Title: 103700-CP-1-2004-1-UK-ERASMUS-TN
1103700-CP-1-2004-1-UK-ERASMUS-TN
HERODOT Connected! The use of ICT in higher
education Geography departments in Europe
Karl Donert and Harry Rogge
2Bologna Process and EHEA
- Bologna make European Higher Education the
best, most competitive in global marketplace - course developments based on learning outcomes
- student-centred learning approaches at core of
change - central role of e-learning and new technologies
in learning and teaching (European Commission,
2002)
European Commission (2003), The Bologna Process
Next Stop Berlin 2003, http//europa.eu.int/comm/e
ducation/bologna_en.html
3Context HERODOT Survey 2002
Main learning methods used by Geography students
percentage of departments, 65 institutions,
multiple responses
Few use computer-assisted learning
Donert K (2005), The use of ICT in Geography
departments in European higher education,
Changing Horizons in Geography Education, HERODOT
Publication
4HERODOT Survey 2002
Professional training (CPD) events in past 2
years (65 replies)
number replies Type of CPD activity replies
0 38 GIS 13
1 31 e-learning course 9
2 14 specific computer course 4
3 8 basic ICT course (Office) 5
gt3 6 web page development 4
CPD trainers 3 Others, non-IT 64
little professional development one third of this
related to computers
22
Donert K (2005), The use of ICT in Geography
departments in European higher education,
Changing Horizons in Geography Education, HERODOT
Publication
5HERODOT Survey 2002 some conclusions
- Geographers teaching in higher education
- should expect to include ICT as part of the
educational learning approaches promoted - should consider how e-learning changes the way
that higher education Geography learning takes
place - must consider the potential of new technologies
in geographical education - should undertake research if we are to maximise
online pedagogical opportunities in teaching
exciting, authentic and relevant Geography in
higher education
Donert K (2005), The use of ICT in Geography
departments in European higher education,
Changing Horizons in Geography Education, HERODOT
Publication
6HERODOT Survey 2005 Aims
- Describe use of ICT in Geography in European
Geography departments in higher education - Analyse the characteristics of ICT use in
Geography teaching in higher education - Assess the attitudes and approaches of academics
to ICT in Geography - Identify weaknesses and needs
- Make recommendations for action
7Survey 2005 hypotheses
- Geographers do not use ICT in teaching/learning
- Geographers do not understand the value of ICT
- while Geographers were at the forefront of the
Internet revolution, now the use of ICT in
teaching may now be dominated by those teaching
GIS. - teacher educators use ICT as the use of ICT is
obligatory in teacher training in all European
countries (eEurope, 2002) - Might expect to find some differences between
- Geography, Teacher Educators and GIS teachers
- Managers a key group
- they make decisions, their attitudes and
approaches critical
8Survey sample structure
Survey of 112 network HE members April-July
2005 69 institutions responded 26
countries UK-10, CZ-7 NL-6, ES-5, AT-5
9Survey sample structure
10Survey sample structure
expert
experienced
established
senior
new
experienced
11Research Questions
- What are Geographers in Europe using ICT for?
- What are their perceptions of ICT?
- What is their understanding of the potential of
ICT? - What are the drivers of change?
12Experience
most Geographers use computers few involved in
online courses or online collaboration
13US
Survey 2005
1990s
eEurope 2010
14Why use computers?
- most recognised learner benefits
- Motivation, Flexibility
- Broadening, Deepening
- Some commented on potential
- Challenging courses, Exciting learning, High
interactivity - almost no barriers - few negative aspects
- BUT fewer recognised teaching benefits
- Management and organisation
- Assessment
- More practical and better
- implies few have integrated computer use in
teaching and learning process
15What is needed for teaching and learning with
computers?
- students need computers - in the hands of
learners - Internet and Intranet essential
- online pedagogical tools (virtual learning
environments) not seen as important - less aware of distance learning aspects like
communication opportunities - specialist data and software thought to be more
important
16Institutional drivers affecting computer use
- institutions require computer use by
staff/students - most provide computers and support
- few rewards for teaching with computers
- less support for learners than for teachers
- Geographers are less committed than GIS or
Geography educators to importance (centrality) of
computers for learning and teaching Geography
17Geographers least involved in computer-based
courses
18Research Questions
- What are Geographers in Europe using ICT for? LOW
LEVEL PRACTICAL FUNCTIONS - What are their perceptions of ICT?
ICT IS IMPORTANT - What is their understanding of the potential of
ICT? NOT VERY MUCH - What are the drivers of change? STUDENTS
19Managers are a key group
- Managers responses (n15)
- Ways computers enhance teaching of Geography
- Information
- allocate, interpret, arrange data, develop
graphs, work with a Web-GIS, simulation and
demonstration, work on a whiteboard - It is necessary in any kind of spatial geography
and scientific questions as well as in education
because it is a tool to analyse, visualise,
restructure etc. geographical data
20Ways computers enhance teaching of Geography
- Geo-information
- GIS as a tool to enhance the students
understanding of social and natural phenomena on
a local and global scale in a way most students
are comfortable with due to their everyday use of
computers for applications like gaming and
communication etc. - In the development of models, in cartography and
GIS, for searching journals, papers and access to
maps and planning issues
21Ways computers enhance teaching of Geography
- Global communication
- Facilitates information search from around the
world, analysis of data, presentation of data
(although great danger that Power Point used
excessively at the expense of original thought
and direct personal contact). - Potential for contact across national boundaries
could be developed more - It allows students to broaden their awareness of
big issues like global economy and
globalization processes
22Ways computers enhance teaching of Geography
- Global and local communication
- Finding information on the web, collecting and
evidence of students work, communicating with
students (assessment, instructions...) - Allows possibility of elearning
- Enables access to data
- More student-tutor interaction
23Ways computers enhance teaching of Geography
- Scepticism
- I dont know. My feeling is that students
consult a much wider range of information sources
than before, but much more superficially. - In presentation (oral, written), FORM tends to
overrule FUNCTION in the use of computer
technologies. - Computer communication (mail, discussion groups
in webCT, etc) tends to be much more shallow and
casual than face to face communication, in my
experience.
24What are the gaps?
- Bologna and eEurope implies that online education
is central to the creation of a European Higher
Education Area by 2010 - TUNING survey shows Geography academics think
their degrees provide adequate information
management skills - employers and graduate attitudes disagree
- While employers believe the use of ICT is covered
more than academics - Academics, employers and graduates agree on the
high relative importance of both as generic skills
25Some action and proposals
- publication State of computer use in Geography
teaching in Europe - training - Computers in Geography a workshop
for academics Brno, Czech Republic (October
2005), aim to encourage more Geographers to
provide online learning - training for managers
- series of best practise papers how to use
- Web site offering advice, guidance, examples (for
Geographers) - promotion of the benefits of learning (and
teaching) online - possible European or international projects and
- further research
26Conclusions and recommendations
- Geographers should embrace online learning as it
provides opportunities for significant levels of
student interaction (Zell, 2001) - e-Learning is essential for geographers as it has
been shown to be an excellent facility for the
development of collaborative skills including
cooperative problem solving and teamwork
activities (Simms, 2000) - integrating e-learning within our Geography
courses should be a high priority it would
encourage deeper, more reflective and student
centred learning approaches, meeting the core
goals of Bologna
Simms R (2000), An interactive conundrum
Constructs of interactivity and learning theory,
Australian Journal of Educational Technology,
16(1), 45-57, http//www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet
16/sims.html Zell, A.J., (2001) Four uses of the
Internet, http//www.sellingselling.com/articles/i
nternetSelling.html
27Thank you ?
teaching with technology
student needs
enlightened learning
Geographers _at_ home
Were waiting for technology to come to us
HERODOT Disconnected!