Learning Technologies 2008 Conference
Friday 7th November

Nancy White:

Full Circle Associates: Stewarding Technology for Communities

This workshop was delivered via videoconference.

Nancy White started Full Circle to provide assistance to business through internet technologies. Her research and specialization focuses on how technology creates learning in communities.

Stewarding technologies for communities is all about learning together. During her research technologies have changed rapidly and she realizes the need to focus on pedagogies – the way people learn with technology, rather than the technology itself.

She outlines different ways of perceiving communities:
•    Learning communities
•    Knowledge Networks
•    Communities of Practice
•    Online Communities

Communities involve me, we and many:

Me: the individual (personal identity, interest trajectory
We: communities (bounded membership group identity shared interest
Many: networks (boundaryless, fuzzy, intersecting interests

These ideas have opened up new areas of understanding in relation to technologies:

Technologies enable people to:
•    Discover and appropriate
•    Build communities
•    Create identities

Key roles in forming communities:
•    Community leaders
•    Technology stewards: people with enough experience working with communities and enough knowledge of technology to support the community in using the technology. Selecting and configuring technology as well as supporting its use in the community. This role is about guiding learning, noticing things and making them happen now for individuals.

•    Network weavers
Read her great book “ Digital Habitat: Stewarding Technology for Communities”: an ecological view of technology in communities

Important polarities of communities:
Togetherness – Separateness: shifting engagement from the group to the individual
Interacting – Publishing: conversing, experimenting, practicing, learning, planning and the tools and processes used to publish
Individual – Group: designed for groups, experienced as individuals. Does not imply homogeneity: need for customization when individual outcomes are required. Multimembership requires attention to both.

Orientations - selecting appropriate tools to support a community:
Develop community activities oriented to:
•    Meetings
•    Open-ended conversations
•    Projects
•    Access to expertise
•    Relationships
•    Context
•    Community cultivation
•    Individual participation
•    Content publication
Steward the activities to nurture the community so that the technology becomes less of a focus and the community becomes the point of practice. Consider carefully the point of the exercise: what is it the community needs to learn, practice, collaborate on?

The technology should become invisible. Building communities is what its all about!

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference
Friday 7th November

Tandberg Product Demonstration

The best thing about the demonstration was the YouTube video they showed called: Ask Gen Y.

This video provides an excellent glimpse into the key events, images and technologies that have shaped the world that this generation of young people have grown up in. This is largely a complex, competitive, hyperconnected world where boundaries are collapsing by the minute, blurring the difference between real and virtual lives and ways of living; services and providers; users and creators, participants and observers.

Watch it here:

Ask Gen Y

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference
Thursday 6th November

Gary Putland, General Manager of education.au

Learning Technologies: are we in control of my learning?

This is a catchy topic and Gary addressed it through the challenge of considering how we might address the needs of 21st century learners in Australia, and what education.au is doing to get this process underway. The general message was that we are way behind and need to be active in doing something NOW!

Gary’s session explored:
•    Hyperconnected worlds
•    Risk-taking and risk-sharing
•    21st century learning and the lag in policy implementation
•    The National services education.au offers

MCEETYA has just published a paper about the learning needs of our students. This report recognizes Australian students as global citizens, and as members of the Asia Pacific region, and discusses the importance of Asian literacy. It also recognises the complex problems that students face today, and the role that ICT technologies play in their life.

The report also recognizes:
1. The digital divide: the haves and have-nots and the need for equity of access
2. That education extends beyond the school gate, and that students are currently learning in very different ways outside of school
3. Students’ need to develop critical skills – cross disciplined thinking in our networked world
4. Students’ need for values and skills: resilience, ingenuity, tolerance etc

Gary also discussed the key points of the Cutler Report on Innovation and ways in which the government has supported (or not supported) innovation through education.

He also noted that more people now have Broadband internet connectivity: 98% of connection time in 2006-7 was for personal use.

Kids today are able to do lots of things that they couldn’t do a few years ago. They are both consumers and users of technologies. They are the mash-up masters – they are hyper-connected. They are in control of their use of the net and all of the services and spaces they access and master.

Risk profiles on the internet are shifting. Innovation and creativity involves risk taking. In our world of fear, we are less prepared to take risks and we, as educators have learnt to become risk-adverse! We have removed the risk factor for our students. They are not learning from mistakes.

He asks: how, as teachers can we move that risk dial back so that our students can learn through the process of making mistakes?

How can we help students develop internet citizenship? Risk and opportunity go hand-in-hand.

21st century learning: change is not happening quickly enough!
Its about:
Fun, motivation, engagement
Intrinsic motivation: about life, curiosity, having degrees of control, undertaking challenging and collaborative tasks
Engagement: involved in relevant active, cognitive processes

21st century learning equips students with basic skills for life:
1. Skills for learning: negotiated, collaborative, interactive
2. Connect with local and global communities: flexible, anywhere, anytime
3. Flexible and Personal: anywhere anytime, personal programs, any technology

His organisation is currently developing thinktanks and blogs related to a national ICT Strategy

Get involved! Have a say!

Go to the education.au website to find out about these and acces lots of resources and information

www.educationau.edu.au

http://www.me.edu.au/FusEd
Is a collaborative site for contributing to innovative ways of using technology in education, however currently the link does not seem to be working

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference
Thursday 6th November
Videoconference

Catherine Macklam and Danny Mass: The 2Learn.ca Education Society, Canada:

“Its easy 2Learn.ca – a unique model of technology professional development

This is a fantastic initiative that demonstrates how a structured and fully supported eLearning network for teachers can create paradigm shifts in pedagogy.
2Learn.ca is a professional development, non-profit educational organization established to help teachers use video technologies to support teaching and learning in Canada. Teachers are trained to use the technology and helped to setup conferenced events.

Teachers are supported at all levels. The team provides workshops, professional speakers and events for a provincial group of schools and teachers in Canada.

The program works with a cascade model, that provides release time for teachers to attend PD activities. They teachers contribute to this program, through ongoing evaluation and responses that help the organization develop training solutions emergently. Teachers must also provide learning opportunities for other teachers in their schools to facilitate the cascading model.

Teacher leaders for the province schools undertake the training needed to learn the technologies, and then take these back into their school communities.

Classroom teachers are given leading opportunities to train and lead their schools in various technologies. This empowers these teachers to the point where they empower other teachers in their school, leading to very effective ICT learning environments.

The key to the 12 year old program is that teachers are encouraged to lead in an area of personal passion. They don’t have to know everything.

Each year they have had a different focus:
1.Curriculum use of internet resources
2. ICT embedded curriculum
3. Grass roots projects
4. Improved broadband: SuperNet, led to multimedia in classroom
5. Videoconferencing in classrooms

They have established a great free website of resources built up of all of the resources they have accumulated over the years. The database is an aggregation of thousands of sites.

The portal focuses on theme based units of study: a teacher teaching that theme can engage in ICT units of work that are fully supported. Teachers can ask the organisation to make an event specific to their programs. This will be posted for all, on the site.

The key to this program is the professional development support that is scaffolded at all levels.

A new initiative is an online community website called 2LearnTogether. This site will connect teachers, learners, resources and events. Forums will help people to engage and establish relevant learning environments. This forum will be moderated and monitored so as to meet privacy issues, via access limitations. The software for the site was Dolphin, an Australian product.

Have a look at their site: its a great resource:
http://www.2learn.ca/

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference

Thursday 6th November

Using social networking tools to connect with clients

Simon Brown’s Case Study

Simon showed us how he teaches and uses video streaming technology when demonstrating techniques and skills with his stone-masonry students at TAFE .

He also uses VeMentoring to expose students to professional industry experts.

Simon builds strong networks through his teaching. His teaching is student-centred and focuses on creating interactivity between students and himself, and employers in the workplace.

He has used ning.com to develop an interactive learning community for his students and has posted photos of the class members on the front page. Each member has their own page. Students have varying degrees of input into the site. The blog post keeps them informed about their work and things like how one of the students who now lives in England is going.

He embeds videos from YouTube about stone masons into the site, and from one of these, he has established a great professional contact for the class.

the tomas ning site

Simon regularly checks out who visits the site through Google Analytics

This provides him with some interesting feedback.

This workshop showed us a real application of how social networking can engage students in the learning process. Simon’s class were a challenging bunch - they werent interested in writing and reading, but preferred ‘doing’. Once they began participating and contributing to the ning class site, their focus changed and most of them eagerly contributed to the class online community in very meaningful ways.

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference

Thursday 6th November

The Adult Educator: an endangered species

Anne Bartlett-Bragg’s workshop

Anne adopts the role of storyteller in her confronting and entertaining workshop.

Whilst she pitches her presentation toward adult educators, it has relevance for all educators.

Anne takes us into the future to the 2015 Learning Technologies Conference, and describes an isolated and ‘endangered’ group of educators - the last remaining ‘tribe’ of educators.

She provides us with a definition of ‘endangered’:

“threatened by predators and changing environments; few in numbers”,

and shows us a number of other endangered species:

- Printers (Anne pushes a paperless environment)

- Swimming pools, car manufacturers

- Educational services

- Bankers

- Chimney sweeps (for fireplaces)

Anne explains how her 2015 future-world is shaped by 2008 events happening now,

- The changing nature of work: only 70% jobs are now full-time and permanent

- The new trend for part-time work for women

- 200,000 jobs predicted to be lost during the next 12 months

- Learners have changed and their needs and expectations have changed

- Effective Learning Management Systems (LMS) are available for students online

She names the predators responsible for the crisis in education:

- Educators who continue to use digital technologies in boring, pedestrian and irrelevant ways that do not engage students: eg. powerpoint shows, use of IWBs as data projectors, printing materials etc

- Managed informal sharing and discussion groups: we can do all of this without the ‘big guys’, in more relevant ways

- The IT department: they block and restrict access

Anne describes some key identity issues that put educators at risk:

- Decreasing numbers of young educators: an aging population

- The role of educators has fundamentally changed (but have educators changed?)

She finishes her presentation with a whimsical response to this question: What can we do about it?

- Create sanctuaries

- Lobby

- Set up a Save Vocational Educators fund!

Whilst amusing, its also sad! And thats the whole point of her presentation!

Learning Technologies 2008 Conference

Thursday 6th November

Twittering at the Speed of Light

Howard Effey’s workshop

This is a mind-bending session that explores ideas that link technology with psychology.

In his workshop, Howard asks:

How does technology intersect with polarity or opposite ways of thinking/being?

He mentions some possible polarities to illustrate his point:

- Masculine and feminine

- Introversion and extraversion

I think he is suggesting that technology can shift our way of thinking and being, and can alter previous ideas about ourselves and our personas, enabling us to interact and develop knowledge about ourselves in new ways.

He seems to be saying that technology allows us to exchange information to reduce the distance between ‘opposite’ ideas of ourselves and others.

Perhaps he is referring to the ways in which we use technology to explore aspects of ourselves in ways we may not have previously been able to. For example, when we create avatars online, we can choose to reinvent ourselves and experience opposite ways of being, acting and interacting with others, in virtual worlds closely aligned with reality.

As a counsellor he recognizes that young people often interface online in a more extraverted manner.

Howard refers to Twitter and its potential to develop an exchange of information that furthers our sense of knowing and connectedness. He sees a significance in these new ways of ‘knowing’ and relates them to very traditional ways of knowing - ie intuitive knowing. Twitter has the potential to carry information faster than most other ways. He likens it to being a passenger on an ‘indian train’! During the US election, Twitter was used to exchange information and forecast news.

Twitterers can break news to the world faster than traditional media sources can. I remember when China was devastated by an earthquake in May 2008. Twitter was recorded as beating the media in breaking the news to the world. The following article points out however, that whilst speed is the issue here, quality of journalism isnt.

article: Twitter didnt beat the media: it was quicker

I think that perhaps the point of all this, is that networks like Twitter enable instant connectivity to cyber spaces where our identity and persona can be stretched to the point of our imagination. Exchange of information is potentially lightning-fast, personal and instant. Our fellow twitterers are at our fingertips.

Thursday 6th November

Keynote Speaker: George Siemens, eLearnspace

Analyzing the obvious: technological and social connections

George’s workshop has prompted me to ask the question: What is the purpose of our teaching, or, why do we teach?

If our primary motivation is to prepare young people for the world they will encounter when they leave school, then we need to be thinking now about our current effectiveness. What do students need to survive in the 21st century?  How can we help them learn the things they need to know with technology that is available, affordable and accessible.

On the other hand, if our motivation is to instill a lifelong love of learning in young minds, then we perhaps need to look at how we deliver learning content and how we provide learning opportunities to engage students and allow them to immerse themselves in their own learning processes.

George’s presentation points us in the right direction to think of ways to achieve both of these things: to prepare and future-proof our students, and to empower them to steer their own learning experiences.

He claims that deep knowledge and effective learning occurs when students are connected through networks.

If we understand how and why connections form we should be able to understand how to shape better ways of educating students. If we focus on networks we can create a streamlined process of learning from design to delivery of content. Knowledge is what we seek to teach. Knowledge resides in how we connect things together. Knowledge is a pattern of connectivity – a  way of engaging with and navigating networks. Knowledge is a way of engaging with the network connections.

Learning is networking, putting together the patterns of knowledge.

Three levels of connection are needed for learning to occur:
1.    Neural: how our brains form thinking is through neurons firing to make a pattern of connectivity. Its not the image of the person that forms the memory, but the patterns in which the neurons fire.
2.    Conceptual: how we define the subject matter to form a conceptual map. An expert’s understanding leads to contextual understanding that a novice cant.
3.    Social/external: Technology has amplified the significance of social networking in forming connections needed for learning to take place.

Understanding is dependent upon the breadth of our knowledge: how and what/who we connect to deepen our understanding.
“Connections are to learning as atoms are to the physical world” (Siemens)

The more connections, the deeper the understanding.

There are many technological tools that are now available to make connections for our students: this is exciting. Education is an exciting crossroad.

To understand connections and the patterns they form leads us to understand how people learn, acquire and acccumulate knowledge.

George claims that if we can monitor someone’s thought patterns, the process of forming connections and the patterns they make through this process, then we can enhance learning for them.

“Learning opportunities are determined by how we interact with knowledge and others” (Siemens)

Siemens challenges educators to ask:
“What happens when the tools of control shift from educator to learner?”

The content and the tools of technological learning put the control in the hands of the learner: eg in his lecture some people are blogging (me included), googling, twittering, emailing, typing etc whereas traditionally, learners are held captive by the teacher/lecturer.

Technology can free the learner, empower them and allow them to make choices.

As students increase the number of connections through technology provided by institutions, they assume increased control of the learning process. It seems to me that if that is so, then outside of school, students have almost total control of how they learn, yet as they ‘power down’ when they walk through the school gate, they reluctantly have to relinquish this control, let go of the learning process. This highlights a key deficiency of educational institutions today.

Did you know that the extra 40 plus million voters in the 2008 US election were largely encouraged to vote via interactive connections, online?

Technology amplifies the ability to connect with other people in learning communities.

“Our views of knowledge and learning dictate the shape of our institutions” (Siemens)

George urges educators and institutions to view students as clients and themselves as providers.

If you are in business, when a client’s needs shift, you must shift with them or your business collapses. It makes sense that if our field is about providing and delivering learning and knowledge to students, then as the requirements of these students shift, our delivery methodology (pegagogy) must shift to accommodate their new needs.

Learning networks cater for 21st century learning needs.

A learning network is a group of people and data sources somehow linked. The connection provides an opportunity to learn with someone else (Eg a library, forum, blog). You don’t have to be a contributor, but can participate by the nature of the link or connectivity.

George describes the chief characteristics of networks:
- They vary.
- A social network is a type of learning network but the tasks are not explicit.
- A learning network is task-focused and specific, intentional.

Sustained participation occurs in varying contexts (Klein: Sources of Power) and determines the value of connections and networks.

Sensemakers are people who shape our views of the world: newspaper editors etc. Institutions have traditionally performed as sensemakers.

Today we have to make our own way through complex fields of understanding. We need to become our own sensemakers to negotiate new knowledge, situations and contexts. This is critical for our students.

“Our institutions are about being sensemakers for our students, not making sensemakers of our students”.

George’s message makes me understand that this needs to change.

Our students need to be able to ‘make sense’ of their world. This is how we can best prepare them for their future. Enabling them to take control of the learning process and to participate and engage with technology in relevant ways will encourage a lifelong love of learning that extends well beyond the classroom walls.

I cant help but ask: isnt that what we seek to teach?