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Adobe Connect
            Some Practical Considerations

                    Michael Hallissy
                     H2 Learning

www.h2.ie
Introduction
            •   Founding partner in H2 Learning
                 – Focus on the use of digital technologies in teaching, learning and
                   assessment
            •   Former director the MATL in Hibernia College
                 – Lead tutor in the Certificate in i-Learning
            •   Completing EdD in Institute of Education, London
            •   Doctoral Thesis entitled:
            •   "Building teacher professionalism in teaching-learning interactions
                between online tutors and learners during synchronous tutorials –
                a case study from Hibernia College"
            •   Focus on working with lecturers to use these tools to enhance
                student learning
                 –   What knowledge and expertise do staff have?
                 –   What knowledge and expertise do they need to enhance student learning?

www.h2.ie
Introduce Yourself

            • Name
            • Lecturing in ….
            • Have you used Adobe Connect or similar
              tool?
              – If yes, what tool?
            • What would you like to learn from today?


www.h2.ie
Some Perspective

            •   Learning at a distance has been around since 1890s
            •   1st online OU Course 1988 (Mason, 2001)
            •   “the internet does not educate, nor does it actively support learning.
                Mostly, it provides information” (Laurillard, 2012; 29)
            •   OU noted that “active discussion has long been one of the aspects that is
                difficult to provide in distance education, with tutorials and summer schools
                being the usual means of achieving this” (Mason, 2001; 73)
            •   Since 1988 there has been a great deal written on the topic of discussion
                and online courses in HE but this has mostly focused on asynchronous
                technologies – forums particularly.
            •   But today we have new tools that facilitate live discussion




www.h2.ie
Technology and what it can do
            •   “Computer-mediated conferencing (CMC) is unique among distance
                education media because of its ability to support high levels of responsive,
                intelligent interaction between and among faculty and students while
                simultaneously providing high levels of freedom of time and place to
                engage in this interactivity.” (Rourke et al., 1999; 50)

            •   “The claims made for the educational value of CMC rest on the assumption
                that students learn effectively through discussion and collaboration”
                (Laurillard, 2002; 147)
                 –   She notes that “the properties of a medium do not determine the quality of
                     learning that takes place” (Ibid;147)


            Now we have:
            • Synchronous Computer-mediated conferencing technologies (SCMC)
                 –   Adobe Connect, Wimba, Elluminate, Lync etc.

www.h2.ie
Here are some of the strategies we could use
online




            http://www.ion.uillinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/instructionalstrategies.asp

www.h2.ie
3 Elements of Online Learning & Teaching




                             Content


                    SCMC                   Forum



www.h2.ie
New Opportunities

            • Immediate and just-in-time access to peers, lecturers,
              and knowledge experts
            • Ability for multiple people to interact and share ideas
              with one another concurrently
            • Hands-on tools through which learners can react to
              presented concepts or apply knowledge in real time
            • Direct connections to real-world situations and primary
              sources
                                                      (Finkelstein, 2006; 6)



www.h2.ie
Synchronous Learning Environments




            “Synchronous learning is live, real-time (and usually
             scheduled), facilitated instruction and learning-oriented
             interaction.”
                                              (Hyder et al., 2007: p. 1)

www.h2.ie
Were they engaged during these sessions?




www.h2.ie
Or were they watching TV or something else?




www.h2.ie
Students are NOT always clear why they are
attending these events?

                   Purpose of the tutorial            Percentage
            Opportunity for tutor to present new         57%
            content
            Opportunity for tutor to revise content      93%
            presented in the recorded lesson

            Opportunity for students to raise           100%
            questions and discuss the lesson
            content
            Opportunity for students to work in          20%
            small groups online
            Opportunity for students to present          21%
            their work to colleagues

www.h2.ie
Adobe Connect




www.h2.ie
Typical Features of SCMC technologies


            Slides                Hands up


                                             Yes         No




                       Chat box                    Emoticons



            Controls
www.h2.ie
Online Lecture

                                                       • Allows you to connect live at a
                                                         distance
                                                       • Allows you to interact with your
                                                         audience in real-time
                                                       • Allows you to bring “experts” or
                                                         “guest lectures” into your lecture
                                                         hall
                                                       • Facilitates webinars – open
                                                         them up to everyone
                                                       • It can be archived and replayed



            http://www.iri.uni-hannover.de/online-lecture.html
www.h2.ie
Share Rich Content

            •   PowerPoint Slides
            •   Video and audio
            •   Webpages
            •   Documents
                – Research papers, correspondence etc.
            • Interactive whiteboard feature
                – Brainstorming
            • And much more



www.h2.ie
Instruction

                                       Input and output
                                             tasks




              Lecturer chosen
                                                                   Lecture to many
                 resources




                       Lecturer controls                   Lecturer as
                      „time & pace‟ seen              teller, organiser, ju
                            as key                             dge




                                                                                     Watkins et al., 2002
www.h2.ie
But it can be so much more …

            •   Unplanned chats among peers over lunch
            •   Lively in-class discussions or debates
            •   Student-led presentations or performances
            •   Study group, team, or committee gatherings
            •   Impromptu exchange between a student and a lecturer after class
                or during office hours
            •   Timely and personalised guidance from a reference librarian,
                advisor, or a lecturer
                                                               (Finkelstein, 2006; 3)




www.h2.ie
Construction

                                            Individuals, pairs, gro
                                                     ups




               Tasks for processing
                                                                             Lecturer as enquirer
                and understanding




                          Student experience a                         Long time
                               resource                          blocks, student-paced




                                                                                     Watkins et al., 2002
www.h2.ie
Co-construction


                                         Changing
                                      groups, netwo
                                       rks, linkages




                   Tasks of
                                                                Lecturer as
                  generating
                                                                learner too
                  knowledge




                          Access to
                                                       Time seen as
                           world of
                                                       less relevant
                          resources

                                                                        Watkins et al., 2002
www.h2.ie
Potential roles for lecturers and learners


            When
            teachers:    Instruct   Guide      Facilitate   Consult


            Learners                                        Self-
            become:     Dependent Interested   Involved
                                                            Directed




www.h2.ie
What the Research has to say




            “Instructors who are new to the online environment may
             struggle with the transition from the central figure in the
             learning process to a facilitator or guide of that process.”
                                                   (Palloff and Pratt, 2011)

www.h2.ie
Analogy of a dinner party host
            Prepare for their arrival                             Have resources ready in advance
                                                                  When they arrive you can focus on these and on
                                                                  collaboration
            Welcome them warmly                                   Welcome people by name
                                                                  Create a warm and secure environment
            Frequently assess the mood of the room                Frequently check that people are alright
                                                                  Don‟t wait till the end of the evening
            Have more food (for thought) than you need            Prepare more activities that you need
                                                                  Don‟t feel you need to use them all
            Make everyone feel included                           Give people opportunities to interact
                                                                  Refer to comments made by people by name
            Facilitate Connections and conversation, but don‟t    Your role is to facilitate an environment where learners
            dominate ever discussion                              are exchanging ideas with others, and seeing their
                                                                  peers as resources for ongoing learning
            Offer guests something to take home with them         Provide a transcript or a recording of the event
                                                                  Access to slides, readings or continue the discussion
                                                                  on the forum
            Know when to say good night; leave everyone wanting   End on a high point. Don‟t try to cover everything.
            more                                                  Monitor the energy levels and go with the group.



www.h2.ie
Where might you start?

            •   How you can build interaction into the session - you don't want
                people sitting at their computer all evening looking at the screen so
                how might you get them involved?
            •   Don't fall into the "autopilot" mode where you forget students are
                present.
            •   Get learners to concentrate by minimising external distractions
                 – Have ground rules and use the emoticons
            •   Role of the facilitator similar to that of the ringmaster in the circus
                 – You need to keep things focused and moving
                 – It needs structure
                 – Gauge feedback


www.h2.ie
Practical Tips
            •   Ensure they have the technology
                 –   Headphones
                 –   Microphone
            •   Get people to acknowledge they can hear you
            •   Have clear ground-rules
                 –   This is what we are going to do …
                 –   This is what I will be doing …
                 –   This is what I expect from you …
            •   If people have questions how can they interact with you and
                colleagues?
            •   How will you get people to interact?
                 –   Use the poll feature
                 –   Texting feature
                 –   They can speak through the microphone
                 –   What about shy or quiet students? “Will you just click-in on them?”
www.h2.ie
Interaction Tools
            •   Use of questioning
                 – Check in with learners regularly and get feedback via emoticons?
                       – “Can everyone hear me?” Smiley or Sad face
                       – “Is x clear or do you want me to go deeper? “ Thumbs up or down
                 – Groups
                       – Strategies to give learners a chance to interact with each other
                       – This can be done in break-out groups or via texting
                       – Structuring discussions and feedback
            • Mix of Resources
                –   Maybe begin with a short video clip (stimulus to engage)
                –   Share a webpage or a document
                –   Share a research or a newspaper article
                –   Mix it up – use a variety of media
                –   Have clear tasks associated with these media
www.h2.ie
Your Role in all this
            • If tutor is too enthusiastic the students “slip easily into the
              role of passive audience” (Brookfield and Preskill, 2005;
              194)
            • “Teachers should confine themselves to a reasonable
              quota of lecturing minutes per class, preferably at the
              beginning or the conclusion of a class.” (ibid; 200)
            • What do you want to achieve at the end of the session?
            • How might you introduce new content or ideas and get
              some discussion or interaction going?
            • It takes time and there is a learning curve – how can you set
              yourself up to succeed?
            • Be conscious that this is new and it can be daunting!
www.h2.ie
Silence
            •   Be aware that silence is a factor
                 – Speaking into a vacuum
                 – Wait-time (learning to leave gaps)


            One lecture‟s reflection on this:
            “I had absolutely no experience of it previously the first time I put on
            those headphones and said hello or good evening I was absolutely
            terrorised [nervous laughter]”

            “I was pleasantly surprised it all happened much much easier than I
            thought and so I think the strongest thing I found is that my teaching
            skills are, or if you like my onsite classroom teaching skills, I was able
            to call on once I just got over the first hurdle of actually doing this
            online.”
www.h2.ie
So design your lectures online

            • Remember it is one tool among many
            • It is good at facilitating certain types of interactions
              – it is not a silver bullet
            • Novice online – it takes to be comfortable
            • How will it dovetail with face-to-face?
            • How will it link with with Moodle etc.?
            • Keep it simple and structure it
                – Not that you have every second accounted for
                – But that you don‟t have to do all the work
                – Manage the time

www.h2.ie
Some Final Words
            • This is relatively new in online education
                – Asynchronous has a long tradition
            • “Mediated synchronous and blended DE contains natural
              conditions for interaction, especially between the student
              and teacher and among other students.” (Bernard et al.,
              2009)
            • Tutor View
                – “I feel that I am using the technology that I know how to use to its
                  maximum and so now if I could move a bit deeper”
                – “But I would love if the technology would allow us to move even
                  further. That is where I am at, at this stage.”
            • Participate as a learner in an online event
www.h2.ie
References
            •   Bernard, R. M., Abrami, P. C., Borokhovski, E., Wade, C. A., Tamim, R. M., Surkes, M. A. and
                Bethel, E. C. (2009). 'A Meta-Analysis of Three Types of Interaction Treatments in Distance
                Education'. Review of Educational Research, 79 (3), 1243-1289.
            •   Finkelstein, J. (2006). Learning in Real Time: Synchronous Teaching and Learning Online. San
                Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
            •   Johnson, S. D. and Aragon, S. R. (2003). 'An Instructional Strategy Framework for Online Learning
                Environments'. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 100 (Winter), 31-43.
            •   Mason, R. (2001). 'Effective facilitation of online learning: the Open University experience'. In J.
                Stephenson (Ed.), Teaching and learning online: New pedagogies for new technologies. London:
                Kogan Page.
            •   Laurillard, D. (2002). Rethinking University Teaching: A conversational framework for the effective
                use of learning technologies. (Second Ed.). London and New York: Routledge Falmer.
            •   Laurillard, D. (2012). Teaching as a Design Science. Building Pedagogical Patters for Learning and
                Technology. New York and London: Routledge.
            •   Rourke, L., Anderson, T., Garrison, R. D. and Archer, W. (1999). 'Assessing Social Presence in
                Asynchronous Text-based Computer Conferencing'. Journal of Distance Education, 14 (2), 50-71.
            •   Watkins, C., Carnell, E., Lodge, C., Wagner P. and Whalley C. (2002). 'Effective Learning'. Institute
                of Education International Network for School Improvement Research Matters Series (17).

www.h2.ie

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  • 1. Adobe Connect Some Practical Considerations Michael Hallissy H2 Learning www.h2.ie
  • 2. Introduction • Founding partner in H2 Learning – Focus on the use of digital technologies in teaching, learning and assessment • Former director the MATL in Hibernia College – Lead tutor in the Certificate in i-Learning • Completing EdD in Institute of Education, London • Doctoral Thesis entitled: • "Building teacher professionalism in teaching-learning interactions between online tutors and learners during synchronous tutorials – a case study from Hibernia College" • Focus on working with lecturers to use these tools to enhance student learning – What knowledge and expertise do staff have? – What knowledge and expertise do they need to enhance student learning? www.h2.ie
  • 3. Introduce Yourself • Name • Lecturing in …. • Have you used Adobe Connect or similar tool? – If yes, what tool? • What would you like to learn from today? www.h2.ie
  • 4. Some Perspective • Learning at a distance has been around since 1890s • 1st online OU Course 1988 (Mason, 2001) • “the internet does not educate, nor does it actively support learning. Mostly, it provides information” (Laurillard, 2012; 29) • OU noted that “active discussion has long been one of the aspects that is difficult to provide in distance education, with tutorials and summer schools being the usual means of achieving this” (Mason, 2001; 73) • Since 1988 there has been a great deal written on the topic of discussion and online courses in HE but this has mostly focused on asynchronous technologies – forums particularly. • But today we have new tools that facilitate live discussion www.h2.ie
  • 5. Technology and what it can do • “Computer-mediated conferencing (CMC) is unique among distance education media because of its ability to support high levels of responsive, intelligent interaction between and among faculty and students while simultaneously providing high levels of freedom of time and place to engage in this interactivity.” (Rourke et al., 1999; 50) • “The claims made for the educational value of CMC rest on the assumption that students learn effectively through discussion and collaboration” (Laurillard, 2002; 147) – She notes that “the properties of a medium do not determine the quality of learning that takes place” (Ibid;147) Now we have: • Synchronous Computer-mediated conferencing technologies (SCMC) – Adobe Connect, Wimba, Elluminate, Lync etc. www.h2.ie
  • 6. Here are some of the strategies we could use online http://www.ion.uillinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/instructionalstrategies.asp www.h2.ie
  • 7. 3 Elements of Online Learning & Teaching Content SCMC Forum www.h2.ie
  • 8. New Opportunities • Immediate and just-in-time access to peers, lecturers, and knowledge experts • Ability for multiple people to interact and share ideas with one another concurrently • Hands-on tools through which learners can react to presented concepts or apply knowledge in real time • Direct connections to real-world situations and primary sources (Finkelstein, 2006; 6) www.h2.ie
  • 9. Synchronous Learning Environments “Synchronous learning is live, real-time (and usually scheduled), facilitated instruction and learning-oriented interaction.” (Hyder et al., 2007: p. 1) www.h2.ie
  • 10. Were they engaged during these sessions? www.h2.ie
  • 11. Or were they watching TV or something else? www.h2.ie
  • 12. Students are NOT always clear why they are attending these events? Purpose of the tutorial Percentage Opportunity for tutor to present new 57% content Opportunity for tutor to revise content 93% presented in the recorded lesson Opportunity for students to raise 100% questions and discuss the lesson content Opportunity for students to work in 20% small groups online Opportunity for students to present 21% their work to colleagues www.h2.ie
  • 14. Typical Features of SCMC technologies Slides Hands up Yes No Chat box Emoticons Controls www.h2.ie
  • 15. Online Lecture • Allows you to connect live at a distance • Allows you to interact with your audience in real-time • Allows you to bring “experts” or “guest lectures” into your lecture hall • Facilitates webinars – open them up to everyone • It can be archived and replayed http://www.iri.uni-hannover.de/online-lecture.html www.h2.ie
  • 16. Share Rich Content • PowerPoint Slides • Video and audio • Webpages • Documents – Research papers, correspondence etc. • Interactive whiteboard feature – Brainstorming • And much more www.h2.ie
  • 17. Instruction Input and output tasks Lecturer chosen Lecture to many resources Lecturer controls Lecturer as „time & pace‟ seen teller, organiser, ju as key dge Watkins et al., 2002 www.h2.ie
  • 18. But it can be so much more … • Unplanned chats among peers over lunch • Lively in-class discussions or debates • Student-led presentations or performances • Study group, team, or committee gatherings • Impromptu exchange between a student and a lecturer after class or during office hours • Timely and personalised guidance from a reference librarian, advisor, or a lecturer (Finkelstein, 2006; 3) www.h2.ie
  • 19. Construction Individuals, pairs, gro ups Tasks for processing Lecturer as enquirer and understanding Student experience a Long time resource blocks, student-paced Watkins et al., 2002 www.h2.ie
  • 20. Co-construction Changing groups, netwo rks, linkages Tasks of Lecturer as generating learner too knowledge Access to Time seen as world of less relevant resources Watkins et al., 2002 www.h2.ie
  • 21. Potential roles for lecturers and learners When teachers: Instruct Guide Facilitate Consult Learners Self- become: Dependent Interested Involved Directed www.h2.ie
  • 22. What the Research has to say “Instructors who are new to the online environment may struggle with the transition from the central figure in the learning process to a facilitator or guide of that process.” (Palloff and Pratt, 2011) www.h2.ie
  • 23. Analogy of a dinner party host Prepare for their arrival Have resources ready in advance When they arrive you can focus on these and on collaboration Welcome them warmly Welcome people by name Create a warm and secure environment Frequently assess the mood of the room Frequently check that people are alright Don‟t wait till the end of the evening Have more food (for thought) than you need Prepare more activities that you need Don‟t feel you need to use them all Make everyone feel included Give people opportunities to interact Refer to comments made by people by name Facilitate Connections and conversation, but don‟t Your role is to facilitate an environment where learners dominate ever discussion are exchanging ideas with others, and seeing their peers as resources for ongoing learning Offer guests something to take home with them Provide a transcript or a recording of the event Access to slides, readings or continue the discussion on the forum Know when to say good night; leave everyone wanting End on a high point. Don‟t try to cover everything. more Monitor the energy levels and go with the group. www.h2.ie
  • 24. Where might you start? • How you can build interaction into the session - you don't want people sitting at their computer all evening looking at the screen so how might you get them involved? • Don't fall into the "autopilot" mode where you forget students are present. • Get learners to concentrate by minimising external distractions – Have ground rules and use the emoticons • Role of the facilitator similar to that of the ringmaster in the circus – You need to keep things focused and moving – It needs structure – Gauge feedback www.h2.ie
  • 25. Practical Tips • Ensure they have the technology – Headphones – Microphone • Get people to acknowledge they can hear you • Have clear ground-rules – This is what we are going to do … – This is what I will be doing … – This is what I expect from you … • If people have questions how can they interact with you and colleagues? • How will you get people to interact? – Use the poll feature – Texting feature – They can speak through the microphone – What about shy or quiet students? “Will you just click-in on them?” www.h2.ie
  • 26. Interaction Tools • Use of questioning – Check in with learners regularly and get feedback via emoticons? – “Can everyone hear me?” Smiley or Sad face – “Is x clear or do you want me to go deeper? “ Thumbs up or down – Groups – Strategies to give learners a chance to interact with each other – This can be done in break-out groups or via texting – Structuring discussions and feedback • Mix of Resources – Maybe begin with a short video clip (stimulus to engage) – Share a webpage or a document – Share a research or a newspaper article – Mix it up – use a variety of media – Have clear tasks associated with these media www.h2.ie
  • 27. Your Role in all this • If tutor is too enthusiastic the students “slip easily into the role of passive audience” (Brookfield and Preskill, 2005; 194) • “Teachers should confine themselves to a reasonable quota of lecturing minutes per class, preferably at the beginning or the conclusion of a class.” (ibid; 200) • What do you want to achieve at the end of the session? • How might you introduce new content or ideas and get some discussion or interaction going? • It takes time and there is a learning curve – how can you set yourself up to succeed? • Be conscious that this is new and it can be daunting! www.h2.ie
  • 28. Silence • Be aware that silence is a factor – Speaking into a vacuum – Wait-time (learning to leave gaps) One lecture‟s reflection on this: “I had absolutely no experience of it previously the first time I put on those headphones and said hello or good evening I was absolutely terrorised [nervous laughter]” “I was pleasantly surprised it all happened much much easier than I thought and so I think the strongest thing I found is that my teaching skills are, or if you like my onsite classroom teaching skills, I was able to call on once I just got over the first hurdle of actually doing this online.” www.h2.ie
  • 29. So design your lectures online • Remember it is one tool among many • It is good at facilitating certain types of interactions – it is not a silver bullet • Novice online – it takes to be comfortable • How will it dovetail with face-to-face? • How will it link with with Moodle etc.? • Keep it simple and structure it – Not that you have every second accounted for – But that you don‟t have to do all the work – Manage the time www.h2.ie
  • 30. Some Final Words • This is relatively new in online education – Asynchronous has a long tradition • “Mediated synchronous and blended DE contains natural conditions for interaction, especially between the student and teacher and among other students.” (Bernard et al., 2009) • Tutor View – “I feel that I am using the technology that I know how to use to its maximum and so now if I could move a bit deeper” – “But I would love if the technology would allow us to move even further. That is where I am at, at this stage.” • Participate as a learner in an online event www.h2.ie
  • 31. References • Bernard, R. M., Abrami, P. C., Borokhovski, E., Wade, C. A., Tamim, R. M., Surkes, M. A. and Bethel, E. C. (2009). 'A Meta-Analysis of Three Types of Interaction Treatments in Distance Education'. Review of Educational Research, 79 (3), 1243-1289. • Finkelstein, J. (2006). Learning in Real Time: Synchronous Teaching and Learning Online. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. • Johnson, S. D. and Aragon, S. R. (2003). 'An Instructional Strategy Framework for Online Learning Environments'. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 100 (Winter), 31-43. • Mason, R. (2001). 'Effective facilitation of online learning: the Open University experience'. In J. Stephenson (Ed.), Teaching and learning online: New pedagogies for new technologies. London: Kogan Page. • Laurillard, D. (2002). Rethinking University Teaching: A conversational framework for the effective use of learning technologies. (Second Ed.). London and New York: Routledge Falmer. • Laurillard, D. (2012). Teaching as a Design Science. Building Pedagogical Patters for Learning and Technology. New York and London: Routledge. • Rourke, L., Anderson, T., Garrison, R. D. and Archer, W. (1999). 'Assessing Social Presence in Asynchronous Text-based Computer Conferencing'. Journal of Distance Education, 14 (2), 50-71. • Watkins, C., Carnell, E., Lodge, C., Wagner P. and Whalley C. (2002). 'Effective Learning'. Institute of Education International Network for School Improvement Research Matters Series (17). www.h2.ie

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Key point is that the technology or the medium is not going to determine the quality of learningOkay you select a good product/tool but it is how you use it that counts – the lecturer is key in using the tool
  2. Key is there is interaction and the tutor plans in advance what and how they want to achieve during the tutorial."Support is a crucial element for retaining and motivating learners". Nothing works better when a learner is in trouble that a "live exchange with the right person"
  3. research around online learning highlights the need for students to be actively engaged in creating their own knowledge (Salmon, 2008; Hrastinski, 2009; van Alst and Hill, 2001)
  4. InstructionCollaborationSupportSocialisation and informal exchangeExtended outreach
  5. The active construction of knowledge by learners through a process of real-time give-and-take is well-served in a live online setting (Finkelstein, 2006)The notion of Collaboration - "Collaboration is a key element to the success of an online learning environment (Conrad and Donaldson, 2004)No matter what technology we employ, it is still the human experience that is most important. Students learn from teacheres, their peers, and knowledge experts. No one learns from a computer" (Kimura, 2002)
  6. Good practice gives prompt feedback(Chickering and Gamson, 1987)