connectivism and self-organized learning

45
Connectivism and Self- Organized Learning George Siemens September 22, 2011 RUIVE: Innovation, Quality and Accreditation

Upload: jayme

Post on 24-Feb-2016

59 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Connectivism and Self-Organized Learning. George Siemens September 22, 2011 RUIVE: Innovation, Quality and Accreditation. What is connectivism ?. This. Really. That’s it. Describe knowledge and learning process through the lens of connections. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

 Connectivism and Self-Organized LearningGeorge Siemens

September 22, 2011RUIVE: Innovation, Quality and

Accreditation

Page 2: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

What is connectivism?

Page 3: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

This

Page 4: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Really. That’s it.

Page 5: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Describe knowledge and learning process through the lens of connections

Page 6: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

But, making the transition to a “connection” as the unit of analysis in learning is not easy

Page 7: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

It raises questions about:

Page 8: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

What enables connections?

Page 9: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

What prevents connections?

Page 10: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Why is it important?

Page 11: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Abundance

Page 12: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

More is different, but not new1550-1750

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_history_of_ideas/toc/jhi64.1.html 

Page 13: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

http://research.uow.edu.au/learningnetworks/seeing/snapp/index.html 

Page 14: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Matthew principle

Page 15: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 16: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Because the internet and social media make managing/owning/directing your own learning possible.

Intermediary agents need not apply.

Page 17: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

What is self-organization?

“Processes of self-organization literally create order out of disorder”

Francis Heylighen

Page 18: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

“Individuals, groups, and communities all form symbiotic relationships for a wide variety of reasons but the underlying impetus is resource sharing. Whether the resource is food, information, or support, individuals come together to share resources (Ribbands, 1953). 

Erin Brewer, 2003

Page 19: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Online Self-Organizing Social Systems (OSOSS) “structure allows large numbers of individuals to self-organize in a highly decentralized manner in order to solve problems and accomplish other goals.”

Wiley & Edwards 2003 

Page 20: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 21: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Learning is a complex process (mainly because people are complex)

Our institutions today (attempt to) manage it like it is complicated system.

Page 22: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

X

X

X

Too focused on preserving this

Today’s education system

Page 23: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Complex systems: “a set of diverse actors who dynamically interact with one another awash in a sea of feedbacks.” 

Miller and Page, 2007

Page 24: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Complexity: “disturbing traits of mess, of the inextricable, or disorder, of ambiguity, or uncertainty”

Morin, 2008

Page 25: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

2008, 2009, 

2011

Page 26: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 27: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

What is the technical ecosystem of open online learning?

Page 28: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 29: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 30: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 31: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Tools used by learners

http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/643/1402Fini, 2009

Roughly anything.

Page 32: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

The data set

Connectivism and Connective Knowledge 2008(CCK08)

Page 33: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

SNA & Participation Habits

Page 34: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

CCK08 Weekly Forum Posts

Page 35: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

CCK08: Introduction forum

Limited interaction. Most are isolated

Page 36: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Downes auto-subscribes learners in CCK08

Page 37: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Introduction forum posts: CCK08

Dialogue limited: Group too large?

Page 38: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Week 12 forum posts: CCK08

More equitable distribution? Due to smaller #’s of participants?

Page 39: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning
Page 40: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Open coding using Cohere

http://cohere.open.ac.uk  

Page 41: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Axial Coding

Page 42: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Techniques

- Sensegiving through artefact creation and sharing

- Sensemaking/giving through language games- Knowledge domain expansion- Wayfinding cues, symbols- Social organization through creating sharing

Page 43: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Surprised to not find (automated) technology as more prominent

 

At what point to we “max out” the ability to  make sense of our complex world through social means?

Page 44: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

Future considerations

Technological and social self-organization. The value of extended cognitive agents.

Page 45: Connectivism  and Self-Organized Learning

change.mooc.ca

Twitter: gsiemens 

www.elearnspace.org/blog

Learning Analytics & Knowledge 2012: Vancouver

 http://lak12.sites.olt.ubc.ca/