Posts Tagged ‘Educational leadership’

‘Doubt’ movie trailer remix by meg

October 4, 2009

A couple of weeks ago, I watched the movie ‘Doubt,’ starring Meryl Streep and Philip Seymour Hoffmann. The IMDB summary for the film reads,

“Set in 1964, Doubt centers on a nun who confronts a priest after suspecting him of abusing a black student. He denies the charges, and much of the play’s quick-fire dialogue tackles themes of religion, morality, and authority.”

Great film, a proper morality play. What I also loved about it was the way it commented on new technologies and the changing times. So I thought I’d do a remix along the lines of a movie trailer, as seems to be all the rage (check out Scary Mary Poppins … it’s a cack!). Here’s the radio edit … I made a dance mix too, but I prefer the shorter version, myself :) . Hope you like it. I think it’s kinda fun!

Opinion: Barriers to teaching online

July 9, 2008

Target Image

Me mates at education.au have released a report on Educators and ICT usage and one of the most interesting things it points to are the barriers that educators report to thier teaching and learning with online technology (p. 33). Here are the main hindrances they’ve identified, plus my reasons for why all of these, excepting the final barrier, should not be barriers at all:

  • 41%: Poor infrastructure, bandwidth, equipment reliablity, accessiblity of logins, permissions. Discounting the bandwith issue, the ‘poor infrastructure’ barrier can be largely blamed on unwieldy and user-unfriendly Learning Management Systems (BlackBoard, MyClasses, WebCT …) that school and some university administrations insist teachers use. Logins, permissions, reliablity, blah blah blah, aren’t an issue with most online applications that can be turned to an educational use.
  • 40%: Blocking/filtering of internet content. See above, with an especial emphasis on ‘administration’ — namely, the reluctance and/or unimaginativeness on the part of ‘admin’ to come up with policies and guidelines that manage risk.
  • 21%: Limited access to computers or internet connection. Will Ruddy’s digital education revolution sort this one out? There’s no excuse for its not doing so.
  • 20%: Limited confidence or expertise in the use of compter technologies. See above and above and above. Teachers need PD in this stuff and it needs to be paid for, but, really, the main reason they’re spooked is that they’ve only ever had experience with dead-awful LMSs and they subsequently don’t know how easy the Web could be if only they were allowed to use it.
  • 12%: Lack of relevant resources on on the internet. You could say that there’s not much you can do about this one … except why not create such resources yourself? :)

What a dire set of results! But as a South Aussie, and as someone who passionately believes in the value education, not firewalls, I’m pleased to say that South Australian educators were most likely to name blocking of internet content as a barrier to teaching and learning online, at a respectable 67%.

Come on, education leaders! Start being a bit creative and pro-active on these issues! Decide where your priorities need to be with online teaching and learning and develop policies to manage risk. Employ people who know this stuff from an educational point of view and who can teach the teachers and who can defreakify things for them. Get yourself educated on online technologies and their use in education. Students, parents and teachers are relying on you to be across the issues and to start finding solutions that will work in the ‘real world’ of the Web.

Bookmark and Share

Target: Critical challenges

March 21, 2008

Target ImageAs a follow-up to an earlier post on the 2008 Horizon Report, here’s what The Horizon Project Advisory Board identify as the main challenges facing higher ed over the next five years (p. 5):

  • Need for innovation and leadership, at all levels, due to shifts in scholarship, research, creative expression and learning: “Experimentation must be encouraged and supported by policy”
  • Increasing expectation that services and content will be delivered to mobile and personal devices
  • Collaborative learning means having to develop new forms of interaction and assessment
  • Need for instruction in how to create meaningful content with Web 2.0 tools, as well as instruction in visual, information and technological literacy. In particular, this asks us how are we going to develop curricula and assessments that apply to competencies in communication in blogs, digital videos, wikis, photo essays and the like?

These challenges are very similar to those identified in the 2007 Horizon Report, so it’s clear that we’re seeing a significant pattern emerge in terms of what’s needed in higher ed in the near future. Let’s hope we’re up to being creative and sensible in our responses to these issues as we meet them.

Bookmark and Share

Opinion: Black$Board in court

March 15, 2008

I can’t believe that educational institutions happily do business with companies like this! Black$Board is using school and higher ed $$$$$$$$$ to fund legal actions against smaller companies such as Desire2Learn (D2L).

Black$Board has managed to patent a system that allows individual users to log-in with a single procedure to access multiple courses. What a joke! I can’t believe they’ve managed to patent that! I can access my multiple blogs and wikis through single log-in procedures! WetPaint and WordPress watch out! Black$Board might be taking you to court soon because they’ve just succeeded in arguing that D2L has infringed Black$Board’s patent rights.

Our educational leadership signs contracts with mobs like Black$Board, and then spruiks how being involved with them is much, much better than using something free and more agile as an LMS (such as a wiki or blog). These LMS companies (including D$2L) are just rorting already-underfunded educational institutions out of money that could be going to professional development or improved infrastructure. Black$Board is just in it for the money, don’t kid yourself. In that sense, they are no different from any other internet company — except that their product is waaaaaaay poorer than most, they have hoodwinked educators into believing it’s all about the learnin’ (when it’s not — it’s all about the $$$$$$$$), and they have a monopoly over the market. It’s a disgrace.

Bookmark and Share

Opinion: PLE — some problems

March 5, 2008

Loudhailer imageI wrote about PebblePad, a Personalised Learning Environment (PLE) in a previous post. Although PebblePad is a huge step beyond Web 1.0 systems such as MyClasses, BlackBoard and WebCT, I think there are still problems with how we, as teachers and educational leaders, are approaching the issue of online learning and where it occurs in the online environment.

Basically, I’m still not convinced by the need to have everything in one spot and mounted on an institution’s own servers. And I’m not convinced educational organisations need to pay for this stuff. I think it probably makes it in some ways easier to have everything in one place, and it gives institutions greater control over what systems students use, but I believe we need to be looking further out than that.

You can do all (OK, ‘most’) of the things you can do in PebblePad for free in other online applications – applications that are often more powerful and ‘authentic’ than those found in PP. For example, why use PP’s limited blog function when students can blog via WordPress, Blogger, LiveJournal and the like. Students can also share ‘experiences’ and ‘thoughts’ via a blog, and they can set up meetings through Google Calendar or Zoho Planner. And you can sort out action plans through things such as ToodleDo and Remember the Milk. Furthermore, wikis and blogs can make for highly potent and accessible webfolios. For the ‘extras’ such as adding reflections or doing SWOT analyses, well … I’m sure teachers can come up themselves with ways of integrating them into assignments or classroom tasks and should be doing so, anyway.

I just believe that schools and post-compulsory education need to get out of the mindset of having to pay for everything and having to find server space for it. Web 2.0 allows us to be much more creative than that.

Bookmark and Share

Tech’n'Teach: Personalised Learning — PebblePad

March 5, 2008

tech'n'teach iconI recently attended a seminar and workshop in Sydney on PebblePad, a Personalised Learning Environment (PLE) built around WebFolios, as the PP mob like to call them. The system has been very well thought-out and (hurrah, hurrah) places the learner at the centre, rather than the teacher or the institution (as per the Web 1.0 systems of MyClasses, BlackBoard, WebCT and Moodle). In this sense, PP is a huge step beyond the clunky, unresponsive, inflexible Learning Management Systems (that term again! See a previous post) that most Australian educational organisations are currently running with.

Pebble Pad is pedagogically sound, individually customisable for the student, very user-friendly, and it looks terrific (again, a big improvement over the Web 1.0 systems mentioned above). When I was first playing around in the interface, I was very impressed by the amount of thought that had gone into it. However, there are some broader issues I think thatteachers and educational leaders need to think about, and I’ll get to them in another post.

In PebblePad, users create ‘assets’ such as action plans, meetings, ‘experiences’, ‘thoughts’, blogs, CVs and webfolios. For each asset you create, you’re taken through a set of steps. For example, if you are creating an action plan asset, you are asked to think about and record your current situation, the ideal situation, the steps you will take to make it all happen, a SWOT analysis, the supporting resources you will require (books, journals, web, people, courses etc). You can also tag things up so that they’re easy to find afterwards, thus doing away with the rigid folder system that, again, reflects a Web 1.0 environment. No folders in PebblePad! :)

It’s a similar process for each asset you create, so, as you can see, the whole thing is very well constructed both technically and educationally. However, the system does have some failings. The blog function was very basic when I looked at it and the visual editor that the whole of PP uses is also fairly primitive. Further, teachers are relying on the makers of PebblePad to have gotten the pedagogy right — which is not such a huge problem, thankfully, because it’s looks pretty good to me — but what if you want to change things yourself? Maybe there’s that function available, but I’m not sure … There’s also the general question of the need to pay for all of this functionality at all when it’s already free and often more developed on the web. See my next post for more on that issue.

Another consideration has to be how easy it is for the student to take all their work with them when they finish at your institution. PebblePad allows them to do that, but why would you ask students to muck around with transferring stuff when they can be doing it all outside of the LMS or PLE anyway and to much greater effect? You’d think it was a hassle, and so would students …

Having said all that, PebblePad is a good system and I’d encourage you to have a look at it.

Bookmark and Share

EdCom: “Learning is the driver”

January 8, 2008

PodulesLogoThe quote in the title of this blog post comes from Greg Black, the Chief Executive Officer of Education.au, a major provider of national business and education projects including EdNA, Education Network Australia, which many listeners will be familiar with. I spoke to Greg for my EdCom podcast and you can hear the interview on the MP.com podcast pages.

Greg has spent a long time in education, and has a background in futures thinking and leadership development and in this interview he shares with EdCom his insights into where education is currently ‘at’ and where it’s headed. In particular, Greg talks about how we can start to meet the needs of the 21st century learner, and about using teaching techniques and strategies that will help students to thrive. Greg points to the need for ‘discernment’ and he lays out a challenge to educational leaders to embrace the new technologies for the benefits of students.

File size: 19.5 MB
Running time: 22.40

Bookmark and Share

EdComListenButton EdComDownloadButton EdComSubscribeButton

This podcast is also available on My Odeo Channel


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.