Overview of e-learning in the UK
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Transcript of Overview of e-learning in the UK
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Overview of e-learning in the UK
Professor Gráinne Conole, University of SouthamptonEmail: [email protected]
NVU –Konferansen 2005, Kaltur for e-elearningLevanger 15-16th March 2005
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Emergence of a research field
1. Pre-subject area – no perceived interest
2. Beginnings – questions arise3. Emergence – more researchers4. Diversification – different schools5. Establishment – defined community
and alignment with other fields
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Current status
• E-learning - Between stages 3 and 4– Influx of researchers into the area– Growth of new units and research
centres– Specialised journals – Dedicated conferences– Community for fostering debate
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pedagogical aspects
underpinningtechnologies
Making the connections in e-learning research
organisationalissues
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Contextual factors
• Funding and policy drivers• Cultural dimensions• Subject-specific aspects• Current hot topics
– Accessibility– Widening participation– Lifelong learning– E-business– Plagiarism, digital rights, IPR
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Underpinning technologies• New and emerging technologies
– mobile and ubiquitous– intelligent agents
• Understanding the media– multiple forms of representation– different characteristics of media
• A distributed electronic environment– standards and interoperability– infrastructure and architectures
• Access to information– structuring and distributing information– integrating different portals, gateways and resources– exploiting the different communication mechanisms
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Pedagogical aspects
• Student and staff experiences• Best methods of
– representing information– Designing and accessing resources– encouraging communication and collaboration– integrating with other learning and teaching methods
• Development issues– new forms of literacy– mechanisms for skills updating and development
• Understanding the affordances of technologies• Exploring the potential for new forms of pedagogy
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Organisational issues
• Developing models for– mapping institutional structures– supporting institutional processes– sharing knowledge– distributing information– supporting change– engaging different stakeholders
• Awareness of external factors• Understanding changing roles and
identities• Linking strategy and practice
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Common characteristics
• Change• Political dimension• Interdisciplinary• Access and inclusion• Convergence and interoperability• Interactivity
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Themes
• The good and the bad of ICT• Speed of change• New collaborations and discourses• User focussed• Changing practice• Wider impact
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Theme I
• The good and the bad of ICT– Weblogs, issues of control– The affordances of technologies– Appropriateness, fit for purpose– Ownership vs open source– Simplifying the complex– Content is king vs information overload
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Theme II
• Speed of change, the Web in 2010– Immense amounts of information – New tools and resources – The Web for nomads– Predicting the unpredictable– Researching where the light is – A world beyond the Web
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Theme III
• Supporting new collaborations and discourses– New distributed Communities of Practice – Self-sustaining Communities of Practice– Interacting with the media – Tailored and contextualised – Making sense - the power of narrative
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Theme IV
• Harnessing needs, understanding end users– Adaptive and personalised – Ethnographic approach to users – The (semantic) web of meaning – Supporting the whole learning cycle– Learning objects and reusability– Focus on learning activities
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Theme V
• Changing practice– Reflective research/practitioner– Changing roles – Passive to interactive technologies– Focus on educational objectives – Learning design and Communities of Practice – How do you motivate people to do this
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Theme VI
• Wider impact– New models for society – the adaptive
model for Governance – Blurring of boundaries – Distributed cognition – Compelling experience– A changing world– Technology is here and will continue to
have an impact
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Discipline issues
• Variety of feeder disciplines– education research, cognitive psychology,
instructional design, computer science, business and management, philosophy, semiotics, critical discourse analysis
• Benefits – wealth of methods and approaches– different perspectives
• Drawbacks– no shared language and understanding– lack of cohesion to the area
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Choice of research methods
• Tension between – Focus on evaluation or research– Quantitative vs. qualitative approaches
• Choice of methodologies – Has an impact on outcomes– Tends to be based on previous experience, favoured
methods
• Approaches– Exploring individual case studies– Developing generic models– Undertaking systematic reviews– Applying specific theoretical perspectives– Active involvement and action research
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Methodological issues
• Lack of – rigour– theoretical basis– ‘academic credibility’
• Tensions – between policy makers and practitioners– stakeholders with conflicting agendas– efficiency gains/effectiveness vs
improving learning
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Impact
• Changing organisations– structures, roles and processes– teaching, research and administration
• Specifics– students: impact on learning experience– practitioners: exploring the potential– support staff: developing reliable services– senior management: integrating
strategies
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Research versus practice
• Researchers– Explore, question– Specific beliefs– Removed from
practicalities– Research drivers– Research
communities– Defining the area– Too anecdotal
• Practitioners– Practical
applications– Politics– Relevance and role– LT community– New breed– No clear pathway– Dearth higher up
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My research interests
• Learning design– DialogPlus project – learning activity toolkit– LADIE – Design, construction and use of learning
activities
• Evaluation – E-learning materials for in-service teachers in China– Online Neonatology course across Europe– UK e-university!!!
• E-assessment– TOIA assessment tool– Evaluation of e-assessment in Scotland
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My research interests
• Learning theories– VEOU online environment for orthopaedic
surgeons across Europe• Managed learning environments
– Organisational issues• Review of tools for effective practice• Research centres
– E-Learning Research Centre– New national centre for research methods
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References• Conole, G., (2002), ‘The evolving landscape of learning
technology research’, ALT-J 10(3), 4-18• Conole, G. (2003), ‘Understanding your organisation’ in the
‘Creating a Managed Learning Environment (or MLE) infoKit’, available at www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk
• Conole, (2004), ‘Report on the effectiveness of tools for e-learning’, report for the JISC commissioned ‘Research Study on the Effectiveness of Resources, Tools and Support Services used by Practitioners in Designing and Delivering E-Learning Activities’, available at www.cetis.ac.uk:8080/pedagogy
• Conole, G., Dyke, M., Oliver, M., & Seale, J., (2004), ‘Mapping pedagogy and tools for effective learning design’, Computers and Education, Vol 43, Issues 1-2, 17-33
• Conole and Dyke, (2004), ‘The affordances of ICT’, ALT-J, 12.2, 113-124
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Overview of e-learning in the UK
Professor Gráinne Conole, University of SouthamptonEmail: [email protected]
NVU –Konferansen 2005, Kaltur for e-elearningLevanger 15-16th March 2005