Neutral version (university references removed) of a workshop designed and run for the University of Bristol, March 2015. Deals with issues of blended, flipped and borderless learning and tries to distil some key principles.
2. But technology is everywhere...
âWe are not
rethinking some
part or aspect of
learning, we are
rethinking all of
learning in these
new digital
contextsâ (2007)
3. But technology is everywhere...
For a physical space of learning to exclude the virtual, digital devices would have
to be banned, switched off or inoperable. Otherwise the assumption must be that
learning in real space is penetrated with information and conversations from
elsewhere, and that real world learning events can be captured and ampliïŹed
into virtual spaces. (2014)
4. What is âblendedâ learning?
Independent
study
Guided/
supported
learning
better to think about...
5. What is âblendedâ learning?
Independent
study
Guided/
supported
learning
accessing online content
computer-based tutorials
and tests
producing digital artefacts
collating, curating, note-taking
reviewing, reïŹecting attending, apprehending
recording, note-taking
virtual tutoring/mentoring
referring to content
accessing virtual communities participating, interacting
presenting, sharing ideas
6. What is âblendedâ learning?
Independent
study
Guided/
supported
learning
accessing online content
computer-based tutorials
and tests
producing digital artefacts
collating, curating, note-taking
reviewing, reïŹecting attending, apprehending
recording, note-taking
virtual tutoring/mentoring
referring to content
accessing virtual communities participating, interacting
presenting, sharing ideas
7. All settings are âblendedâ...
Settings are âporousâ or leaky
Boundaries between personal/institutional are blurring
(time, space, technology, content/services, tasks)
⣠learners are continuously
connected
⣠technologies are immersive
and intimate
⣠realworld locations are
data nodes
⣠continuous record ->
âinstant memorialisingâ
8. What (else) is blurring/blending?
independent taught/guided
personal public/institutional
informal formal
real time record/representation
...? ...?
10. New things to know
⣠(Sub)disciplines: web science,
digital media, internet culture,
animation, digital humanities...
⣠Interdisciplinary problems:
digital bodies, globalisation,
communication design, privacy...
âŁProfessional issues: âWhat does it
mean to be a lawyer in this new
ethical space?â
âŁWhat new areas are emerging
in your subject or profession?
11. New ways of knowing
⣠Data collection, analysis, management, re/use:
what can be (done with) data?
⣠Secondary research: what and
where is legitimate knowledge?
⣠Design, inc. research design
⣠Collaboration, inc. remotely
⣠Modes of representation, e.g.
data visualisation, animation,
virtual worlds, hypermedia, digital presentation...
âŁDigital/information literacy is fundamental
12. New motives for learning
⣠fewer traditional graduate jobs,
more informal âknowledgeâ work
⣠most high value jobs involve
digital technologies
⣠7-10 career changes, loose ties,
portfolio careers
⣠constant upgrade (the capable
self as lifelong project)
⣠alternatives to a degree: informal learning, online credits,
OERs, MOOCs, TED talks, Kahn academy, Google...
⣠Digital/information literacy is fundamental
13. New practices of learning
social media practices -> new
assumptions about sharing,
openness, credibility, authority...
personal apps/services -> new
practices of collating, collaborating,
writing, referencing...
14. New practices of learning
reliance on image-based media &
graphical interfaces -> new practices
of searching, ïŹnding, visualising,
communicating, managing info
experience of gaming -> high
expectations of simulation
environments, micro-reward
structures, assessment tasks (coding
as communication of ideas? )
15. New practices of teaching?
Borderless, blended, ïŹipped classrooms
Networked, connected, rhizomatic learning
Open, public, massive, online courses
16. New practices of teaching?
1. Students locate, evaluate and work with information
2. Students collaborate using virtual tools
3. Students communicate ideas in a variety of media
4. Students create digital artefacts and leave a digital trace
5. Real time is precious: students are prepared, teaching is responsive
6. Authentic (academic/professional) tasks: authentic digital practices
7. Engagement and feedback from beyond the classroom/cohort
8. Studentsâ digital resources - tools, services, skills, identities -
are recognised and valued
17. Everything must change?
Independent
study
Guided/
supported
learning
accessing online content
computer-based tutorials
and tests
producing digital artefacts
collating, curating, note-taking
reviewing, reïŹecting attending, apprehending
recording, note-taking
virtual tutoring/mentoring
referring to content
accessing virtual communities participating, interacting
presenting, sharing ideas
18. Against the myth of digital ânativesâ
⣠Students fundamentally divided
on uses of technology in learning
⣠Learners are different! May have
limited or negative digital
experiences
⣠Some enjoy virtual engagement,
others see it as poor substitute
⣠Learners have difïŹculty transposing digital practices from social to
professional/academic contexts e.g. evaluating information
⣠Creative production and knowledge sharing are minority activities to
which most learners are introduced by educators (Selwyn 2011-14)
⣠NetGen (<25yo) use internet more for social/leisure but older, better
qualiïŹed people use it more for study and self-advancement
19. âDigitalâ learners still want...
shared places and spaces of learning
shared time-of-life, cohort experience
transformational encounters with
inspiring teachers
sense of belonging
20. Universities still make a unique offer ...
shared places and spaces of learning
shared time-of-life, cohort experience
transformational encounters with
inspiring teachers
sense of belonging
high quality academic content
specialised digital practices
space to play: ïŹuency, resilience, repertoire
âa professional reputation, carefully managedâ
... and must now reframe it in the digital space
23. Continuities and disruptions
In pairs/small groups discuss and write on post-it notes:
What should we continue doing that supports students
effectively with their learning?
What should we change to support students more
effectively (and how)?