personal learning environments

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Personal Learning Environments Graham Attwell

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New presentation on Personal Learning Environments from conference on Scaffolding Learning - Web 2.0 and e-Portfolios at the University of South Denmark, May 2007

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Page 1: Personal Learning Environments

Personal Learning

Environments

Graham Attwell

Page 2: Personal Learning Environments

Personal Learning Environments - a

concept based on Web 2 .0 and social software

Page 3: Personal Learning Environments

We are at present undergoing a deep and prolonged industrial

revolution based on digital technologies

Page 4: Personal Learning Environments

The reform and reshaping of social

systems and institutions has tended to lag behind in periods of rapid technological

change

Page 5: Personal Learning Environments

Profound innovations in technology tend to be reflected

in older paradigms

Page 6: Personal Learning Environments

for example the ‘virtual classroom’ or the ‘Virtual Learning Environment’

Page 7: Personal Learning Environments

The challenge

Page 8: Personal Learning Environments

It is not the development of

technology per se which poses such a

challenge to education systems

and educational institutions

Page 9: Personal Learning Environments

but the changing ways in which people are using

technologies to communicate and to learn and the

accompanying social effect of such use

Page 10: Personal Learning Environments

My Space and Bebo

Page 11: Personal Learning Environments

Web logs

Page 12: Personal Learning Environments

Flickr, Second Life

Page 13: Personal Learning Environments

forming and participating in on-line social networks and communities

Page 14: Personal Learning Environments

The reaction of education systems and institutions to the rise of social networking has been at best

bewilderment, at worst downright hostility

Page 15: Personal Learning Environments

a refusal to engage in these issues risks school becoming increasingly irrelevant to the everyday lives of many young

people

Page 16: Personal Learning Environments

and particularly irrelevant to the ways in which

they communicate and share knowledge

Page 17: Personal Learning Environments

Web 2.0 allows young people to be active co-creators of knowledge

Page 18: Personal Learning Environments

We have to review the industrial schooling model including the organisation of institutions and

pedagogy and curriculum

Page 19: Personal Learning Environments

It is not just young people who use social software

for learning

Page 20: Personal Learning Environments

Social software is widely used in

the workplace for informal learning

Page 21: Personal Learning Environments

Most informal learning is learner driven, problem based, or

motivated by interest

Page 22: Personal Learning Environments

Google is the most used e-learning application

Page 23: Personal Learning Environments

most learning is unaccredited

Page 24: Personal Learning Environments

people learn through legitimate peripheral

participation

Page 25: Personal Learning Environments

Knowing is .... located in relations among

practitioners, their practice, the artefacts of

that practice, and the social organization…of

communities of practice

Lave and Wenger, 1991

Page 26: Personal Learning Environments

Lurking is a means of becoming integrated in distributed communities

of practice

Page 27: Personal Learning Environments

In such communities of practice formal learning materials are

seldom used

Page 28: Personal Learning Environments

We have ignored the vast potential of freely available ‘objects’ of all kinds for

learning purposes.

Page 29: Personal Learning Environments

changes in the way in which we learn and develop new competences is a challenge to our traditional

subject organisation

Page 30: Personal Learning Environments

And although most countries have adopted a rhetoric of lifelong learning,

there is little sign that education systems have sufficiently changed to

facilitate such a movement.

Page 31: Personal Learning Environments

The answers?

Page 32: Personal Learning Environments

How can we support lifelong

competence development?

Page 33: Personal Learning Environments

Personal Learning Environments

have the potential to meet such a

challenge

Page 34: Personal Learning Environments

PLEs are not another substantiation of

educational technology but a new approach to

learning

Page 35: Personal Learning Environments

A response to pedagogic approaches which require that learner’s e-learning systems

need to be under the control of the learners themselves.

Page 36: Personal Learning Environments

and recognise the needs of life-long learners for a system that provides a standard

interface to different institutions’ e-learning systems, and that allows portfolio information

to be maintained across institutions.

Page 37: Personal Learning Environments

Learning is now seen as multi episodic, with

individuals spending

occasional periods of formal

education and training

throughout their working life.

Page 38: Personal Learning Environments

PLE are based on the idea that learning will take

place in different contexts and situations and will not

be provided by a single learning provider

Page 39: Personal Learning Environments

the idea of a Personal Learning Environment

recognises that learning is continuing and seeks to

provide tools to support that learning

Page 40: Personal Learning Environments

Using whatever tools and devices which the learners

choose

Page 41: Personal Learning Environments

It also recognises the role of the individual in organising their own

learning

Page 42: Personal Learning Environments

PLEs can help in the recognition of informal learning

Page 43: Personal Learning Environments

PLEs can develop on the potential of services

oriented architectures for dispersed and

networked forms of learning and knowledge

development.

Page 44: Personal Learning Environments

“the heart of the concept of the PLE is that it is a tool that allows a learner (or anyone) to engage in a distributed

environment consisting of a network of people, services and resources. It is not just Web 2.0, but it is certainly

Web 2.0 in the sense that it is (in the broadest sense possible) a read-write

application.”Stephen Downes, 2006

Page 45: Personal Learning Environments

The promise of Personal Learning Environments

could be to extend access to educational

technology to everyone who wishes to organise

their own learning.

Page 46: Personal Learning Environments

The ‘pedagogy’ behind the PLE – if it could be still

called that – is that it offers a portal to the world,

through which learners can explore and create,

according to their own interests and directions,

interacting at all times with their friends and

community

Page 47: Personal Learning Environments

the PLE will challenge the existing education systems

and institution

Page 48: Personal Learning Environments

New forms of learning are

based on trying things and

action, rather than on more

abstract knowledge.

Page 49: Personal Learning Environments

Policies to support the development and

implementation of PLEs

Page 50: Personal Learning Environments

encouraging and supporting the development of

communities of practice and engagement in those communities

Page 51: Personal Learning Environments

decisions over funding and support need to be

taken as close to practice as possible

Page 52: Personal Learning Environments

a broader understanding of

digital literacy and its integration

within the curriculum s

Page 53: Personal Learning Environments

recognise different forms and contexts

of learning

Page 54: Personal Learning Environments

the development and adoption of new pedagogies

Page 55: Personal Learning Environments

the co-shaping of technologies bringing together techies and teachers, enterprises

and institutions

Page 56: Personal Learning Environments

Thanks for

Listening

Wales Wide Web -www.knownet.com/writing/weblogs/Graham_Attwell