The document discusses the evolving landscape of e-learning and the future of learning through new technologies and pedagogies. It outlines several key trends in technology including mobile devices, augmented reality, learning analytics, and cloud computing. It also discusses how the web has transformed from Gutenberg to Zuckerberg and the implications of disruptive technologies. New approaches to learning design are proposed to promote the adoption of e-learning strategies through interventions and the strategic use of learning management systems.
Benchmarking tool: the student digital experienceJisc
Developed collaboratively with the National Union of Students and the Jisc change agents' network.
Taken from our learning and teaching practice experts group meeting on 23 June 2015
7Cs of Learning Design: How it really happens - UNISA Benchmark Workshoptbirdcymru
This description of practical 7Cs of Learning Design training was presented for delegates of University of South Africa, 24 February 2014 at University of Leicester
The role of UK higher education (HE), further education (FE) and skills sectors in developing student employability is clear. Technology can be an enabler to the development and communication of employability skills, but are organisations and employers making best use of it?
This presentation aims to share and discuss the emerging themes and ideas being generated through our student employability project, which explores how technology can best support students to develop and communicate the skills that are needed for the workplace.
The presentation informs participants of what has been learnt so far and engage them in discussions. We will:
Share emergent themes including issues and opportunities from the study
Share, discuss and build on ideas for what organisations, programme teams and we can do to enhance student employability and the use of technology.
Presenters:
Lisa Gray, senior co-design manager, Jisc
Peter Chatterton, independent consultant, higher education
Geoff Rebbeck, independent consultant, further education and skills
Who will find this useful?
The presentation will be of interest to anyone across HE, FE and skills with an interest in how students develop and communicate employability skills, primarily:
Senior managers with responsibility for employer responsiveness and employer engagement
Academic/teaching staff with an interest in employability
Technology-enhanced learning and academic enhancement roles
Employability leads
Staff with responsibility for personal development planning (PDP)
Careers staff.
Speaker: Scott Hibberson, subject specialist (online learning and the digital student experience), Jisc
This workshop will build confidence to design and deliver a digital curriculum – one that will prepare students to learn successfully in digital settings, and to thrive in a digital world.
Three activities will be introduced and attendees will be encouraged to share ideas about completing them. Participants will then be able to take away the associated resources and complete, reflect on and follow up the activities in their own time.
A presentation sharing the findings from our 2020 student digital experience insights surveys together with an overview of our new questions for the 2020-21 surveys of students, teaching and professional services staff and researchers.
The session will offer opportunities for colleagues to share their experiences of how students are adapting to the changes bought about by the pandemic.
By Ruth Drysdale, senior consultant - data and digital capability, Jisc and Sarah Knight, head of data and digital capability, Jisc
TLC2016 - Digicouching pedagogy in online learning on Humak University of App...BlackboardEMEA
Presenter: Paivi Timonen
Organisation: Humak - Humanistic University of Applied Sciences
Description: The Humak University of Applied Sciences runs online learning on Moodle/Moodlerooms and online webinars (Adobe Connect /Collaborate). Pedagogical aim is couching pedagogy which Humak has developed for the purpose to develop socio constructive learning. Studies are on digital environments. For supporting learning on small groups Humak uses real time webinars. For real time webinars we have developed a pedagogical path for activating and deepening students learning. Humak has recent experience on cMOOCs (Constructive Massive Online Courses).
Slides from ISD Digital Roadshow @IOE 29th June 2016, 'Digital capabilities'Moira Wright
Slide presentation from ISD Digital Roadshow @ IOE
Diana Laurillard, Professor of Learning with Digital Technologies in the London Knowledge Lab at UCL IOE
Benchmarking tool: the student digital experienceJisc
Developed collaboratively with the National Union of Students and the Jisc change agents' network.
Taken from our learning and teaching practice experts group meeting on 23 June 2015
7Cs of Learning Design: How it really happens - UNISA Benchmark Workshoptbirdcymru
This description of practical 7Cs of Learning Design training was presented for delegates of University of South Africa, 24 February 2014 at University of Leicester
The role of UK higher education (HE), further education (FE) and skills sectors in developing student employability is clear. Technology can be an enabler to the development and communication of employability skills, but are organisations and employers making best use of it?
This presentation aims to share and discuss the emerging themes and ideas being generated through our student employability project, which explores how technology can best support students to develop and communicate the skills that are needed for the workplace.
The presentation informs participants of what has been learnt so far and engage them in discussions. We will:
Share emergent themes including issues and opportunities from the study
Share, discuss and build on ideas for what organisations, programme teams and we can do to enhance student employability and the use of technology.
Presenters:
Lisa Gray, senior co-design manager, Jisc
Peter Chatterton, independent consultant, higher education
Geoff Rebbeck, independent consultant, further education and skills
Who will find this useful?
The presentation will be of interest to anyone across HE, FE and skills with an interest in how students develop and communicate employability skills, primarily:
Senior managers with responsibility for employer responsiveness and employer engagement
Academic/teaching staff with an interest in employability
Technology-enhanced learning and academic enhancement roles
Employability leads
Staff with responsibility for personal development planning (PDP)
Careers staff.
Speaker: Scott Hibberson, subject specialist (online learning and the digital student experience), Jisc
This workshop will build confidence to design and deliver a digital curriculum – one that will prepare students to learn successfully in digital settings, and to thrive in a digital world.
Three activities will be introduced and attendees will be encouraged to share ideas about completing them. Participants will then be able to take away the associated resources and complete, reflect on and follow up the activities in their own time.
A presentation sharing the findings from our 2020 student digital experience insights surveys together with an overview of our new questions for the 2020-21 surveys of students, teaching and professional services staff and researchers.
The session will offer opportunities for colleagues to share their experiences of how students are adapting to the changes bought about by the pandemic.
By Ruth Drysdale, senior consultant - data and digital capability, Jisc and Sarah Knight, head of data and digital capability, Jisc
TLC2016 - Digicouching pedagogy in online learning on Humak University of App...BlackboardEMEA
Presenter: Paivi Timonen
Organisation: Humak - Humanistic University of Applied Sciences
Description: The Humak University of Applied Sciences runs online learning on Moodle/Moodlerooms and online webinars (Adobe Connect /Collaborate). Pedagogical aim is couching pedagogy which Humak has developed for the purpose to develop socio constructive learning. Studies are on digital environments. For supporting learning on small groups Humak uses real time webinars. For real time webinars we have developed a pedagogical path for activating and deepening students learning. Humak has recent experience on cMOOCs (Constructive Massive Online Courses).
Slides from ISD Digital Roadshow @IOE 29th June 2016, 'Digital capabilities'Moira Wright
Slide presentation from ISD Digital Roadshow @ IOE
Diana Laurillard, Professor of Learning with Digital Technologies in the London Knowledge Lab at UCL IOE
Presentation to Faculty of Science at the University of Windsor with acknowledgement to Helen Beetham, Grainne Conole, Peter Goodyear, Robert Eliis - thank you
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http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
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2. Outline
• The evolving landscape of e-learning
• Affordances of new technologies
• From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg
• Learner experience
• New pedagogiesandimplications
• Open practices
• Teacher practice and paradoxes
• Strategies for change
– Intervention framework: linking
research to policy and practice
– TheLMSasa Trojan horse
– New approaches to design
3. Research questions
• What:
– Is the learner experience and teacher practice?
– Are the emergent technologies and their affordances?
– Resources, OER and Pedagogical Patterns are there and
how are they been used?
– E-Pedagogies are there and how do they facilitate
different forms of learning?
– New learning design approaches can be used to
promote and support e-learning?
– Strategies are in place to promote and support e-
learning?
– Theories and methodologies are been used?
4. Evolving e-learning landscape
Emergent technologies
and affordances
Theory and methodology
E-pedagogies, strategies
and learning design
Resources, OER and
Pedagogical Patterns
Evaluations Interventions
5. Technological trends
• Mobiles and e-books
• Gesture and augmented
learning
• Learning analytics
• Personalised learning
• Cloud computing
• Ubiquitous learning
• BYOD (Bring your own device)
• Digital content
• The flipped classroom
http://learn231.wordpress.com/2011/10/25/trend-report-1/
6. Social & participatory media
Media sharing Blogging
Mash ups Messaging
Collaborative Recommender
editing systems
Virtual worlds
Social
and games
networking
Social Syndication
bookmarking
http://magicineducation.wordpress.com/2011/11/10/web-2-0-world-map/
6
Conole and Alevizou, 2010
7. Peer Open
critiquing
User
Collective
generated
aggregation
content
Networked Personalised
Social media revolution
The machine is us/ing us
8. Gutenberg to Zuckerberg
• Take the long view
• Theweb is not the net
• Disruption is a feature
• Ecologies not economics
• Complexity is the new reality
• Thenetwork is now the computer
• The web is evolving
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wallyg/2617472088/
http://memex.naughtons.org/
9. Disruptive technologies
• The web has transformed
practice
• No central ownership
• Ecology of abundance
• Examples
– Napster
– Malware
10. Learner experience
• Technology immersed
• Learning approaches: task-
orientated, experiential,
just in time, cumulative,
social
• Personalised digital
learning environment
• Mix of institutional systems
and cloud-based tools and
services
• Use of course materials
with free resources
10 Sharpe, Beetham and De Freitas, 2010
11. EDUCAUSE study
• Students drawn
to new
technologies but
rely on more
traditional ones
• Consider
technologies
offer major
educational
benefits
• Mixed views of
VLEs
11
12. 8-Learning Events Model
The essence of learning
Reflection Dialogue
Collaboration Application
19. Mobile learning
E-books
Study calendars
Learning resources
Online modules
Annotation tools
Podcasting
19 Communication mechanisms
20. Inquiry-based learning
My community
The Personal Inquiry project
Inquiry-based learning across
formal and informal settings
Sharples, Scanlon et al.
http://www.pi-project.ac.uk/
21. Virtual genetics lab
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMMfHZUNpZY&feature=youtu.be
The SWIFT project
25. Open scholarship
• Exploiting the digital network
• New forms of dissemination
and communication
• Promoting reflective practice
• Embracing the affordances of
new technologies
Weller: http://nogoodreason.typepad.co.uk/
28. Open accreditation
Peer to Peer University OER University
www.p2pu.org/en/ wikieducator.org/OER_university/
29. Teacher practices: paradoxes
• Technologiesnot extensively
used (Molenda)
• Lack of uptake of OER
(McAndrew et al.)
• Little use beyond early
adopters (Rogers)
• Despite rhetoric and funding Pandora’s box
little evidence of
transformation (Cuban,
Ehlers)
29
30. Intervention framework: linking
research to policy and practice
OER
Horizon scanning
Learning design
Virtual worlds
Research
Learner experience Web 2.0
Blackboard rollout Design practice
Policy Teacher practice
OER/iTunes
Use of technologies
Learning spaces
Cloud computing
Learner practice
Use of technologies Diversity/culture
31. TheLMS as a Trojan horse
• LMS as a safe nursery slope
• Shift from content to
activities
• Promote reflection and
collaboration
• MobileLMS
• Integration with cloud
computing
32. Blackboard audit
• Data
– Online survey (260 returns)
– Departmental visits
• Key findings
– Used as content repository
and administration
– Pockets of innovation
– More support needed on
effective design strategies
– Tension between teaching
and research
– Usability issue
34. Learning Design
Shift frombelief-based, implicit
approaches todesign-
based,explicit approaches
Learning Design
A design-based approach to
creation and support of
courses
Encouragesreflective,scholarly
practices
Promotessharing and discussion
35. Conceptualise
What do we want to design, who for
and why?
Carpe Diem:
7Cs of learning Design
Consolidate
Evaluate and embed your design
http://beyonddistance.wordpress.com/2012/02/07/carpe-diem-the-7cs-of-design-and-delivery/
38. MSc in Learning Innovation
Dissertation
Case Studies of Innovation
Research Design and Methods
Learning Design
Technology-Enhanced Learning
39. The future of e-learning
Continuing emerging
technologies and pedagogies
New business Co-evolution of
models tools & users
Maturing theory & More sophisticated
methodology mechanisms re: uptake
40. New metaphors
Ecologies
Spaces
Memes Rhizomes
http://e4innovation.com/?p=489
41. Final thoughts
• Participatory and social media enable new forms of
communication and collaboration
• Communities in these spaces are complex and
distributed
• Learners and teachers need to develop new digital
literacy skills to harness their potential
• We need to rethinkhow we design, support and assess
learning
• Open, participatory and social media can provide
mechanisms for us to share and discuss teaching and
research ideas in new ways
• We are seeing a blurring of boundaries:
teachers/learners, teaching/research, real/virtual
spaces, formal/informal modes of communication and