Jacquie Flexible Learning

September 9, 2007

Design Overview

Filed under: Constructing Course, Reference List, Weblog — by jacquiehayes @ 9:06 am

I went to my first face to face with Terry on Thursday, and that clarified a lot of questions i had about this course,  thanks Terry, so here i go.

Leigh also came and talked to us and showed us briefly how to add content onto the Wiki that Rachel had set up, as every time i tried to put something on it, it wouldnt show up.  So hopefully i will now be able to give it a go and be away racing.

Willie was great as per usual and challenged us on quite a few ideas, and it brought me back to remembering what Heather Day and Willie had taught me while doing some units in Level 5 Adult Education, and also my Moderators cause, so thank you for recharging my memory. 

Thats the great thing about learning and how valueable this course has been for me, as I thought i had forgotten some of that stuff until you start to put it into practice again and the mind is jump started into using that learning.

I have finally decided to construct my course on Excel 2007.

As earlier in my blog in my design course, I was looking at all 2007 but as this was going to be such a big project, I have decide to condense it to just new features that are available in Microsoft Office 2007 Excel.  The reason behind this is we have students who have purchased new computers and they have Microsoft Office 2007 Excel on these and as the features have changed from the 2003 version, they are asking us how to use these new features, thus bringing me to constructing  a course to help them.

My other course i learnt how to develop my plan, but now i am taking it a bit further and want to reflect on who my learners are, and how they are going to learn, and what kind of learners are they. (this will go on the wiki as well)

There are many theories of learning, and so i have decided to read up on a few, and here is how I have perceived some of these readings. 

People learn from many varieties, and i feel that it comes down to the way the course is designed and contructed, and how you teach in educational programs, and to recognise that every person has a different way of digesting information and learn in different ways. such as thinking, emotions, attitudes, motivation.

www.brookes.ac.uk/services/ocsd/2_learntch/theories.html

Above is a link to a website to go to, to give you some ideas on where i got my referencing from.

Burns mentions that behavioural learning as a relevant permanent change including both observational activity and internal processes, such as thinking, and attitudes examples being.

  • Experimental learning
  • Cognitive approach
  • Action learning
  • plus many more.

Expermential learning is thought by Kolb that there are four stages of learning and that this learning can begin at any one stage and that it is continuous (there is no limit to the number of cycles you can make in a learning situation.)  People learn in four ways they are:

  • concrete experience
  • through observation
  • through abstract conceptuation
  • through active experimentation

Kolb who has been exploring over the last few decades educational research and found that indivuals begin with their own style of experimental learning cycle.

Honey and Mumford http://www.ruby3.dircon.co.uk/Training%20Files/Theory%20Pages/learning%20styles.htm also identify four learning styles:

They are:

  • Activist (enjoys the experience)
  • Reflector (reflects a great deal)
  • Theorist (connects and abstract ideas from experience)
  • Pragmatist (enjoys the planning stage)

Action Learning is another approach which can be linked with the world of action through a reflective process of learning groups or Action Learning Groups (McGill & Beaty 1995) http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=author:%22McGill%22+intitle:%22Action+Learning:+a+guide+for+professional,+management+%26+…%22+&hl=en&rlz=1T4ADBF_enNZ226NZ227&um=1&oi=scholarr is the aim from learning with and from each other, and said that there can be no learning without action and no action without learning.

August 26, 2007

Course Outline

Filed under: Constructing Course, Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 10:00 pm

I have been having a look on the web for references to read for this course and i have found this site real valuable so i have saved it to my reference list.

http://members.shaw.ca/mdde615/index.htm

here are a few interesting ideas that i have read and found useful.

Key elements in communication

Many teachers new to online instruction believe that the opportunity to communicate with their students and the ability for students to engage in dialogue amongst themselves is reduced in the online environment. However, the reverse can actually be true. The opportunity for communication is greater than in the classroom because physical and temporal limitations vanish in the online classroom. Studies have shown that participation actually increases in well designed online settings. Shy students can be encouraged to participate in online discussions whereas they might never contribute in a classroom setting

 

Tips and strategiesBe clear and upfront about your expectations, while still being flexible enough to meet the needs of your students. Remember many adults are taking distance courses so that they can juggle family, work and educational pursuits. Humanize your content by focusing on your learners not on the mode of delivery. While online courses rely on computers and various technologies for many aspects of communication and delivery, the technology should always support your learning goals and your students.

This next article i read was very interesting and i thought about this for using blackboard

Encourage and insist upon participation by all students. Using a threaded discussion board is one means by which reluctant or shy students might feel comfortable contributing to online discussions. Start early with some sort of “ice-breaking”/getting used to the technology activity. This might, for example, take the form of brief biographical information posted to an introductory online conference or the design of individual web pages for posting to the course site. Make sure every student succeeds in this initial activity (you may need to email individual students to provide encouragement and assistance).

Links

http://members.shaw.ca/mdde615/links.htm

June 22, 2007

Reading I have just finished

Filed under: Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 2:07 am

I have been doing some more reading on the Authentic Learning for the 21st Century:  By Marilyn M. Lombardi

 Edited by Diana G. Oblinger

 ELI Paper 1:  2007

May 2007

Educause Learning Initaiative

It talks about learning researchers haveing authenticated down to 10 design element which provide educatiors with a check list which could be valuable to them.

It also talks about Simulation based learning (on line ) and its role play and how to help then develop communications and leadership skills they may need.

It talks about Open learning  and the troubles they may occur in the web based course.  Learners are introduced to key concepts and pratises which will help instructors become aware on students misunderstanding.

Also in the reading it looks into how IT supports Authentic Learning, i.e. software visualization, digital devices etc.

References:  http://www.ntlf.com/html/sf/jbrown.pdf

May 31, 2007

Lyn’s Blog

Filed under: Reference List, Weblog — by jacquiehayes @ 8:27 am

I have been looking at lyns bl0g and look forward to see her plan.  have  a look at her site. I love Lyn’s new photo of Dunedin.

May 22, 2007

My Resources

Filed under: Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 3:08 am

I have been looking through my own del.icio.us  bookmarks that I have tagged for later use to help me with my plan. I have also looked at others on the DFLP07  and have picked out that I have found quite valuable to this course.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_2007#Ribbon

Designing e-learning – Design approaches

Designing e-learning – Sample learning sequences

Technology That Enhances Verbal-Linguistic Intelligence

How Technology Enhances Howard Gardner’s Eight Intelligences

ADDIE Model – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

All these have confirmed a lot of what we do at our community Learning Centres, we facilitate, but we also get to know our students and find out their learning styles whether they be visual, audiable, reflective etc.  From when they first arrive to enrol we get their details, what it is they are wanting out of the course (the outcome)  The students learning ability , the resources and equipment we use.  How long the course takes (how many recommended hours ) also their time line.  We use Performance Criterias as a check list for our students to complete as they work through their books. We have evaluations forms that each student completes after every assessment. 

May 7, 2007

Copy Right

Filed under: Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 10:06 pm

Looking at the web site about stealing the goose, My thoughts are that it is a shame that society feels that they need to own everything that they do and feel they need to  have a copy right on their work. This is especially in Education, and I am a great believer that Teaching and Learning should be a shared partnership.  Knowledge should be shared willingly that is how people learn and that is how we have got where we are today.  It is a shame that people want to put a price on their knowledge.

May 6, 2007

Reading on Distant Learning

Filed under: Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 5:17 am

Here is some good reading on distant learning

http://www.odlaa.org/events/2005conf/nonref/odlaa2005Anderson.pdf

May 5, 2007

A useful site to open

Filed under: Reference List — by jacquiehayes @ 5:01 am

I have just been surfing and found a great web site for all my courses I am working on for my Graduate Certificate level 7 in Adult Education, as I feel that everything I am learning still comes back to the basics of this web site.  I have learnt that before I can do my designing, I have to remember the foundation of Teaching and the kind of Learning there is.  This all goes hand in hand with my Designing for Flexible Learning and I am just learning so much more, and realising that flexible learning is the future of Teaching and Adult Education.

I am also putting this link on to my del.icio.us

http://leo.oise.utoronto.ca/~lbencze/Teaching.html#Case_Methods

Powered by WordPress.com