Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

A vision for the future of technology enhanced ...

A vision for the future of technology enhanced learning

A review of the digital technology landscape

Grainne Conole

March 06, 2019
Tweet

More Decks by Grainne Conole

Other Decks in Education

Transcript

  1. A vision for the future of Technology Enhanced Learning: key

    trends and implications 11th March 2019 University College Dublin Gráinne Conole, Dublin City University
  2. Outline −The Irish e-learning landscape −EENEE report − Theoretical lens

    − Today’s digital society − Affordances − Opportunities − Top ten trends − Open practices − Pedagogy − Continuing Professional Development −Learning Design and Analytics −Beware of the rhetoric −Reflections https://bit.ly/2H4tpqL
  3. The Irish e-learning landscape −Policy perspectives −Continuing Professional Development −Learner

    agency and the learner voice −Tools and methodologies − MOOCs in Ireland − Learning Design − Learning Management Systems − E-Portfolios − Assessment −Futures − Open Education − Emergent digital literacies − New technologies
  4. EENEE report −Education outcomes enhanced by the use of digital

    technologies: what are the conditions for success? −How does digital technologies enhanced teaching and learning? −What are the enablers for successful digital technology use? −What are the implications for policy and transformative curriculum reforms? With Mark Brown and Miroslav Beblavy
  5. Outline of the report • Foregrounding literature • Theoretical lens

    • Changing nature of the digital society • Affordances of digital technology • Effective pedagogy for innovation • Continuous Professional Learning • Barriers • Principles and recommendations • Final reflections
  6. OECD 2015 −ICT has revolutionised virtually every aspect of our

    life and work −Students unable to navigate through a complex digital landscape will no longer be able to participate fully in the economic, social and cultural life around them −Challenges: information overload, plagiarism, online risks −Students need to become critical consumers of Internet services and electronic media and make informed choices
  7. −Study of 41 classrooms −Questions whether digital technology has transformed

    teaching and learning −More incremental change and cross-pollination than top-down policy mandates
  8. Theoretical lens −Potential to enhanced and transform −Quality and effectiveness

    of pedagogy and outcomes depends on teachers −New technologies arising all the time −Limited change or progress −Traditional modes of instruction and assessment dominate −Many factors mediate success
  9. Today’s digital society −Today’s digital society is complex and dynamic

    −Changing nature of work − 65% of jobs of the future don’t exist now − From knowledge recall to critical thinking… −Millennial generation − Different needs and expectations − IWWIWWIWI − Development of academic literacy skills − Adaptive and lifelong learners − Mixed of formal and OER/MOOCs − New forms of accreditation − Changing role of teachers and learners http://e4innovation.com/?p=995
  10. Affordances of digital technologies −Phases: −Cultural −Symbolic −Communication −Ntworked −Cyber-infrastructure

    −Affordances −Differ according to the technology, context and use −Internet most disruptive technology of last 50 years https://bit.ly/2O4lngx
  11. Opportunities • Technologies can: • Enable more interaction & communication

    • Help with retention • Be engaging & motivational • Extend the classroom • Provide timely and targeted feedback • Personalise the learning experience • BUT: technology is not a single entity; no single all-encompassing answer can be provided to the question of impact on educational outcomes
  12. Top ten trends −Place an important part of identity −Connect

    parents/learners −Permeable boundaries −Shift in ownership −Learners map their pathway −Abundance of data and AI −Changing nature of work −Rethink success −Impact on health and wellbeing −Connect the past to the present http://www.core-ed.org/research-and-innovation/ten-trends/
  13. Open practices −Opening up education −Facets − OER − MOOCs

    − E-textbooks −Use of open practices complex, personalised and contextual (Cronin) −Continuum of openness and access (Olcott) https://bit.ly/2gchbww
  14. Impact −Learners − OER (Wiley’s 5 Rs) − MOOCs (learning

    at scale) − E-textbooks (flexible & cost effective) −Teachers − New approaches to design − MOOCs for CPD −Researchers − Data-intensive collaborative research − Social media − Open scholarship https://bit.ly/2VBvFch
  15. Future of open learning: challenges −Lack of digital literacies −Teaching

    the poor sister −New forms of accreditation −Senior management buy-in −Appropriate CPD −Unbundling of education http://e4innovation.com/?p=938
  16. Digital learning ecology −Classroom expanded and evolved as virtual place

    sits alongside physical −A variety of different complementary learning opportunities −Further evidence of blurring of boundaries Brown, 2015
  17. Effective pedagogy for innovation Teaching-centred Learning-centred Learning of facts and

    declarative knowledge Memorising information Teacher is central A focus on passing exams Drilling of right questions and routines Learning to pass exams Focus on information presentation to passive learning Technology as a media channel Learning from resources and technology Learning of conceptual knowledge Working with information Activity is central to learning Applying knowledge, theoretical thinking and demonstrating generic skills Problem-solving, design, project work and inquiries Learning how to learn Focus on how learning occurs within an activity Technology as intellectual partner in learning Learning with resources and technology Churchill (2017) Sfard (1998): acquisition vs. participation
  18. The parameters of effective design Effective instruction depends on understanding

    of the complex interplay among learners’ prior knowledge, experiences, motivations, interests, and language and cognitive skills; educators’ own experiences and cultural influences; and the cultural, social, cognitive, and emotional characteristics of the learning environment (National Academy of Sciences, 2018)
  19. Brown 2008 A pedagogical compass −UNESCO Pillars of learning −

    Learning to be − Learning to do − Learning to know − Learning to live together −‘Pedagogical compass’ needs to swing between all four −Needle is not always pointing towards more traditional ‘learning by listening’ −Also the compass should not be stuck in any particular direction, as effective pedagogy requires a variety or combination of approaches
  20. Constraints and conflicts • First order: constraints & limitations external

    to teachers • Funding and resource • Infrastructure • Access and time • Leadership • Second order: conflicts & tensions internal to teachers • Teacher confidence • Teacher beliefs and attitudes • Resistance to change • Reluctance to adopt new technologies https://bit.ly/2XRAUXo
  21. Continuing Professional Learning −Central role of the teacher −Continuing Professional

    Learning −Enable teachers to develop innovative learning interventions −Make effective use of digital technologies −Formats −Specialised and tailored workshops −Peer support and mentoring −Examples of good practice −Share and discuss practice −Resources, OER and MOOCs https://bit.ly/2UkM1G1
  22. Empower staff to create, discover and engage in meaningful personal

    and professional development (National Forum, 2016) Orna Farrell
  23. Problem Learning Design New approaches to design that are pedagogically

    based and make effective use of technologies Learning Analytics Analysis of VLE data to better understand how learners are learning and to improve learning and teaching Solution Teachers Lack the digital literacies needed to harness potential of digital technologies Learners Lack academic digital literacies and need to develop strategies for learning
  24. Learning Design A pedagogically informed approach to design that makes

    appropriate use of technologies https://bit.ly/2Tp2s7K
  25. Learning Design Frameworks −Frameworks for guiding the use of technology/media/materials

    −SAMR, SECTIONS, COACT −Workshop approaches aimed mainly at promoting general good practice. i.e. social constructivist assumptions −7Cs, 8LEM, ABC −Approaches based on specific theory of learner engagement −ICAP Conole, Forthcoming
  26. The 7Cs of Learning Design Conceptualise Vision Communicate Create Consider

    Collaborate Activities Combine Synthesis Consolidate Implementation https://bit.ly/2mOnqgt
  27. Sta rt En d Learning Outcomes LO1 LO2 LO3 LO4

    Assessme nt LO1 LO2 LO3 LO4 Week 1 Topic 1 Week 2 Topic 2 Week 3 Topic 3 Week 4 Topic 4
  28. Learning Analytics Summative (teachers) −See what learners are doing −Identify

    learners who are struggling −Find concepts that learners find difficult −Provide targeted support Formative (learners) −See patterns of their learning −Receive advice on better learning strategies −Compare learning against classmates −Set/review learning goals http://bit.ly/2ukJRwb
  29. Beware of the rhetoric −65% of future jobs don’t exists

    – debunked −Overly positivist accounts, not taking account of the nuances −Lack of credibility, not build on empirical evidence −Millennial generation – discredited −Uncritical adoption of popular teaching and learning ‘catchisms’ – claims and counterclaims
  30. Reflections −Digital learning ecology is complex − More research needed

    to understand the complexity −Influence of affordances − Understand affordances & how they support pedagogy −No single metaphor for 21st Century learning − Support for learning needs to match learner needs and the context of learning −Assessment needs to support deep learning − Needs to be purposeful & support active, authentic and meaningful learning
  31. Reflections −Teachers’ mindsets mediate technology implementation − Targeted and authentic

    CPL −Impact of leadership and institutional cultures − Need to align with factors for successful update of digital technologies −Refocus and change mindsets − From education in change to education for change
  32. Change as a constant Change isn’t just one thing, just

    one time, just one big revelation. Change occurs in stages, and phases, which each add depth, colour, character, and create a multidimensional, multifaceted you