1993 dissertation system)
  • Other educational software Essence, TCA
    (1993-1997)
  • WebGuide (1997-2000 post-doc classroom system)
  • BSCL (2001-2002 visiting scientist EU asynch)
  • VMT (2003-2009 synchronous learning)

8
My theory of group cognition
  • Vygotsky inter-personal learning precedes as the
    basis of individual learning
  • Small groups have powerful learning mechanisms
  • Technology should be designed to support intense
    group interaction
  • Pedagogy should support collaborative knowledge
    building

9
Collaboration is powerful!
  • Breaks passivity asocial alienation
  • Students work together to understand assignments,
    course goals, material
  • Students help each other
  • Students make their knowledge visible
  • Students can judge themselves vs. peers
  • 80 of employees work in teams

10
Synchronicity
  • Synchronous (e.g., chat) is more engaging
  • It has a stronger sense of social contact
  • It is far more efficient in building knowledge
  • It can support interaction collaboration
  • It allows immediate feedback, deeper discussion,
    sharing, negotiation

11
Blending it
  • Blended learning combines the advantages and
    overcomes many problems
  • Almost all online programs (outside Drexel) find
    that F2F contact near the beginning is necessary
    for meaningful asynch interaction

12
Conclusion
  • A careful mix of individual, small-group and
    class work
  • A careful mix of reading, lecture, small-group
    tasks, class discussion
  • Use of technology as appropriate to pedagogical
    aims and processes

13
An iSchool culture of innovation collaborative
learning
  • How can we change student resistance to
    innovation in instruction learning?
  • How can we change student resistance to sharing
    knowledge group work?
  • How can we blend our online courses?
  • How can we introduce synchronicity?

14
References on the power of collaboration
  • Stahl, G. (2008). Chat on collaborative knowledge
    building. QWERTY, 3(1), 67-78.
  • Stahl, G., Koschmann, T., Suthers, D. (2006).
    Computer-supported collaborative learning. In R.
    K. Sawyer (Ed.), Cambridge handbook of the
    learning sciences (pp. 409-426). Cambridge, UK
    Cambridge University Press. Available in English,
    in simplified Chinese, in traditional Chinese, in
    Spanish, in Portuguese, in German, in Romanian.
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