Deploying social software in learning and teaching environments
Presentation for EDEN 2006. Held in Barcelona 25th to 28th October 2006.
6390 views | comments | 32 favorites | 0 downloads | 6 embeds (Stats)
More Info
This slideshow is Public
Total Views: 6390 on Slideshare: 6370 from embeds: 20
Most viewed embeds (Top 5):
More
Slideshow Transcript
- Slide 1: deploying social software in learning
and teaching environments:
the implications for distance education
Dr Steven Warburton
King’s College London
steven.warburton@kcl.ac.uk
- Slide 2: • distance learning – social
software’s killer ap? (Anderson, T.
2005)
• social software – distance
learning's killer ap? (Downes, S.
2005)
- Slide 3: Blogs are just one of a number of social tools
discussion fora
social
IRC recommendation
instant messaging
blogs
social tools
wikis
social bookmarks
collaboration social networks
- Slide 4: why social software and why in education?
• social nature of learning
• social-constructivism
• situated learning
• dialogue and negotiated meaning
• collaboration, community and creativity
• socio-technical and cultural changes
• ambient technology, ubiquitous computing
• shift from community to networks
• web-natives, digital natives, net generation
• web 2.0
» read/write web -> consumer becomes producer
» complexity, emergent behaviour and emergent
classifications
» the rise of social tools, sharing and syndication
- Slide 5: blogs: individual, personal and informal
syntactical form:
• chronological: they
perform time
• brief, frequent posts
• open to comments
• syndicated (rss)
• linked (blogroll and
trackback)
semantic content:
• multiple classification
schemes by content
• filter vs. personal
types
- Slide 6: why blog?
• internet blogging
• self promotion
• opinion
inherent tensions:
• dating
• formal and informal
• community presence and • individual and group
participation
• freedom and censorship
• everyone else is, so why not? • autonomy and control
• public and private
• educational blogging • identity and trust
• authentic and inauthentic
• what is the potential for emerging
technologies in [distance]
education?
• how do we understand and
negotiate the meaning of these
tools?
• do they support our underpinning
educational values?
- Slide 7: versatility of blogs
• providing a rich set of writing activities: writing as
a process of self discovery
• supporting conversational learning
• creating or augmenting social presence
• encouraging reflective practice (through an
inherent reflective, informal tone)
• developing a ‘critical voice’
• providing a record or portfolio of learning
• developing a community of inquiry
• creating learning networks, social networks
• developing and understanding ones identity as a
learner (autonomy and ownership)
• tension between self and reader necessitates
learning to trust and understand ones own
perspectives
- Slide 8: a case study
a fully online distance learning MA in War Studies
that attracts mature professionals from a variety of
educational backgrounds
- Slide 9: the online learning environment
VLE – institutional space blogs – personal space
• bounded • open
• content based • dialogue driven
• assessment driven • autonomous and reflective
• discussion (structured): • aggregation -> community
• critical discourse -> critical • journal metaphor ->
thinking learner identity
- Slide 10: tutor/course blog
external ‘expert’ blogs
student blog
student blog
personal aggregator: “river of news”
community
network
- Slide 11: Framework:
Questions?
Garrison, Anderson and Archer (2000)
• will students blog?
• how often will they
blog?
• how does this compare
to internet or free-form
blogging (style and
voice)?
• can blogs facilitate
community formation
(through augmenting social
presence)?
research instruments: content
analysis [blogs], questionnaires and
semi-structured interviews.
- Slide 12: were blogs successful?
• low threshold: easy to use both
conceptually and in terms of technical
usability
– “easier than falling off a banana boat.”
– “i also thought that the blogging was easy to
use and an interesting experience as I never
blogged before.”
- Slide 13: on first analysis
• a range of bloggers from enthusiastic
(20%) to occasional (30%) to non existent
(50%)
• similar to other reported studies: Walker 2003; Brooks,
Nichols and Pribe 2005; Kruger 2005; Ramsden 2006.
• blogs contained indicators of social
presence yet they were often marked by
formal (and lengthy) commentaries on the
course materials
- Slide 14: tensions
- Slide 15: • finding purpose?
– “i have never blogged before. I knew that there are such
a sites and tools, but it was useless for me in my normal
life. I don’t have time to write something, what is not
needed by anybody.”
• the pragmatic student approach
– “i, like many others in the program, have a very busy schedule
and tend to prioritize what needs tending as not all of it can be
done right away. The blog, in comparison to the reading,
discussion, essays and group projects, seems to be the lower
priority."
- Slide 16: private and public realms
• “i prefer to use the discussion boards. It's a
privacy thing - I'm not comfortable broadcasting
my thoughts on the web through my blog.”
• “no, not really, it's just getting over the creapiness
[sic] of the entire blog thing”
- Slide 17: students struggle with blogs
• time and assessment pressures:
– drive pragmatic decision making in using blogs. students
are strategic in their learning approaches
• informality:
– authors are uneasy with the confessional and tone of
blogs (impression management, see Goffman 1959)
• genre:
– are they academic notebooks, diaries or a social space
for free expression?
• [educational] context:
– implies assessment, risk, exposure - disrupting the
balance of intrinsic and extrinsic motivational factors
that appear to drive ‘internet bloggers’
- Slide 18: understandings
- Slide 19: contextual negotiation and
interpretation
• blogs (indeed social software) mean different things to
different people in different cultural contexts
• the utility of blogs (like the internet cf. Hine 2000) is
created through a process of negotiation and interpretation
in specific contexts of use
• blogging evangelists often draw on the rhetoric of the
internet – democracy and emancipation
– yet we need to understand the specificities or the demands of
education i.e. examine technology in use
Hine, C. (2000) Virtual ethnography. Sage London.
- Slide 21: learning spaces: institution <-> internet
• student appropriation of blogs at Warwick
• institutional but they blog about politics and each other -> flame
wars, problems with censorship arise
• Warwick blogs exist at the intersection of
educational and internet space
• blurring of formal and informal boundary
• within this context how are these tools used?
• personal commentaries, shared planning, opinions/critiques/rants,
social contact and self identity
• finding value in blogging is not straightforward -
despite the optimism for their use in education
- Slide 22: • genre analysis and blogs
– “genres are the intellectual scaffolds on which
community-based knowledge is constructed”
(Berkenkotter and Huckin, 1995)
• misunderstanding blogging as genre
– “i don't quite get the reason behind the Blog. I write my
own notes as I go through the course, mostly mind maps of
either the course material or ideas.”
– “no. I haven't distilled the point of blogging yet with
regard to this course.”
- Slide 23: solutions?
• blogging as remediation:
– “the language of cultural interfaces is largely made up from elements
of other already familiar cultural forms” (Manovich, 2001)
– familiarise students with the genre by relating blogs to antecedents
such as (learning) journals, diaries and note-cards
• force purpose:
– remove the discussion boards (remove VLE?) and dispel confusion over
learning spaces (personalised learning approach?)
• negotiate purpose:
– direct and guide through example (tutor blogs, tone and style)
– engage students in articulating and defining use
– encourage students to move from lurking -> active participation
• uncover the selfish motives for blogging
– we need to uncover how students assemble the various technical
possibilities that add up to their own internet or educational experience
– blogs become portfolios and part of the lifelong learning agenda
- Slide 24: the end
Steven Warburton
Published in The New Yorker
King’s College London
September 12th, 2005
steven.warburton@kcl.ac.uk
By Alex Gregory
http://warburton.typepad.com