david m. kennedy, phd 甘明德 博士 director, teaching and learning centre associate professor,...

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David M. Kennedy, PhD甘明德 博士Director, Teaching and Learning CentreAssociate Professor , CDS

The context Outcomes-based

approaches to T &L Learning design The students The tools Impact

voices of the students Feedback

Opportunities & Issues Questions

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Research intensive UniversityPost- & under-grad.OBA is now the norm

Previous exp. of students Didactic Exam-driven F2F

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Emphasis on Critical thinking Real problem-solving Whole-person development Communication – local and global! Language – particularly in HK Transforming information into knowledge Being self-organised, engaged, passionate

The Biggs model align outcomes, activities

and assessment articulate criteria for success

▪ rubrics communicate expectations

to students▪ provide examples▪ provide feedback

Content and concepts

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Quantitative phase Qualitative phase

Missing the point Single point Multiple unrelated points

Logically related answer

Unanticipated extension

Misses point

StateRecogniseRecallTell

EnumerateDescribeListClarifyDo algorithms

Compare/contrastExplain causesAnalyseRelateApplyPredict

TheoriseGeneraliseHypothesiseReflectCreateDesign

Biggs, J. B. (2003). Teaching for quality learning at university (2nd ed.). Buckingham: Open University Press.

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(McNaught, et. al., 2006)

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(McNaught, et. al., 2006)

Lots of opportunities

BUT …

Disorganized, disparate, demanding

Designhttp://www.bargainpoolsupplies.com/images/NT125_RaftCad_beforeafter.jpg 9

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Things to consider Learning tasks – Active authentic learning

▪ real problems involving reflective processes ▪ peer feedback, modeling and mentoring

Learning resources for blended learning▪ e + books, e + journals, e + media▪ social networking

Learning support▪ using the tools to manage feedback, exemplars,

rubrics

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Careful design to achieve curriculum alignment

Integration of F-2-F AND technologyUse the MOST appropriate

technology (discipline)Don’t forget research

opportunities

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Use of ICTs Web 2.0 technologies

in particular▪ Blogs – for reflective

writing▪ Social networking – for

communities of practice▪ Walls, Tagging, Forums

ePortfolios for more flexible assessment artifacts

http://www.ethics.org.au/resources/img/general-content/articles/0148b-hammer-cartoon.gif

13http://baxterking.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/hong-kong-15-thumbnail-hong-kong-_tngpx10001x14537x1fa4c1096.jpg

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Under-grad demonstrate the use of

Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) to implement curriculum reforms in language education

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http://moodle.cite.hku.hk/ 23

Post-grad Demonstrate an

effective understanding of the design of eLearning environments

build a blended learning environment

demonstrate an academic perspective

http://digitalconversations.files.wordpress.com/2008/12/calvin-on-writing-a-thesis.jpg24

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26http://moodle.cite.hku.hk/

27http://www.toastmasters.org/OtherImages/FindingYourVoice.aspx

The student voice (MSc – ICT coordinator) impact on your learning and class

dynamics

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Primary school ICT coordinator impact on your learning

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… when I started this module I thought the assessment was unfair … but, as I undertook the tasks I was reminded of how you always ask us to demonstrate our knowledge. Now I have completed the tasks, built my own learning platform, set up forums, added videos I now have the confidence to develop myself further. Thank you, PL

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More engaging forms of assessment More choice in the assessment possible Better management Better modeling of assessment

requirements Better evidence of reflective practice Better engagement Better motivation Better use of media to illustrate complex

ideas (good teaching and course evaluations) 32

The need to model ‘academic’ blogging/presentation Plagiarism – need Turnitin or equivalent Citations and bibliographies The effective use of media The use of visual representations Students do NOT naturally use learning

technologies These are non-trivial issues The next slide

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With thanks to ALT-C for the invitation to share my T&L

experiences My students for sharing their views

David M. Kennedy Director, Teaching and Learning Centre Associate Professor, CDS Lingnan University, Hong Kong davidmkennedy@LN.edu.hk http://www.ln.edu.hk/tlc/staff/davidmkennedy/dmk0.ht

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Some have argued that Web 1.0 environments are passé: Web 2.0 is where the action is! However, what may be more useful is to think of Web 1.0 and 2.0 applications as offering a raft of potential affordances and opportunities. Learning designs that incorporate an LMS/VLE to provide support for scaffolding, grouping and organising learning can be combined with Web 2.0 applications (e.g., for students to share, and collaborate) and ePortfolios. The synergy of these tools offers increased flexibility, manageability and more student-centred learning.

The presentation will examine an outcomes-based approach to learning design and how this may be supported by the synergy of Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 applications.

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