Boyer Lectures - Empire State 2009
Transcript of Boyer Lectures - Empire State 2009
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Opening, Mentoring and Connecting: Harnessing the Net
for Teaching and Learning
Terry Anderson, Ph.D.Canada Research Chair in Distance Education
Boyer Lecture, March 2009
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Presentation Overview
• Robert Frost’s poem on vicarious communication
• The Impact of Openness on teaching and Learning
• Relationships and the Net– Groups– Networks – Collectives
• Openness, mentoring and Empire State
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The Tuft of Flowers Robert Frost (1874–1963).
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The Tuft of Flowers
I went to turn the grass once after one Who mowed it in the dew before the sun.
The dew was gone that made his blade so keen Before I came to view the leveled scene.
I looked for him behind an isle of trees; I listened for his whetstone on the breeze.
But he had gone his way, the grass all mown, And I must be, as he had been, - alone,
‘As all must be,’ I said within my heart, ‘Whether they work together or apart.’
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But as I said it, swift there passed me by On noiseless wing a ‘wildered butterfly’,
Seeking with memories grown dim o’er night Some resting flower of yesterday’s delight.
And once I marked his flight go round and round, As where some flower lay withering on the ground.
And then he flew as far as eye could see, And then on tremulous wing came back to me.
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I thought of questions that have no reply, And would have turned to toss the grass to dry;
But he turned first, and led my eye to look At a tall tuft of flowers beside a brook,
A leaping tongue of bloom the scythe had spared Beside a reedy brook the scythe had bared.
I left my place to know them by their name, Finding them butterfly weed when I came.
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And fell a sprit kindred to my own;So that henceforth I worked no more alone;
But glad with him, I worked as with his aid,And weary, sought at noon with him the shade;
And dreaming, as it were, held brotherly speechWith one whose thought I had not hoped to reach.
‘Men work together,’ I told him from the heart,‘Whether they work together or apart’.
Robert Frost (1874–1963).
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Athabasca University, Alberta, Canada
* Athabasca University
Fastest growing university in Canada
34,000 students, 700 courses
100% distance education
Graduate and Undergraduate programs
All English, but many course credit equivalencies with
TÉLUQ
Master & Doctorate – Distance Education
Only USA Regionally Accredited University in
Canada
Athabasca University
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ValuesWe can (and must) continuously improve the
quality, effectiveness, appeal, cost and time efficiency of learning.
Learner control, choice and freedom are integral to 21st Century formal education and life-long learning.
Education for elites is not sufficient for planetary survival
“Today’s learners want to be active participants in the learning process – not mere listeners; they have a need to control their environments, and they are used to easy access to the staggering amount of content and knowledge available at their fingertips”
EduCause Horizon Report 2009
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The compelling Case for Openness
Imagine a world in which every single person is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge. That's what we're doing. –
Terry Foote, Wikipedia
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Ernest Boyer (1928-1995) • "if a balance can be struck between
individual interests and shared concerns, a strong learning community will result. We believe six principles -purposefulness, openness, justice, discipline, caring, and celebration-can form the foundation on which a vital community of learning can be built. Now, more than ever, colleges and universities should be guided by a larger vision."
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Charles Wedemeyer (1911-1999)Open Learning
• Learning centered• Diminish dependencies• Open curriculum• Open accreditation• Ultimate learning environment
is the learner themselves – Personal Learning Environment
• Concern with learning more than instruction
• Must be cost effective
Charles Wedemeyer (1973)
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Charles Wedemeyer (1975)• “the system accepts the learner and his
environment as the environment for learning and concentrates that environment instead of developing specialized teaching environments” – p. 4
• Now the need to move from independent study to learner controlled, cooperative learning
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AcademicRegulationsPrerequisitesTime to degree
AutonomyFreedomAffordabilityDemocracy
SocialCollaborative, Cooperative and Connected Activities
Open Education
Time & SpaceContext in UsePaced & Unpaced
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Empire State
• Innovative, Open model• Successful• However “essentially the learning model has not changed much in 30 years, (Williams 2008)“ correspondence plus email!
• Does the Net hold promise for a new vision of openess and innovation for Empire State?
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Educational Change• ”To eradicate that intolerance of variety in
educational practice so characteristic of the academic man of the past, and to diminish in future generations his equally characteristic opposition to changes involving adaptation to new conditions, is to render one of the greatest possible services to educational progress." • Norton, A. (1909) A History of the Medieval
University. p. 3
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ESC Master Plan 1976 A. Chickering
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The Mission of Empire State College
• enables motivated adults, regardless of geography or life circumstance, to design a rigorous, individualized academic program
• Committed “To develop, implement and assess new approaches to learning that recognize the strengths and needs of adult learners.”
Empire State College – America’s First Open University
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• Does Individualized deny opportunity for social processes?
• in·di·vid·u·al·ize1. To give individuality to.2. To consider or treat individually; particularize.3. To modify to suit the wishes or needs of a
particular individualfrom Latin in- ‘not’ + dividere ‘to divide’.
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Taxonomy of the ‘Many’Dron and Anderson, 2007
GroupConscious membership
Leadership and organizationCohorts and paced
Rules and guidelinesAccess and privacy controls
Focused and often time limitedMay be blended F2F
Metaphor : Virtual classroom
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Formal Learning and Groups• Long history of research
and study• Established sets of tools
– Classrooms,– Learning Management
Systems – Synchronous (video &
net conferencing)– Email
• Need to develop face to face, mediated and blended group learning skills
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Groups as Communities of Practice
• Wengler’s ideas of Community of Practice– mutual engagement – synchronous and notification
tools – joint enterprise – collaborative projects, “pass the
course”– a shared repertoire – common tools, LMS, IM and doc
sharing
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LMS and Distributed web 2.0 Group Tools
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Problems with Groups
• Restrictions in time, space, pace, & relationship - NOT OPEN
• Often overly confined by teacher expectation and institutional curriculum control
• Usually Isolated from the authentic world of practice
• “low tolerance of internal difference, sexist and ethicized regulation, high demand for obedience to its norms and exclusionary practices.” Cousin & Deepwell 2005
• Group think (Baron, 2005)• Poor preparation for Lifelong Learning
beyond the course
Paulsen (1993)Law of Cooperative Freedom
Relationships
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• Groups and Empire State’s Distance Education programming
• Groups are necessary, but not sufficient for quality learning.
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Group
NetworkShared interest/practice
Fluid membershipFriends of friends
Reputation and altruism drivenEmergent norms, structures
Activity ebbs and flowsRarely F2F
Metaphor: Virtual Community of Practice26
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2. Formal Learning with Networks
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• Networks create and sustain links between individuals creating flexible communication and information spaces
• Networks link diversity, span boundaries, enable communication among disparate individuals
• Each of us may belong to many networks• Networks can connect self-paced and independent
learners to cooperative study activities• Networks last beyond the course - basis for ongoing
support and advise from alumni and professional communities
Network:An integrated system of resources and people
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Networks
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– Provide resources from which students’ extract and contribute information
– In school one should learn to build, contribute to and manage one’s networks
– Transparency provides application and validation of information and skills developed in formal learning
– Provides role models for new students
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“People who live in the intersection of social worlds are at higher risk of having good ideas” Burt, 2005, p. 90
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Communities of Practice • Distributed• Share common interest• Self organizing• Open• No expectation of meeting or even knowing all
members of the Network• Little expectation of reciprocity• Contribute for social capital, altruism and a
sense of improving the world/practice through contribution (Brown and Duguid, 2001)
Networks
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Creating Incentives to Sustain Contribution to Networks
The New Yorker September 12, 2005
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Building Networks of Practice in Education
• Motivation – marks, rewards, self and net efficacy, net-presence
• Structural support – Exposure and training– Transparent systems– Wireless access, mobile computing
• Cognitive skills – content + procedural, disclosure of control
• Social connections, reciprocity– Creating and sustaining a spiral of social capital
building Nahapiet & Ghoshal (1998)
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Network Pedagogies
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• Connectivism– Learning is network formation: adding new nodes,
creating new paths between people and learning resources
– “Learning can reside outside of ourselves (within an organization or a database), is focused on connecting specialized information sets, and the connections that enable us to learn are more important than our current state of knowing.” Siemens, G. (2007)
• Complexity – Learning in environments in which activities and outcomes emerge in
response to authentic need creates powerful learning opportunities– Learning at the edge of chaos– Complicity: An International Journal of Complexity and Education See the Networked Student by Wendy Drexler
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Network Tool Set (example)
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TextText
Stepanyan, Mather & Payne, 2007
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Access Controls in Elgg
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Voicethread.com
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GroupNetwork
Collective‘Aggregated other’
Unconscious ‘wisdom of crowds’Stigmergic aggregation
Algorithmic rulesAugmentation and annotation
More used, more usefulData MiningNever F2F
Metaphor: Wisdom of Crowds
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3. Formal Education and Collectives
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• Collectives used to aggregate, then filter, compare, contrast and recommend.
• Personal and collaborative search and filter for learning• Smart retrieval from the universal library of resources – human and
learning objects• Allows discovery and validation of norms, values, opinion and “ways of
understanding”
“a kind of cyber-organism, formed from people linked algorithmically…it grows through the aggregation of Individual, Group and Networked activities” Dron & Anderson, 2007
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Collective Tools
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Explicit
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• Explicit recommender systems:
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Collective Examples for Educational Application
• Artifact Ranking systems: Google Search; CitULike; • Tag Clouds: What do collectives find of interest?• Recommendation Systems: People like me, like …..• Wikis: Contributions from the crowd• Folksonomies: Bottom up and emergent
classification systems• Voting and auctions: Perfect market?• Prediction Markets: • Net based psychology and sociology
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Collective Examples: Determining our Effect
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• Analysis of blog postings using semantic and matching techniquesPotential uses:
uncover suicidal ideationmental health of the communityunderstand evolving communication genres
measure impact of popular memes understanding and predicting early adoptersSee Mishne, & de Rijke (2006) Capturing Global Mood Levels using Blog Posts
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Hive mind? Borgs?Group consciousness?
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• Collectively managing planet Earth• What does it mean to be aware of each other?
Collectives operate as mirrors to monitor and learn from our collective selves (Spivack, 2006)
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Collectives, Privacy & Identity
• Best way to protect personal integrity is by creating a robust but realistic web presence.
• Your actions are being mined, best to be a miner rather than a lump of coal!
• Active social net users are more socially active and integrated than non users (Ellison, Steinfield, & Lampe, 2007)
• Use of Blogs reduces feelings of alienation and isolation among online learners (Dickey, 2004)
• When perceived interest and benefits increase, willingness to provide personal data increases (Dinev & Hart, 2006)
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Content Discovery
Presence Communi-cation
Reflection Collabor-ation
Blogs
Social Tagging
Web Conference
Web CT
Web Tool Affordances
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Role of the Empire State Mentor
1. Designs programs and contracts
2. Offers appropriate instruction
3. Assesses and evaluates4. Manages and Develops
Instructional Resources5. Counsels and Advises
– (Bradley 1975)
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The emergent role of the Tutor
• Tutor’s Role: To encourage and “facilitate the process of developing the “whole learner” meaning development of knowledge, intellectual capacities, values, attitudes, behaviors, psychosocial maturity, and integration. “ Wallace 2008
• this study seeks to determine the competencies of successful online mentors in the Center for Distance Learning (CDL) at ESC.
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• “Despite the fact that mentors and students now engage in email communication as a part of their mentoring, largely to replace postal mail as a means of turning in papers as well as to set up appointments to speak on the phone, essentially the learning model has not changed much in 30 years, and therefore the competencies of mentors working in these programs have not changed either”. Williams 2008
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1.Designs programs and contracts
• Net tools help develop, plan and archive the Learning Plan?– Cloud computing– Filing– Versioning,– Permanence,– Ownership– transparency
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2. Offers appropriate instruction
• Appropriate:– Anytime– Any need– Individual & grouped– Archived– Voting– Texting– App sharing– Develops net efficacy
Web conferencing – like Elluminate.com
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Offers Appropriate Instruction
• Transparency – Allows monitoring, encouraging, supporting high expectations
• Students as content creators• Participatory Pedagogies
Does mentoring become more or less powerful when shared among more than one learner?
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3. Assesses and evaluates
• E-portfolios for assessment• Assessment/feedback
beyond the group• Authentic assessment• Mobile technology in
service learning• Peer review and evaluation
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4. Manages and Develops Instructional Resources
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Open Education Resources (OERs)Vision + Affordance
• “At the heart of the open educational resources movement is the simple and powerful idea that;– the world’s knowledge is a public good in
general– the World Wide Web provides an
extraordinary opportunity for everyone to share, use, and reuse that knowledge.”
Hewlett Foundation Smith, & Casserly. The promise of open educational resources. Change 38(5): 8–17, 2006
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OER Granularity
– Diagrams, photos– Articles (Open access publications)– Games, simulations, activities– Units of learning (IMS LD)– Units and courses– Programs
Special Issue of IRRODL edited by Dave Wiley fall 2009
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OER’s are Open (Mostly)
• Meaning you can:– Augment– Edit– Customize– Aggregate and Mashup– Reformat– Re-published
• But they need to be licensed – – not just put online
See Scott Leslie’s 10 minute video at http://www.edtechpost.ca/gems/opened.htm
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The Emerging Political Economy of Peer Production: Michael Bauwens
• a 'third mode of production' different from for-profit or public production by state-owned enterprises.
• Its product is not exchange value for a market, but but use-value for a community of users
• “produce use-value through the free cooperation of producers who have access to distributed capital”
www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=499
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Prod-Users - From production to produsage - Axel Bruns (2008)
• Users become active participants in the production of artifacts:
• Examples:– Open source movement– Wikipedia– Citizen journalism (blogs)– Immersive worlds– Distributed creativity - music, video, Flickr
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Produsage Principlesprodusage.org
• Community-Based –the community as a whole can contribute more than a closed team of producers.
• Fluid Heterarcy – produsers participate as is appropriate to their personal skills, interests, and knowledge, and may form loose sub-groups to focus on specific issues, topics, or problems
• Unfinished Artifacts –projects are continually under development, and therefore always unfinished;
• Common Property, Individual Rewards – contributors permit (non-commercial) community use, adaptation, and further development of their intellectual property, and are rewarded by the status capital they gain through this process
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Open Educational Resources
Produser ModelEx. WikiEducator
Open participationEmergent governanceUnrestricted licensingMass growth potential
Produser/ConsumerEx. MIT OCW
Restricted participationStaff production
Institutional governanceNon commercial license
Mora, M. (2008)
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5. Counsels and Advises
– Benefits – convenience– Travel costs– Access– Confidentiality
• Student Online Support groups and networks– Online counseling: a descriptive analysis of
therapy services on the Internet. Chester & Carolyn A. Glas (2006)
The online environment minimises social cues, creating an illusion of privacy that may decrease perceptions of interpersonal risk and make it easier to communicate about emotional issues (Wellman, 1997). Can you Counsel online?
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Building relationships with the ‘whole learner’ through social
software
• Through sharing of profiles, tags, reflections, photos and artifacts, enhanced teacher/student relationships are afforded - leading to transformative learning??
• See McCarthy, (2009) Social Networking behind student lines with Mixi– Breaking barriers new cost effective ways to work
with, motivate and mentor students
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Value learning-mentoring processes that:
• emphasize dialogue and collaborative approaches to study;
• support critical exploration of knowledge and experience;
• provide opportunities for active, reflective, and creative academic engagement.
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• Importance of the Competency of Constancy “constancy” is defined as the mentor’s ability to stay engaged with the student for all of the steps―
• reliable, loyal, and never too busy to be available to the student. (Williams, 2008)
• Technology affordances re constancy• Archives• Organization• Capturing (utube, podcasts etc.)
• Transformative learning “takes longer to occur than the time these students spend with their mentors or spend in reflection”
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Changes required for 21st Century Learning
Students’ not teacher’s role to: Define problemRetrieve data, human and learning resourcesValidate informationSensemakingNegotiating, collaborating, producing with othersApplying to authentic problemsCreating and building artifactsReflecting
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Conclusion
• Though successful yesterday and today, the use of new net based tools will propel teaching and learning at Empire States to new accomplishments, increased transparency and openness, efficiency and effectiveness.
• The adoption of these disruptive technologies is worth the gain!
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• “The pessimist complains about the wind, the optimist expects it to change, the realist adjusts the sails.” William Arthur Ward (1921 – 1994)
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"He who asks a question is a fool for five minutes; he who does not ask a question remains a fool forever.”
Chinese Proverb
Terry Anderson [email protected]
http://cde.athabascau.ca/faculty/terrya.php
Blog: terrya.edublogs.org
Your comments and questions most welcomed!