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Encouraging academic skills
development through social reading:
A critical review of digital solutions
and implementation strategies
ALT-C
Richard Walker, University of York
Samuel Parr, University of Leicester
6th September 2022
Today
 Social reading and collaborative
annotation defined
– Support from literature
 Collaborative Annotation
platform overview
 How to use collaboration
annotation in your teaching
– Recommendations and tips for
encouraging social reading in courses
What is social reading?
 Collaborative reading, where
students discuss their thoughts
and ideas about a resource
 Book groups and seminar
discussions
Collaborative Annotation
 Collaborative reading, where
students discuss their thoughts
and ideas about a resource
 Book groups and seminar
discussions
 Online through collaborative
annotation
Collaborative Annotation in Talis Elevate
Why is this relevant to HE?
 Students’ textual understanding and engagement
– Academics report that students have limited critical engagement in texts
– It is difficult to see or measure student engagement in course texts
before summative assessment
– Course reading can feel very separate from the wider learning journey,
particularly for non-core texts
 Community Building
– Community improves student academic and social achievement,
increases curricular integration, and increased satisfaction with learning
(Calderwood, 2000; Rovai, 2002; van Tyron & Bishop, 2009)
– Developing an online community can be challenging, and discussion
forums are often inadequate
How collaborative annotation might help
 Students’ textual understanding
– “Collaborative annotation tools capture students’ thinking and
processing in the moment, more closely mirroring the learning that one
might see in a face-to-face class when students discuss content with
their instructor and/or classmates” (Adams & Wilson, 2020)
– Provides opportunities for students to ask questions, discuss ideas, and
provide peer-to-peer learning
– Educators can see and measure engagement and understanding
 Community
– Provides a discussion forum that is a natural part of the student journey
Support from literature
 Limited amount of published research
 Focus on digital support for pre-class reading
assignments: an instructor-designed, flipped learning
approach (e.g. Miller et al., 2018)
 Social learning environments may support continuous
conversations between learners, enabling them to reflect
on target learning resources and build understanding of
key concepts (Crouch & Mazur, 2001)
 Li & Zhou (2021) found human to text interactivity in
social reading boosted students’ social presence
 Various case studies with some evidence of success…
Collaborative
Annotation Software
Talis Elevate
Pros:
 Easy-to-use social reading tool
for staff and students
 Allows annotation of documents,
images, and videos
 Some linkage to Talis Aspire
reading lists and VLEs (via LTI
integration), meaning you can
use Talis Aspire Copyright
Clearance
 Basic analytics functions
Cons:
 No groups functionality
 Analytics and linkage to Talis Aspire
and VLEs could be more advanced
 Access control issues, including:
– No external access options
– All academics can find and enrol
in each other’s modules
– Documents shared through links
are a bit clunky
Perusall
Pros:
 Established social reading
platform for HE
 Allows annotation of
documents, images, and videos
 Groups functionality
 Advanced analytics
 Free for educators
Cons:
 No linkage to reading lists
 Free for students, but asks them
to pay for additional content
 Academics responsible for
managing copyright (unless
students pay for texts in
Perusall)
hypothes.is
Pros:
 Allows annotation of web
pages and uploaded PDFs
 Groups functionality
 Free for educators
Cons:
 No video annotation
 No linkage to reading lists
 Students need to add a
Chrome extension to use
 Academics responsible for
managing copyright
ExLibris Leganto
Pros:
 ‘Read and Respond’ integrates with
LMS platforms (module site, Grade
Centre & reading list)
 Instructor can link to target pdf file
and present questions for
discussion
 Commenting function for students:
named or anonymous contributions
 Group work assignments supported
Cons:
 Students can’t set up
collaborative reading activities
– must be allocated a task by
instructor
 Unclear whether images / web
resources can be reviewed
Discounted Tools
 Word/Google Docs: Designed
primarily for collaborative editing,
rather than annotation
 NowComment: Well established,
but lacks integration with VLEs
Evidence from
Case Studies
University of Leicester – Talis Elevate
 Piloted Elevate to a module of
180 Bioscience students
 Students discussed 4 resources
asynchronously in Talis Elevate:
– 2 academic papers
– Module Description and Practical
Assessment Description
University of Leicester – Results
 91.6% of the cohort accessed Talis, but
only 18.3% of 180 students engaged to
make 83 discussion comments and 63
personal comments
 60% of comments were anonymous
 76% of all comments were questions to
the academic
 Discussion was shallow, with comments
rarely having more than one reply
University of Leicester – Results
 Limited evidence that collaborative
annotation encouraged active reading
 However, Talis Elevate was useful for
facilitating questions to academics
 Talis Elevate usage was much higher
than the module’s Blackboard
discussion forum (9 students making
22 comments overall)
 There were a number of issues to the
pilot design that made findings
unreliable. We are repeating the pilot
in Autumn 2022
University of Sussex – Talis Elevate
 Foundation Year Applied Psychology
2019-20 – 200 students
 Talis Elevate used for
five weekly readings
 40% of cohort engaged to make 400
responses and 1400 personal notes
 Anecdotally, student feedback was
very positive
 Usage decreased during Covid-19
Adams & Wilson (2020) – Perusall
 15 students engaged in one or two texts
per week on a distance learning course
 During the first reading, students
averaged nine texts interactions and
four to five peer interactions.
 Engagement increased through the
semester - students’ average text
interactions increased by 30% while
their peer interactions increased by 40%
Case Study Conclusions
 Social Reading platforms can provide more
natural discussion than VLE forums
 Social Reading platforms show some promise for
improving community and textual engagement
 Careful deployment and planning is crucial
Top Tips
Collaborative Annotation - Top Tips
1. Introduction:
– Introduce the social reading software to students at the start
of the module: demonstration & rationale
– Low-stakes, but used consistently throughout the module
2. Engagement:
– Target key texts and learning resources – central to module
– Scaffold engagement with social reading: modelling &
‘socialisation of learners’ (Walker & Baets, 2009)
– Post questions and discussion points to encourage
engagement. Then, as students grow in confidence, the
academic can let them lead discussions
Conclusions
 Social reading and collaborative
annotation can increase active
reading and engagement
 Using collaborative annotation
requires care and planning to
be effective
 Platforms exist, but copyright
and reading list synchronisation
are key issues needing
attention
Next Steps
 Another Talis Elevate Pilot with
three courses in Autumn 2022
 Work with vendors
 Developing knowledge of social
reading across UK HE institutions
 If you’d like to talk more or
collaborate, reach out to us at
richard.walker@york.ac.uk
sp812@leicester.ac.uk
References
Adams, B., & Wilson, N. S. (2020). Building Community in Asynchronous Online Higher
Education Courses Through Collaborative Annotation. Journal of educational technology
systems, 2020, Vol.49 (2), p.250-261.
Crouch, C., & Mazur, E. (2001). Peer instruction: ten years of experience and results.
American Journal of Physics, 69 (9). https://aapt.scitation.org/doi/10.1119/1.1374249
Miller, K., Lukoff, B., King, G., & Mazur, E. (2018). Use of a social annotation platform for
pre-class reading assignments in a flipped introductory Physics class. Frontiers in Education.
07 March 2018. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2018.00008
Walker, R., & Baets, W. (2009). Instructional design for class-based and computer-mediated
learning: creating the right blend for student-centred learning. Applied e-learning and
e-teaching in higher education, eds R. Donnelly & F. McSweeney, Hershey: Information
Science Reference, pp. 241–261. doi: 10.4018/978-1-59904-814-7
Wu Li, Yuanyi Mao, & Liuning Zhou (2021) The Impact of Interactivity on User Satisfaction in
Digital Social Reading: Social Presence as a Mediator, International Journal of Human–
Computer Interaction. https://doi.org/10.1080/10447318.2021.1898850

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Encouraging academic skills development through social reading: A critical review of digital solutions and implementation strategies

  • 1. Encouraging academic skills development through social reading: A critical review of digital solutions and implementation strategies ALT-C Richard Walker, University of York Samuel Parr, University of Leicester 6th September 2022
  • 2. Today  Social reading and collaborative annotation defined – Support from literature  Collaborative Annotation platform overview  How to use collaboration annotation in your teaching – Recommendations and tips for encouraging social reading in courses
  • 3. What is social reading?  Collaborative reading, where students discuss their thoughts and ideas about a resource  Book groups and seminar discussions
  • 4. Collaborative Annotation  Collaborative reading, where students discuss their thoughts and ideas about a resource  Book groups and seminar discussions  Online through collaborative annotation
  • 6. Why is this relevant to HE?  Students’ textual understanding and engagement – Academics report that students have limited critical engagement in texts – It is difficult to see or measure student engagement in course texts before summative assessment – Course reading can feel very separate from the wider learning journey, particularly for non-core texts  Community Building – Community improves student academic and social achievement, increases curricular integration, and increased satisfaction with learning (Calderwood, 2000; Rovai, 2002; van Tyron & Bishop, 2009) – Developing an online community can be challenging, and discussion forums are often inadequate
  • 7. How collaborative annotation might help  Students’ textual understanding – “Collaborative annotation tools capture students’ thinking and processing in the moment, more closely mirroring the learning that one might see in a face-to-face class when students discuss content with their instructor and/or classmates” (Adams & Wilson, 2020) – Provides opportunities for students to ask questions, discuss ideas, and provide peer-to-peer learning – Educators can see and measure engagement and understanding  Community – Provides a discussion forum that is a natural part of the student journey
  • 8. Support from literature  Limited amount of published research  Focus on digital support for pre-class reading assignments: an instructor-designed, flipped learning approach (e.g. Miller et al., 2018)  Social learning environments may support continuous conversations between learners, enabling them to reflect on target learning resources and build understanding of key concepts (Crouch & Mazur, 2001)  Li & Zhou (2021) found human to text interactivity in social reading boosted students’ social presence  Various case studies with some evidence of success…
  • 10. Talis Elevate Pros:  Easy-to-use social reading tool for staff and students  Allows annotation of documents, images, and videos  Some linkage to Talis Aspire reading lists and VLEs (via LTI integration), meaning you can use Talis Aspire Copyright Clearance  Basic analytics functions Cons:  No groups functionality  Analytics and linkage to Talis Aspire and VLEs could be more advanced  Access control issues, including: – No external access options – All academics can find and enrol in each other’s modules – Documents shared through links are a bit clunky
  • 11. Perusall Pros:  Established social reading platform for HE  Allows annotation of documents, images, and videos  Groups functionality  Advanced analytics  Free for educators Cons:  No linkage to reading lists  Free for students, but asks them to pay for additional content  Academics responsible for managing copyright (unless students pay for texts in Perusall)
  • 12. hypothes.is Pros:  Allows annotation of web pages and uploaded PDFs  Groups functionality  Free for educators Cons:  No video annotation  No linkage to reading lists  Students need to add a Chrome extension to use  Academics responsible for managing copyright
  • 13. ExLibris Leganto Pros:  ‘Read and Respond’ integrates with LMS platforms (module site, Grade Centre & reading list)  Instructor can link to target pdf file and present questions for discussion  Commenting function for students: named or anonymous contributions  Group work assignments supported Cons:  Students can’t set up collaborative reading activities – must be allocated a task by instructor  Unclear whether images / web resources can be reviewed
  • 14. Discounted Tools  Word/Google Docs: Designed primarily for collaborative editing, rather than annotation  NowComment: Well established, but lacks integration with VLEs
  • 16. University of Leicester – Talis Elevate  Piloted Elevate to a module of 180 Bioscience students  Students discussed 4 resources asynchronously in Talis Elevate: – 2 academic papers – Module Description and Practical Assessment Description
  • 17. University of Leicester – Results  91.6% of the cohort accessed Talis, but only 18.3% of 180 students engaged to make 83 discussion comments and 63 personal comments  60% of comments were anonymous  76% of all comments were questions to the academic  Discussion was shallow, with comments rarely having more than one reply
  • 18. University of Leicester – Results  Limited evidence that collaborative annotation encouraged active reading  However, Talis Elevate was useful for facilitating questions to academics  Talis Elevate usage was much higher than the module’s Blackboard discussion forum (9 students making 22 comments overall)  There were a number of issues to the pilot design that made findings unreliable. We are repeating the pilot in Autumn 2022
  • 19. University of Sussex – Talis Elevate  Foundation Year Applied Psychology 2019-20 – 200 students  Talis Elevate used for five weekly readings  40% of cohort engaged to make 400 responses and 1400 personal notes  Anecdotally, student feedback was very positive  Usage decreased during Covid-19
  • 20. Adams & Wilson (2020) – Perusall  15 students engaged in one or two texts per week on a distance learning course  During the first reading, students averaged nine texts interactions and four to five peer interactions.  Engagement increased through the semester - students’ average text interactions increased by 30% while their peer interactions increased by 40%
  • 21. Case Study Conclusions  Social Reading platforms can provide more natural discussion than VLE forums  Social Reading platforms show some promise for improving community and textual engagement  Careful deployment and planning is crucial
  • 23. Collaborative Annotation - Top Tips 1. Introduction: – Introduce the social reading software to students at the start of the module: demonstration & rationale – Low-stakes, but used consistently throughout the module 2. Engagement: – Target key texts and learning resources – central to module – Scaffold engagement with social reading: modelling & ‘socialisation of learners’ (Walker & Baets, 2009) – Post questions and discussion points to encourage engagement. Then, as students grow in confidence, the academic can let them lead discussions
  • 24. Conclusions  Social reading and collaborative annotation can increase active reading and engagement  Using collaborative annotation requires care and planning to be effective  Platforms exist, but copyright and reading list synchronisation are key issues needing attention
  • 25. Next Steps  Another Talis Elevate Pilot with three courses in Autumn 2022  Work with vendors  Developing knowledge of social reading across UK HE institutions  If you’d like to talk more or collaborate, reach out to us at richard.walker@york.ac.uk sp812@leicester.ac.uk
  • 26. References Adams, B., & Wilson, N. S. (2020). Building Community in Asynchronous Online Higher Education Courses Through Collaborative Annotation. Journal of educational technology systems, 2020, Vol.49 (2), p.250-261. Crouch, C., & Mazur, E. (2001). Peer instruction: ten years of experience and results. American Journal of Physics, 69 (9). https://aapt.scitation.org/doi/10.1119/1.1374249 Miller, K., Lukoff, B., King, G., & Mazur, E. (2018). Use of a social annotation platform for pre-class reading assignments in a flipped introductory Physics class. Frontiers in Education. 07 March 2018. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2018.00008 Walker, R., & Baets, W. (2009). Instructional design for class-based and computer-mediated learning: creating the right blend for student-centred learning. Applied e-learning and e-teaching in higher education, eds R. Donnelly & F. McSweeney, Hershey: Information Science Reference, pp. 241–261. doi: 10.4018/978-1-59904-814-7 Wu Li, Yuanyi Mao, & Liuning Zhou (2021) The Impact of Interactivity on User Satisfaction in Digital Social Reading: Social Presence as a Mediator, International Journal of Human– Computer Interaction. https://doi.org/10.1080/10447318.2021.1898850

Editor's Notes

  1. Social reading is a form of collaborative reading, where people share their thoughts and ideas about what they’ve read, and receive feedback. It comes in many forms. Outside of HE, the most well known examples include book clubs. In HE, the classic place for social reading is through things like seminar discussions. Over the past twenty years, various platforms have also allowed social reading to take place online. Of particular interest for HE are platforms that allow for collaborative annotation, which is what we’ll be discussing today.
  2. One form of social reading is collaborative annotation. This is where users engage in discussion and analysis of a text through public annotations. Collaborative annotation isn’t new. For example, monks used to leave messages and thoughts for each other in the margins of medieval manuscripts. However, over the past twenty years, various platforms have also allowed collaborative annotation to take place online. For example…
  3. A screenshot to show social reading in action.
  4. There are two issues that collaborative annotation can help address: improving student engagement in academic texts, and developing a sense of community beyond the classroom. Community building: full quote from Adams, Brittany ; Wilson, Nance S. (2020): “Researchers have presented compelling arguments that community is essential in higher education distance learning because it reduces feelings of isolation, improves student academic and social achievement, increases curricular integration, and increased satisfaction with learning (Calderwood, 2000; Rovai, 2002; van Tyron & Bishop, 2009)”
  5. ‘Provides a discussion forum that is a natural part of the student journey’ : For a discussion forum, students need to engage in a resource by themselves, then go to a discussion forum. This adds an extra step to engagement, and requires students to remember the text and the points they wish to discuss. In collaborative annotation, students can see and add to discussion as part of their core learning journey, make comments in real time, and see these comments in the context of the resource.
  6. We could make the point that there isn’t loads of literature out there here!
  7. So, there is reasonable evidence that collaborative annotation can be a useful tool
  8. Article on copyright clearance in Talis: https://support.talis.com/hc/en-us/articles/360004596917 A key problem is that Elevate does not integrate with reading lists. Talis Aspire and Talis Elevate are not connected, so any target resources (files / images etc.)  from a reading list for review in a social annotation task must be uploaded again to Elevate. Also - Elevate only accepts pdfs - so you can't include web links to collections of resources or playlists - or base annotations around a web page. (You can in open source annotation alternatives such as Hypothesis.) You also can't search in Elevate for content  which has been annotated. The only way to access target content is through a direct URL (e.g.  a direct link from a VLE module site to an activity), or by creating a module within Elevate or joining an existing one. So that's a bit clunky. Also the annotation functionality  in Elevate is quite limited. For instance, you can't highlight text in a target document without having to make a comment. You can  make personal or open comments - but you can't hide comments if someone in a shared doc blasts through it highlighting everything (you can hide all other comments by viewing Talis through ‘Personal Notes’). Another problem that UCL staff found was after uploading images to Elevate for an annotation task,  if there are formatting issues with the size of an image for instance, you can't edit it in any way. (UCL have noted that they can't quality control the resources that are uploaded  - in relation to quality and copyright management.) Elevate also doesn’t provide any groups functionality (unlike Perusall), where different groups of students can access the resource and see comments only from their groups. Elevate does have some useful analytics for users, but these are generally limited. Finally, there are access control issues (documents are shared through links) and users outside the institution can't access Elevate resources.
  9. So, there is reasonable evidence that collaborative annotation can be a useful tool
  10. Full stats: 91.6% of the cohort accessed at least one Talis Elevate document. At maximum, 18.3% of 180 students engaged to make 83 discussion comments and 63 personal comments 60% of comments were anonymous 76% of all comments were on the practical handbook, posed as questions to the academic rather than student discussion For the 18 comments of the academic papers, comments were of variable quality. 5 (27%) showed simple engagement, 9 (50%) medium engagement, and 4 (22%) high engagement. Discussion was shallow, with comments rarely having more than one reply.
  11. So, there’s not much success with Talis Elevate so far. However, a more successful example comes from Sussex. Thanks to Wendy Garnham for providing these details in an interview with Samuel Parr.
  12. This is an interesting case study, as it shows potential for collaborative annotation in a distance learning rather than campus based course.
  13. So, there is reasonable evidence that collaborative annotation can be a useful tool
  14. “This introduction should be face-to-face, low-stakes, and engaging” : For example, at Sussex, they ran an in-person demo where students commented on a light-hearted but engaging psychological paper on whether dogs were likely to look like their owners. “Then, as students grow in confidence, the academic can let them lead discussions.” – This didn’t happen at Leicester, which was one of the reasons for low student engagement.
  15. Need  to test the new Leganto LTI integration 1.3 with Bb Ultra to see if we can get this to work - but from what we have seen this is the furthest along, compared with other commercial and open source products.