The world is in a constant state of change. The changes are profoundly affecting every
part of the fabric of our society.
Education is particularly is affected by change, with a
direct impact on the cultures of our schools and universities, and also by projection –
with implications for all our futures.
It is likely that the students we now teach will leave school to enter a world of work
that is radically different to the world with which we are currently familiar.
The evolution of digital media has brought us to an unprecedented point in history
where we are able to connect, create and collaborate in new ways on a global basis.
Knowledge production is burgeoning, to the extent that any fact or statistic is now
openly searchable and available on the Web. Such cultural shifts necessitate new
modes of thinking, new ways of communication and new rules of engagement with
people, content and organisations.
Mobile technologies, handheld devices and social media have combined to create
fertile, anytime-anyplace learning opportunities that are unprecedented. Teachers and
learners are adapting to these new untethered and ubiquitous modes of education,
and in so doing, are discovering an entirely new array of skills which we shall call the
‘digital literacies’. These include the ability to learn across and between multiple and
diverse platforms, the ability to self broadcast to large audiences and the discernment
to select and filter out good and bad content, all achievable within ever changing mediated environments.
What will be the new skills and literacies that teachers and students will need, to
survive and thrive in the digital age? How will assessment of learning change? What
will be the expectations of young learners, and will these differ from what the
institutions can offer? Ultimately, how will teachers prepare students for a world of
work we can no longer clearly describe?
I
n this presentation he will explore these concepts and discuss the future of learning
and teaching in the digital age.
Using social media/online platforms in learning and teaching.Prof Simon Haslett
Presentation by Professor Simon Haslett at the University of Wales Annual Moderators Conference at City Hall, Cardiff (Wales, UK), on Friday 15th April 2011. Simon Haslett is Professor of Physical Geography and Dean of the School of STEM at the University of Wales.
The world is in a constant state of change. The changes are profoundly affecting every
part of the fabric of our society.
Education is particularly is affected by change, with a
direct impact on the cultures of our schools and universities, and also by projection –
with implications for all our futures.
It is likely that the students we now teach will leave school to enter a world of work
that is radically different to the world with which we are currently familiar.
The evolution of digital media has brought us to an unprecedented point in history
where we are able to connect, create and collaborate in new ways on a global basis.
Knowledge production is burgeoning, to the extent that any fact or statistic is now
openly searchable and available on the Web. Such cultural shifts necessitate new
modes of thinking, new ways of communication and new rules of engagement with
people, content and organisations.
Mobile technologies, handheld devices and social media have combined to create
fertile, anytime-anyplace learning opportunities that are unprecedented. Teachers and
learners are adapting to these new untethered and ubiquitous modes of education,
and in so doing, are discovering an entirely new array of skills which we shall call the
‘digital literacies’. These include the ability to learn across and between multiple and
diverse platforms, the ability to self broadcast to large audiences and the discernment
to select and filter out good and bad content, all achievable within ever changing mediated environments.
What will be the new skills and literacies that teachers and students will need, to
survive and thrive in the digital age? How will assessment of learning change? What
will be the expectations of young learners, and will these differ from what the
institutions can offer? Ultimately, how will teachers prepare students for a world of
work we can no longer clearly describe?
I
n this presentation he will explore these concepts and discuss the future of learning
and teaching in the digital age.
Using social media/online platforms in learning and teaching.Prof Simon Haslett
Presentation by Professor Simon Haslett at the University of Wales Annual Moderators Conference at City Hall, Cardiff (Wales, UK), on Friday 15th April 2011. Simon Haslett is Professor of Physical Geography and Dean of the School of STEM at the University of Wales.
Everything you always wanted to know about MOOCs but were afraid to ask.Lorna Campbell
Slides for a lecture on "Everything you always wanted to know about MOOCs but were afraid to ask" presented as part of Queen Margaret University's MSc in Professional and Higher Education, by Lorna M. Campbell, Cetis, using Adobe Connect on Thursday 5 December 2013.
We celebrated one year of OpenContent at the University of Cape Town in February 2011. This presentation ran at our anniversary event where we gave thanks to all of our open educational resource contributors.
The Beautiful, Messy, Inspiring, and Harrowing World of Online LearningGeorge Veletsianos
Keynote at the 2014 BCNET conference in Vancouver, BC. In this presentation I shared stories of learners' and scholars' experiences online, arising from multiple years of qualitative research studies, and framed in the context of the historic realities of educational technology practice. These stories illustrate how emerging technologies and open practices have (a) broadened access to education, (b) reinforced privilege, and (c) re-imagined the ways that academics enact and share scholarship. They also illustrate the multiple realities that exist in online education practice, and the differences between reality and potential and beautiful vs. ugly online education.
Slides from my presentation as part of the Creating effective learning with new technology in the 21st century:
the importance of educational theories
Symposium at AMEE 1 Sep 2014, Milano, Italy
Phonar Nation and Mobile, Connected Learning (#MINA2014)Mark McGuire
Abstract
In this presentation, I discuss Phonar Nation, a free, open, five-week photography course that was offered twice during the North American summer in 2014 as part of the Cities of Learning initiative. Photographer and open education pioneer Jonathan Worth created and taught the non-credit course to individuals from 12-18 years of age through a website designed to work on mobile devices (http://phonarnation.org/). The author followed the course as his twelve-year-old son completed it from New Zealand. The community-based Phonar Nation initiative extends the work that Worth and his colleagues have done with Phonar (Photography and Narrative), an open, for-credit undergraduate course at Coventry University.
I argue that Phonar Nation highlights several related developments in education that are leading to innovative approaches at different levels and in different contexts. Firstly, Phonar Nation is not only open access but it also uses and produces material that is open to be shared through the use of Creative Commons Licenses. Secondly, it is collaborative, both in the way that it is produced and taught, and in the way that participants are encouraged to engage with one another in community settings and through social media sites. Thirdly, Phonar Nation exemplifies an approach to learning that advocates call Connected Learning, which is accessible, interest-driven, socially situated and geared to extending educational and economic opportunities.
With apologies to the great twentieth century philosopher, Don Henley, this talk looks back to the reasons we did learn and looks forward to some of the ways technology might help us to learn for the future.
OER: It’s not the artifact, it’s the process (Mark McGuire, U of Otago)Mark McGuire
See the version with audio and slides: http://goo.gl/gkZR8.
These are the slides from a seminar presentation that I presented on 28 June at the University of Otago. You can hear (and download) the audio (MP3) on UniTube (http://goo.gl/3F7IR). Even better, you can see (and download) the slides and hear the audio together on my blog (http://goo.gl/gkZR8).
Feel free to contact me at mark.mcguire@otago.ac.nz.
"Open Educational Resources: It’s not the artifact, it’s the process". Presented at the Open Educational Resources Seminar, University of Otago, 28 June 2012
Abstract
If we think of OERs as we think of physical artifacts, we might focus on their design, production, storage and distribution. We could quantify their number, calculate their popularity, and track their use. However, in open, distributed, networked learning environments, the emphasis is not be on the resources but on the engagement between participants who create, use, modify, and share experiences. Resources can be used to prompt and fuel conversations, and the results of one conversation can be saved and used as fuel for another, but it is the way in which they are created and used that determines their effectiveness in learning contexts. In this talk, I will use examples from several open courses to explore the nature of digital resources and discuss how they are used to enable constructive engagements between networked learners. I suggest that, although appropriate resources are an important part of the learning process, we need to pay more attention to the design of the structures and networks in which they are generated and circulated.
Keynote on 2 June 2017 at the Learning Carnival – Celebrating Innovation and Excellence in Teaching and Learning
Hosted by North-West University @Mmabatho Palms, Mahikeng,
South Africa
Mark McGure - Open Strategies in Design Education (Cumulus Dublin 8 Nov. 2013)Mark McGuire
Blog: http://markmcguire.net/
Twitter: @mark_mcguire
https://twitter.com/mark_mcguire
Abstract:
In many countries, the increasing costs associated with higher education combined with reduced funding for public education during a period of fiscal restraint threatens the sustainability of current models of provision. Glenn Harlan Reynolds (2012) warns of a “Higher Education Bubble” in the United States. Sebastian Thrun, founder of Udacity.com, a for-profit platform for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), predicts that there will be only 10 institutions delivering higher education in 50 years (Steven Leckart, 2012). In contrast to these doomsday scenarios, Audrey Watters (2013) and others counter that professors and the institutions that employ them are not necessarily resistant to change, and that we should not “hack education” in a way that dismantles public institutions and threatens local economies, the community, social justice, and the public good.
In this presentation, I briefly trace the development of MOOCs and I discuss the differences between the high profile platforms that rely on lecture videos and machine marking (xMOOCs) and earlier experiments that follow what George Siemens refers to as a “Connectivist” approach (2005), which encourages participants to build their own personal learning network (cMOOCs). Using a case study method, I discuss three types of Design courses that leverage open strategies and serve as exemplars of “digital scholarship” (Martin Weller, 2011). The first, #Phonar (Photography and Narrative), is a Coventry University course that uses blogging and social media to connect place-based students to online participants. The second, ds106 (Digital Storytelling), is an online-only course offered by the University of Mary Washington that requires students to interact with one another and with the wider world through blogs, social media and an Internet radio station. The third, DOCC2013: Dialogues on Feminism and Technology, is a Distributed Open Collaborative Course that was offered for the first time in the fall of 2013 by fifteen universities in the United States and Canada, with academics working collaboratively across institutions.
I argue that by encouraging a paradigm shift in education from Push (broadcast) to Pull (accessing an archive) to Co-create (collaborative production) Design education can provide positive examples of how we can do more, and reach more, sustainably. Blurring the boundaries between teacher and student, online and offline, and formal and informal, education can enhance learning and extend its benefits beyond the lecture theatre and design studio. This pedagogical shift is in line with contemporary Design practice, in which collaborative and participatory processes are crucial, especially when working to solve wicked problems.
Imagining and Enabling the Collaborative CommonsMark McGuire
Presentation delivered at the Internet Research 16 (#IR16) Conference, Phoenix Arizona, Oct. 21-24 2015 (http://aoir.org/ir16/). I discuss open practices in education and design, including collaboration, cooperation, crowdsourcing and dissemination. An audio recording of this presentation can be found on Soundcloud (https://goo.gl/G7U1tB). A post that integrates the slides and audio can be found on my blog (http://goo.gl/ps3pHr).
The Future of Higher Ed? A Canary in the Coal Mine of Online LearningLori Packer
Presented at the 2012 HighEdWeb Conference in Milwaukee. Compares the experience of a traditional online degree with a new MOOC to make observations about future directions in online learning.
Everything you always wanted to know about MOOCs but were afraid to ask.Lorna Campbell
Slides for a lecture on "Everything you always wanted to know about MOOCs but were afraid to ask" presented as part of Queen Margaret University's MSc in Professional and Higher Education, by Lorna M. Campbell, Cetis, using Adobe Connect on Thursday 5 December 2013.
We celebrated one year of OpenContent at the University of Cape Town in February 2011. This presentation ran at our anniversary event where we gave thanks to all of our open educational resource contributors.
The Beautiful, Messy, Inspiring, and Harrowing World of Online LearningGeorge Veletsianos
Keynote at the 2014 BCNET conference in Vancouver, BC. In this presentation I shared stories of learners' and scholars' experiences online, arising from multiple years of qualitative research studies, and framed in the context of the historic realities of educational technology practice. These stories illustrate how emerging technologies and open practices have (a) broadened access to education, (b) reinforced privilege, and (c) re-imagined the ways that academics enact and share scholarship. They also illustrate the multiple realities that exist in online education practice, and the differences between reality and potential and beautiful vs. ugly online education.
Slides from my presentation as part of the Creating effective learning with new technology in the 21st century:
the importance of educational theories
Symposium at AMEE 1 Sep 2014, Milano, Italy
Phonar Nation and Mobile, Connected Learning (#MINA2014)Mark McGuire
Abstract
In this presentation, I discuss Phonar Nation, a free, open, five-week photography course that was offered twice during the North American summer in 2014 as part of the Cities of Learning initiative. Photographer and open education pioneer Jonathan Worth created and taught the non-credit course to individuals from 12-18 years of age through a website designed to work on mobile devices (http://phonarnation.org/). The author followed the course as his twelve-year-old son completed it from New Zealand. The community-based Phonar Nation initiative extends the work that Worth and his colleagues have done with Phonar (Photography and Narrative), an open, for-credit undergraduate course at Coventry University.
I argue that Phonar Nation highlights several related developments in education that are leading to innovative approaches at different levels and in different contexts. Firstly, Phonar Nation is not only open access but it also uses and produces material that is open to be shared through the use of Creative Commons Licenses. Secondly, it is collaborative, both in the way that it is produced and taught, and in the way that participants are encouraged to engage with one another in community settings and through social media sites. Thirdly, Phonar Nation exemplifies an approach to learning that advocates call Connected Learning, which is accessible, interest-driven, socially situated and geared to extending educational and economic opportunities.
With apologies to the great twentieth century philosopher, Don Henley, this talk looks back to the reasons we did learn and looks forward to some of the ways technology might help us to learn for the future.
OER: It’s not the artifact, it’s the process (Mark McGuire, U of Otago)Mark McGuire
See the version with audio and slides: http://goo.gl/gkZR8.
These are the slides from a seminar presentation that I presented on 28 June at the University of Otago. You can hear (and download) the audio (MP3) on UniTube (http://goo.gl/3F7IR). Even better, you can see (and download) the slides and hear the audio together on my blog (http://goo.gl/gkZR8).
Feel free to contact me at mark.mcguire@otago.ac.nz.
"Open Educational Resources: It’s not the artifact, it’s the process". Presented at the Open Educational Resources Seminar, University of Otago, 28 June 2012
Abstract
If we think of OERs as we think of physical artifacts, we might focus on their design, production, storage and distribution. We could quantify their number, calculate their popularity, and track their use. However, in open, distributed, networked learning environments, the emphasis is not be on the resources but on the engagement between participants who create, use, modify, and share experiences. Resources can be used to prompt and fuel conversations, and the results of one conversation can be saved and used as fuel for another, but it is the way in which they are created and used that determines their effectiveness in learning contexts. In this talk, I will use examples from several open courses to explore the nature of digital resources and discuss how they are used to enable constructive engagements between networked learners. I suggest that, although appropriate resources are an important part of the learning process, we need to pay more attention to the design of the structures and networks in which they are generated and circulated.
Keynote on 2 June 2017 at the Learning Carnival – Celebrating Innovation and Excellence in Teaching and Learning
Hosted by North-West University @Mmabatho Palms, Mahikeng,
South Africa
Mark McGure - Open Strategies in Design Education (Cumulus Dublin 8 Nov. 2013)Mark McGuire
Blog: http://markmcguire.net/
Twitter: @mark_mcguire
https://twitter.com/mark_mcguire
Abstract:
In many countries, the increasing costs associated with higher education combined with reduced funding for public education during a period of fiscal restraint threatens the sustainability of current models of provision. Glenn Harlan Reynolds (2012) warns of a “Higher Education Bubble” in the United States. Sebastian Thrun, founder of Udacity.com, a for-profit platform for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), predicts that there will be only 10 institutions delivering higher education in 50 years (Steven Leckart, 2012). In contrast to these doomsday scenarios, Audrey Watters (2013) and others counter that professors and the institutions that employ them are not necessarily resistant to change, and that we should not “hack education” in a way that dismantles public institutions and threatens local economies, the community, social justice, and the public good.
In this presentation, I briefly trace the development of MOOCs and I discuss the differences between the high profile platforms that rely on lecture videos and machine marking (xMOOCs) and earlier experiments that follow what George Siemens refers to as a “Connectivist” approach (2005), which encourages participants to build their own personal learning network (cMOOCs). Using a case study method, I discuss three types of Design courses that leverage open strategies and serve as exemplars of “digital scholarship” (Martin Weller, 2011). The first, #Phonar (Photography and Narrative), is a Coventry University course that uses blogging and social media to connect place-based students to online participants. The second, ds106 (Digital Storytelling), is an online-only course offered by the University of Mary Washington that requires students to interact with one another and with the wider world through blogs, social media and an Internet radio station. The third, DOCC2013: Dialogues on Feminism and Technology, is a Distributed Open Collaborative Course that was offered for the first time in the fall of 2013 by fifteen universities in the United States and Canada, with academics working collaboratively across institutions.
I argue that by encouraging a paradigm shift in education from Push (broadcast) to Pull (accessing an archive) to Co-create (collaborative production) Design education can provide positive examples of how we can do more, and reach more, sustainably. Blurring the boundaries between teacher and student, online and offline, and formal and informal, education can enhance learning and extend its benefits beyond the lecture theatre and design studio. This pedagogical shift is in line with contemporary Design practice, in which collaborative and participatory processes are crucial, especially when working to solve wicked problems.
Imagining and Enabling the Collaborative CommonsMark McGuire
Presentation delivered at the Internet Research 16 (#IR16) Conference, Phoenix Arizona, Oct. 21-24 2015 (http://aoir.org/ir16/). I discuss open practices in education and design, including collaboration, cooperation, crowdsourcing and dissemination. An audio recording of this presentation can be found on Soundcloud (https://goo.gl/G7U1tB). A post that integrates the slides and audio can be found on my blog (http://goo.gl/ps3pHr).
The Future of Higher Ed? A Canary in the Coal Mine of Online LearningLori Packer
Presented at the 2012 HighEdWeb Conference in Milwaukee. Compares the experience of a traditional online degree with a new MOOC to make observations about future directions in online learning.
This slidecast looks at how we undertake evaluation and the potential of Web 2.0 as a tool for evaluation. At its simplest, Evaluation 2.0 about using social software at all stages of the evaluation process in order to make it more open, more transparent and more accessible to a wider range of stakeholders. the slidecast goes on to look at Web 2.0 and the different ways we are developing and sharing knowledge, the differences between expert knowledge and crows sourced knowledge and new roles for teachers, trainers and evaluators resulting from the changing uses of social media.
OER activities through University of Michigan, African Health OER Network, an...Kathleen Ludewig Omollo
In November 2011, I was invited to give a presentation about OER at U-M, KNUST, and the larger African Health OER Network to 70-80 third- and final year Department of Communication Design (DeCoDe) Students in the College of Arts at KNUST.
This 75 minute presentation-discussion focused on: What are OER?
Origins of African Health OER Network; Activities of African Health OER Network; Origins of OER at University of Michigan; OER activities within University of Michigan; Other Student-Led OER activities around the world; Collective Brainstorming for OER at DeCoDe; and Concluding Remarks.
Open and online connections community and reality Sheila MacNeill
Slides for webinar (14/3/14. with Catherine Cronin as part of the University of Sussex open education week activities. More information available @http://rustleblog.wordpress.com/open-education-week-2014/
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Steve Wheeler - Digital Pedagogy: Learning 2.0 - Keynote Speaker LILAC 2013
1. Digital Pedagogy:
Learning 2.0
Steve Wheeler
@timbuckteeth
Plymouth University
LILAC Conference, Manchester: March 25, 2013
http://www.public-domain-image.com
2. “I never teach
my students.
I only provide
Steve Wheeler, Plymouth University, 2013
the conditions
in which they
can learn.”
- Albert Einstein
3. Knowledge
Knowing that Declarative Cognition
Steve Wheeler, Plymouth University, 2013
Wisdom
Knowing how Procedural Application
Transformation Analysis
Knowing why Critical
Evaluation
http://slated.org
6. Steve Wheeler, Plymouth University, 2013
“Libraries are a bridge between the
information-rich and the information-
poor” – Ian Clarke
Photo by Steve Wheeler
11. BBC News: 14 March 2012
Encyclopaedia Britannica ends its famous
print edition – goes digital
12. Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2013
http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/communications/internet-minute-
13. Social Media use in 2012
>170 M
ill io n
Billinecnons)
Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2013
>1 o (5 5 m i l
lion po
sts per
ti n d ay)
n co
100 billio
(
>400 Million
illion >150 M
>500 M illion
3.5 Billion views/day >6 Bil
li on i m
>14 million 60 hours/minute ages
articles Sources from service providers and also http://econsultancy.com
14. Mobile game based learning
http://www.digitalbuzzblog.com/infographic-mobile-gaming-statistics-stats-2011/
15. “We are becoming distributed beings. Mobile
makes the trend more explicit.” - Mark Curtis
17. Architecture of participation
Sharing
Collaborating
Tools
Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2011
Tagging Learning
2.0
User
generated
Voting content
Networking
18. “Social media is
where our students
are.”
– Klaus Tochtermann
Engage with it and
you will engage with
them.
http://www.newcastle.edu.au
http://www.freedigitalphotos.net/image/s_flowers-lost-gardens-of-heligan.jpg
20. Learning
User
content
generated
Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2011
21.
22. Only two things make any
significant difference to
learning outcomes –
constructive feedback and
active learning.
(Summary of research by John Hattie)
24. “Blogging ... Is the
most important form
of unchoreographed
public discourse that
we have.”
“Never have so
many people - Lawrence Lessig
written so much
to be read by so
few...”
- Katie Hafner http://news.oreilly.com
28. “..we can drown in our technology.
The fog of information can drive out
knowledge.” - Daniel J. Boorstin
http://gcaptain.com/drowning?10981/
29. • How do I find stuff?
• How do I know it’s accurate?
• How do I share content?
Steve Wheeler, Plymouth University, 2012
• How do I filter content?
• How do I keep up with all the news?
• How do I file content?
• How do I categorise content?
Content isn’t King. It’s a Tyrant...
scavenging.files.wordpress.com
34. Personal Learning Environment
Steve Wheeler & Manish Malik (2010)
Source: http://steve-wheeler.blogspot.com/2010/07/anatomy-of-ple.html
35. “The average digital
birth of children
happens at about six
months.”
http://www.slashgear.com/babys-first-ipad-24121114/
36. What does this
Th e Net generation think
nerat ion? about learning?
Ge
Digital
Natives? Homo
Zapp iens?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/56155476@N08/5667863948/
37. Power users 14%
Ordinary users 27%
Irregular users 14%
Basic users 45%
n = 2096, mean age range 17-23 years
Source: Kennedy et al (2010) Beyond Digital Natives and Immigrants: Exploring
types of net generation students, Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 26 (5).
39. BYOD - Personal technologies
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/117/291379959_594fa8ef70.jpg
40.
41. Competition to write the Lord’s
Prayer in <160 characters
r pa in evan, respect 2 u, may u
rain ear as in evan. giv us r
needs, 4giv r sin as we 4giv r
nmes. resq us from the evil 1. 4
ur always the most xlent dude.
yo
42. ‘Squeeze txt’ and literacy
“Mobile phones are forcing learners to become
more literate. Without the ability to txt, they
cannot fully participate in their own culture of
communication”
Peter Yeomans (2010)
44. Learning
is changing
http://www.slideshare.net/courosa/why-social-networks-matter
45. ‘New’ learners are...
• more self-directed
• better equipped to capture information
• more reliant on feedback from peers
• more inclined to collaborate
•
ey n eed
more oriented toward being their own
Bu t th
e...
“nodes of production”.
ch m or
mu
Education Trends | Featured News
John K. Waters—13 December 2011
http://coolshots.blogspot.com/2007_02_01_archive.html
49. Who can you trust online?
http://grewordlist.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/perfidious.png
50. “60% of all
Internet pages
contain misleading
information.”
- Thomas Edison
Learners need ‘digital wisdom’
51.
52. “Lee Harvey and the Wailers”
(Lee Harvey did not jam alone)
http://www.myspace.com/hsu/photos/6850630
53. “Knowledge that
is acquired under
compulsion
obtains no hold
on the mind.”
Plato
- Socrates Darwikian
ism
http://www.fotopedia.com/items/flickr-713124904
56. Twitter as a library
Twitter as a street corner
Twitter as a broadcast channel
Twitter as amplification
57. “ ‘I store my knowledge in my friends’ … is an axiom
for collecting knowledge through collecting
people.”
- Karen Stephenson
http://bradley.chattablogs.com
63. “How can
technology make
a person better?
http://www.global-images.net
Only in this way:
by providing each
person with
chances.”
http://www.global-images.net
- Kevin Kelly
64.
65. Steve Wheeler swheeler@plymouth.ac.uk
University of Plymouth, United Kingdom
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons
Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK:
International Licence.