Implementer grant technology camp january 9, 2012 final blue
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Teaching Challenges and
Web 2.0 Tools
Julie Gahimer PT, HSDProfessor Krannert School of Physical TherapyUniversity of IndianapolisPresented as a Component of Implementer Grant January 9, 2012
"What our students understand (and that we, as teachers, seem blind to) is that the very nature of information has changed. It's changed in what it looks like, what we look at to view it, where we find it, what we can do with it, and how we communicate it. We live in a brand new, and dynamically rich information environment, and if we are going to reach our students in a way that is relevant to their world and their future (and ours), then we must teach them from this new information environment." -David Warlick
Questions in Higher Education
(Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007)
What is the value of participatory learning (video repositories, wikis)?
Should students be allowed to bring cell phones, ipods, MP3 players to class?
How do we assess the quality of on-line education?
Should students be able to utilize wikipedia/scholarpedia as information resources?
Questions in Higher Education (Chronicle of Higher Education,2007)
How can we best utilize on-line collaboration tools such as Skype and Google talk for educational purposes?
How can we make educational use of virtual reality in academics?
Can learning occur in cafes and pubs?Does learning really exist in one’s own hands?
Fun Facts About Learning80% of us are visual learners11% of us are auditory learners9% of us are kinesthetic learnersIf content is presented 1X ,in 30 days
the retention will be 10%If content is presented 6X, in 30 days
the retention will be 90%
Who is the Net Generation?Born in or after 19828 out of 10 say it is
cool to be smartHave a fascination
with new technologies
Digitally literateMobile
Always connected to their social network
ExperientialCrave interactivityVisual spatial skillsParallel processingAttentional
deployment
Interesting Facts about the Net GenerationBy the age of 21:
◦10,000 hours of videogames◦200,000 e-mails◦20,000 hours of TV◦10,000 hours of cell phone use◦Less than 5,000 hours of reading
Concerns Related to the Net GetShort attention spansChoose not to pay attentionReflection not often valuedSource qualityText literacy
How are Net Gen students different than the old time professors?
Ctl-alt-del is as basic as ABCComputers have always fit in their
backpacksGas has always been unleadedAre comfortable composing documents on-
line and not long handMemory has been turned over to hand held
devicesConstantly connected
9 Strategies for Dealing with Today’s LearnersFocus on “You”Love your audienceFill in the blanksTell a storyProvide easy navigationMake it visualStay short and sweetWrite a recipe
Remember our Students Have Multiple IntelligencesLinguistic- “word smart”Logical- mathematical
“number/reasoning smart”Spatial- “picture smart”Bodily-kinesthetic “body smart”Musical- “music smart”Interpersonal -“people smart”Intrapersonal- “self smart”Naturalist- “nature smart”
Top 5 Teaching and Learning Challenges from UIndy Faculty 20101. How can I engage and motivate
students as well as keep things interesting?
2. How can I create active learning strategies and get student’s attention to accomplish course goals?
3.How can I assess true learning?4.How can I create effective learning
objectives?5.How can I manage my time when there
is so much content?
The World is Open Curtis J Bonk2009
WE-ALL-LEARN FRAMEWORKCurtis Bonk (2009)• Web Searching in the World of e-Books • E-Learning and Blended Learning • Availability of Open Source and Free Software • Leveraged Resources and OpenCourseWare • Learning Object Repositories and Portals • Learner Participation in Open Information
Communities • Electronic Collaboration • Alternate Reality Learning • Real-Time Mobility and Portability • Networks of Personalized Learning
Opener#1 Web Searching in the World of e-Books
E-Books: • Simulations, study aids, dictionaries,
games, hyperlinks to the Web, multimedia, student authoring tools, enhanced data searching capabilities, email, discussion forums, and evaluation tools
• California is adopting policies for digital and open access textbooks as a means to reduce the state deficit and enhance learning.
Opener #2 E-Learning and Blended Learning
K-12 E-Learning: • Michigan has mandated 20 hours of online
experience to complete high school• Students must take one online class to pass high
school• Florida has mandated online course access in every
school district from K-12Higher Education E-Learning: • University of Illinois at Springfield and the University
of Central Florida now offer many of the exact same courses in face-to-face, blended, and fully online formats. Students select the delivery mode
Opener #3 Availability of Open Source and Free Software
Free and Open Source Course Management Systems: • Moodle and Sakai are free and
open source options• As of February 10, 2009, there
were 620,000 registered users of Moodle from 204 countries speaking 78 languages.
Opener #4 Leveraged Resources and OpenCourseWare OpenCourseWare: MIT (1,890 online courses) Hundreds of other universities
and other organizations are placing their courses online
Opener #5 Learning Object Repositories and Portals
Learning Portals Digital museums and countless digital libraries Free dictionaries, encyclopedias, thesauruses Open Access Journals
◦ Public Library of Science (PLoS) free peer reviewed scientific journals in healthcare
◦ Scivee- allows users to hear or see the scientist explain the research in “pubcasts”
Online Sharing Communities: Connexions- All ages-from Rice UniversityMerlot- Higher Education- contains more than 20,000 free learning contents (many peer reviewed)Curriki- free K-12 content
Opener #6 Learner Participation in Open Information Communities
Shared Online Video
Millions of freely available educational videos in You Tube Edu, TeacherTube, Big Think, NomadsLand, Current TV, Link TV, Howcst, Wonderhowto, Google Video, CNN video and BBC Audio and Video.
Stanford, MIT and Berkeley have their own You Tube and iTunes U channels
Matt Harding dances around the world and becomes of teacher of geography 2008, 22 million views
Lee LeFever’s “In Plain English”videos from Common Craft have been viewed millions of times
Scribd is the YouTube of Text documents Wikis: Wikipedia (10 millions pages of content in more than
250 languages) Wikiquote, Wikisource, Wikitionary, Wikinews, and Wikibooks
Opener #7 Electronic Collaboration
Guest Experts on Demand:
Webcam can be used for text chat, online discussion forums, interactive videoconferencing (Skype, Google Talk)
Microsoft offers SharePoint, and GrooveGoogle offers Google Groups and Google
DocsNing online community- 1 million groups
Opener #8 Alternate Reality Learning Virtual Worlds:
Second Life has more than 16 million residents (2009), more than 1 million people log on each day.
Colleges professors are using Second Life to teach law at Harvard, English at Ball State University, sex education at the University of Plymouth in the UK
Medical schools and hospitals are conducting simulations and other instructional activities that previously were extremely expensive.
Businesses like IBM and Dell are utilizing Second Life and other virtual worlds for employee training, community building, special announcements, and online conferences.
Opener #9 Real-Time Mobility and Portability Mobile Learning Mobile learning will transform education around the planet. More than 28 percent of the population as of March 2009 On a global basis, there are 60,000 new mobile subscriptions
every hour 720,000 more people who can learn online each day and
tens of millions more people each month Mobile Technology Give-aways Albilene Christan University- giving away iPhones to
incoming students Oklahoma Christina University giving away both an iPhone
(or iPod Touch) and an Apple Macbook laptop to incoming students.
Opener #10 Networks of Personalized LearningOnline Language Learning
Foreign Languages via Livemocha, ChinesePod, Spanish Pod, Mixxer, KanTalk, Ecpod (many are free).
Web 1.0, Web 2.0, Web 3.0
Web 1.0- “a brochure”Web 2.0- “users add value”
Web 3.0-???????
How Do I Determine What Tools to Use?
Low Risk High RiskTime
Student Centered
Cost
Low Tech ResourcesHandoutsOverhead projectorsFlip chartsBlackboardVCR tapesSlides
Bloom’s Taxonomy (Revised)
Bloom’s Taxonomy1950’s 1990’s -
Digital
Web 2.0 Tools and Bloom’s Taxonomy
DELICIOUSBloom’s Digital Taxonomy: RememberingSocial Bookmarking siteAllows access to bookmarks anywhereSocial component allows for accessing
other’s bookmarksActivity: See How to Store videos,
resources for courses you teachTask: How could this be used in the
classes you teach?
ANIMOTOBloom’s Digital Taxonomy:
UnderstandingVideo with Music Creation ToolActivity: View Student Project
related to bullying in Nursing Practice
Task: How could this be used in the classes you teach?
NETVIBESBloom’s Digital Taxonomy:
ApplyingAggregator of ResourcesActivity: View the UIndy School of
Business Netvibes PageTask: How could this be used in
the classes you teach?
SLIDESHARE Bloom’s Digital Taxonomy:
AnalyzingPresentation Resources for
content and /or graphicsActivity: Choose a topic of
interest and type into SlideshareTask: How could this be used in
the classes you teach?
EXTRANORMALBloom’s Digital Taxonomy:
AnalyzingVideo-creation site following a
storyline, text to movieActivity: View the short video
entitled OT vs PTTask: How could this be used in
the classes you teach?
VOICETHREADBloom’s Digital Taxonomy: CreatingConversations around Audio and ImagesUpload images, documents, and videosAdd narration and vocal commentary to
create an audio/visual presentation or product
Activity: View Kathy Bohley’s mini-lecture on International Marketing, notice the student responses
Task: How could this be used in the classes you teach?
LET’S GET TO WORK!
HAVE FUN!