Posts Tagged ‘Tech'n'Teach’

Tech’n'Teach: Wiki experiences in the classroom

September 26, 2008

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This week, I attended a very insightful seminar on using wikis in a university course. Patricia Abbot is lecturer and course co-ordinator for Theology, Psychology and Human Experience at the Canberra campus of the Australian Catholic University and, earlier this semester, she decided to use a wiki as an assessment item in her course.

For the assignment, students were asked to buddy-up and then develop a wikispace around a particular topic. Patricia described her experiences with using wikis in class during the seminar, but she also invited a student, Fiona, along to report on the learner’s perspective.

Here are some findings:

Student perspective

  • WetPaint was the wiki application used by the class. The application itself worked fine, but students were frustrated by how different web browsers viewed and supported their wikis.
  • Most students worked up their content in MS Word and then did a copy-and-paste into the wiki itself. As a consequence, much of students’ document formatting was lost, especially if they’d used Endnote to create footnotes.
  • Students met early on, in their pairs, to discuss the wikispace they would build, but then worked on their ‘own’ bits individually.
  • Fiona said she enjoyed the task, but felt that teacher expectations needed to be made clearer up front.
  • The 1200-word limit set by the teacher for the assignment was almost impossible to keep to.
  • Students weren’t sure how to reconcile the informality of a web-based format such as a wiki, with the formality of the essay format, which they were more used to.

Teacher perspective

  • Patricia used herself as a benchmark: knowing that she is reluctant to learn a new communication medium, Patricia felt that if she could learn to use a wiki fairly quickly, then just about anyone could. In the end, Patricia felt she misjudged this.
  • Some students struggled with the medium, but Patricia felt that they just needed more practice, not that the wiki itself was hard to use.
  • Patricia also made the point that we don’t stop having orals, just because some students aren’t good at orals: we expect them to master the medium of the oral presentation, and it’s the same with any other media, including wikis.
  • The idea was to have students use the medium as it’s meant to be used: as a collaboration space for students to build their understanding of the topic. But the fact that students did their work separately from each other, in Word, annulled the value of the wiki as a collaborative tool.
  • Teachers need to plan for problems.
  • Students need explicit learning experiences in how to use the medium for their learning.

Some further points came out of the discussion:

  • Perhaps referencing and citation needs to be thought of differently in this context — students were trying to import footnotes from Word, when more creative ways of dealing with formatting and academic rigour could have been found.
  • Students probably need more, ongoing support from the teacher in how to use a wiki (or any other new learning technology) than they are currently getting.

I’ll be interviewing Patricia for EdCom in the coming weeks, so look out for a podcast on the topic soon. Patricia has also kindly made her own reflections on the project via a pdf document (PDF, 316 KB).

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Tech’n'Teach: Special needs success with Nathan

August 4, 2008

Tech\'n\'Teach iconNathan is an amazingly energetic, creative and inspiring teacher at The Canberra College and he’s getting excellent results using blogs in class. Nathan teaches a special needs class, and, despite initial scepticism from some, Nathan reports that that this group of students is really embracing the blogging environment. Rather than struggling with the blogging assignments in his Multimedia and Animation class, this group of students is thriving: “They absolutely love using WordPress!” says Nath, before adding, “it is a great tool in the classroom and students are even doing work at home without being asked!”

Nathan’s using the blog to communicate assignment expectations and instructions, and he makes sure he puts comments and suggestions on each student’s pages and posts, providing feedback and encouragement for everyone to see. He’s also very finicky about how a student’s blog looks, insisting that the design elements (even down to page nomenclature and layout) are consistent and neat. Apparently, even the students are now checking over each other’s sites and giving advice on where to improve!

I’d recommend keeping an eye on how Nathan’s class progresses, and if you’re also having success (or otherwise!) with class blogging, drop me a line or feel free to post a comment.

Tech’n'Teach: Fodey.com

July 18, 2008

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Tech’n'Teach: Avatars

June 27, 2008

One of the things I get asked most often has nothing to do with EdTech and how to integrate it into the classroom, but rather, “Where did you get your little ‘other you’ thingy?” I think people like it because they can recognise me in it … except my avatar’s better looking!

My little ‘other you’ thingy is my ‘avatar’ and I made it at Meez.com. You can make your own there, too — but just watch that you don’t get too carried away … this ain’t the real world, you know, and you can spend ages on that site ‘making yourself’!

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Tech’n'Teach: Using Netvibes with your students

May 16, 2008

Tech\'n\'Teach iconNetvibes is an RSS aggregator that really is too cool for school and therefore should never be used in class … but if you introduce it to your students, you’ll get instant street cred. Guaranteed.As with any aggregator, Netvibes allows you to pull together all your RSS feeds. But Netvibes also has stacks of cool widgets you can add: facebook, weather, calendars, to-do lists, webnotes, flickr, eBay, games, and lots more. It’s much more fun than Bloglines, NewsGator or Google Reader.

NetvibesButtonThere are also public and private views, meaning that you can build your own space, but also have a public space (a ‘universe’) that others can see — which is what makes this a great tool to use with students. For example, you could ask students to find a bunch of feeds on your current class topic and put them together in their Netvibes universe. They can continue to build their Netvibes universe around their feeds by adding widgets and links. You can then visit their Netvibes URL and assess their work based on the quality of the feeds they’ve found as well as how well they’ve synthesised the core concepts you want them to learn. Sign up for Netvibes at www.netvibes.com.

You should also check out the megucation netvibes universe while you’re at it. I’ve pulled together a lot of useful education-related feeds … and even added PacMan, just for fun :)

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Tech’n'Teach: PowerUp — educational gaming

March 21, 2008

If teachers are interested to see how online gaming can be used in education, then take a look at IBM’s PowerUp.

Players have to save the planet ‘Helios’ from ecological destruction. The game is dead easy to download and instal, so give it a go to see the potential for this kind of stuff in education.

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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.

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