social networking, web2.0 and teaching and learning

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http://flickr.com/photos/7447470@N06/1345266896/ Teaching and Learning with SOCIAL NETWORKING and WEB 2.0

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Accompanied an online discussion on how to reflect changes wrought by web2.0 in the teaching of adults in the Australian VET sector

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Page 1: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

http://flickr.com/photos/7447470@N06/1345266896/

Teaching and Learning with SOCIAL NETWORKING and

WEB 2.0

Page 2: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Where are you?

Page 3: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

“The Read/Write Web”(Tim Berners Lee)

Original photo by Hummanna.

Page 4: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

eLearning 2.0/Web 2.0(Stephen Downes)

Elearning 1.0:• static packaged content • little true interactivity and learner input and • very little contact with a teacher• represented by Learner Management Systems. (eg WebCT,

Blackboard, etc)

Elearning 2.0:• more student-centred• centred around a Personal Learning Environment using social software. • students generate and share content. • they interact not only with teachers and their peers, but with anyone in

the world they can learn from.

(this description courtesy of Sean Fitzgerald)

Page 5: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

PERSONAL PUBLISHING/ PARTICIPATORY MEDIA TOOLS

• Blogs – writing (mostly)• Podcasts (audio)• Wikis – collaboration (mostly text)• Social Networking sites (MySpace, Facebook, Ning,

Bebo, Twitter, etc)

MEDIA• Video repositories:

– YouTube, TeacherTube, Google Video, BlipTV• Flickr (photo sharing)• UStreamTV (video creation)

Page 6: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Quick Poll

• How many of you have a– Have a blog?– Facebook, MySpace, or Ning site?– Delicious (social bookmarking) or Flickr

(photosharing) account?– Use Twitter (microblogging)?

Page 7: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

PARTICIPATORY MEDIA/CULTURESOCIAL MEDIA SOCIAL NETWORKINGSOCIAL SOFTWARE

YouTubeFlickrMySpaceFacebookNing, etc

Page 8: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Education by and large has not changed. Syllabus/curriculum is still rooted in a past paradigm of fixed knowledge. The world beyond classrooms has changed a great deal, and will continue to do so at an ever-increasing rate……

Photo courtesy of Sawrah, http://flickr.com/photos/sawrah/314474272/

Page 9: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

WHAT HAS CHANGED?(See Mike Wesch’s The Machine is Us/ing Us at http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmP4nk0EOE)

• Decline of the Gatekeepers• Publish then evaluate• Content Creators; Content Rankers• Everyone has access to everythingThe World is Flat (Thomas Friedman) • “People just don’t subscribe to magazines

anymore; they also subscribe to people.”

Page 10: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Courtesy of Greg Whitby

Page 11: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Paradigm Shift #1

Page 12: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Paradigm Shift #2?

COMMUNITY-CENTRIC

Page 13: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Vance Stevens for AACE Feb 21, 2009

10 Aspects of Paradigm Shift1. Pedagogy - didactic->

constructivist

2. Networking - isolated ->connectivist, distributed

3. Sharing - copyright ->creative commons

4. Literacy – print -> multiliteracies

5. Heuristicsclient/server -> peer to peer

6. Formality –> informal learning

7. Transfer –lecture, sit/get -> modeled, demonstrated

8. Directionality – push -> pull e.g. RSS

9. Ownership – proprietary -> open source

10. Classification – taxonomy -> folksonomy

Page 14: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Networked Learning

Page 15: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

CONNECTIVISM: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age

(George Siemens, University of Manitoba, Canada)

Principles of Connectivism:

• Nurturing and maintaining connections is needed to facilitate continual learning.

• Currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all connectivist learning activities.

• Choosing what to learn and the meaning of incoming information is seen through the lens of a shifting reality. While there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to alterations in the information climate affecting the decision.

Page 16: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Creative Commons Licensing

from Jeffrey Beall at http://www.flickr.com/photos/denverjeffrey/301014978/

Page 17: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Blogs as a Teaching/Learning Tool

http://www.flickr.com/photos/millzero/1523858246/

Resource: Blogs in Education http://blogsineducation.wikispaces.com/

Page 18: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Podcasting

Resource: Podcasting for Educators http://podcastingforeducators.wikispaces.com/

Page 19: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Wikis as a Teaching/Learning Tool

Resource: Wikis in Education http://whywikisineducation.wikispaces.com/

Page 20: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Social Bookmarking as a Teaching/Learning Tool

Page 21: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Photosharing as a Teaching/Learning Tool

Resource: Teaching with Flickr http://teachingwithflickr.wikispaces.com/

Page 22: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Twitter as a Teaching/Learning Tool

Page 23: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

yammer.com

Page 24: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Social Networking Sites as Teaching/Learning Tools (eg Facebook)

Page 25: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Horizontal Learning (multitasking)

Instant Messaging

Instant Messaging

Assignment

SMS

iPod

Surfing

Watching video/TV

Page 26: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

HORIZONTAL V

VERTICAL LEARNING

Page 27: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Vertical Learning (single focus)

Assignment: What were the

principal factors that led

to the Indonesian coup in 1965

and the eventual downfall of

President Sukarno?(5000 words)

Page 28: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Horizontal v Vertical Learning

The discerning eteacher:

• Acknowledges the nature and influence of horizontal learning (multitasking)

• Knows when to encourage vertical learning (single focus activity)

Page 29: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

How and where do teachers and students acquire the skills

to operate effectively in this type of networked world?

Page 30: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Awareness:

• More about ‘learning to be’ – part of a participatory culture– a networked learner/educator– part of a community

Page 31: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

How do I work?

• I know from my own life that something has changed. I am now a much more social learner. I like to draw on the knowledge of others who I can contact and with whom I can discuss issues... I have definitely changed the way I learn, and have found a more enjoyable way of learning. Technology, and the connections it affords, has made that possible.

• I doubt that I could study a formal ‘course’ anymore….

Page 32: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Acquiring the Skills• Join an online community or email list• Ask questions and initiate discussions about your interests and needs• Start publishing or tracking blogs, podcasts• Do an online course in multiliteracy• Create social bookmarking and photosharing accounts• Create media – start simple:

– Upload photos to Flickr; comment on others’ photos– create Digital Stories (Photostory, Moviemaker) and upload to YouTube

• Search YouTube and other video repositories for educational content and start using it in your teaching

• Place yourself in the new habitus of learning – you need to do it to understand and internalise the power of networks; reading and observing will not achieve this philosophical seachange

• Put yourself to the side; know that the best teachers are always willing learners

Page 33: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

The excellent eteacher:

• has an online presence/website (eg course homepage on LMS, or own website, blog, etc)

• Knows how to use technology for delivery and assessment and therefore has a blog, a wiki, or podcast site

• Includes media in delivery and production of teaching materials and student assessment

• Models and teaches digital literacy – Creates and provides digital resources– Teaches search, validation, and verification skills– Employs and models RSS as a means of aggregating and

distributing content

Page 34: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

The excellent eteacher:

• Teaches about, and employs collaborative approaches

• Switches between sage and guide as appropriate

• Knows when to call in the wisdom of the experts to balance the wisdom of the crowd

• Acknowledges the value of informal learning• Accepts that engaging learners is necessary

(and that probably means using technology)

Page 35: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

The excellent eteacher:

• Acknowledges that students may assess the value of a resource via their networks rather than accept the word of the expert (teacher/lecturer)

• Uses social bookmarking for collective mining and sharing of resources

• Is a good (and frequent) online communicator• Knows how to effectively combine synchronous and

asynchronous modes of delivery• Is able to teach in a virtual classroom/web conferencing

environment (eg Centra, Elluminate, etc)• Must be e-connected and draw on the resources of their

networks to remain current (and demonstrate to students)

Page 36: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

New Learning? No - different conditions and environments

• a new habitus of learning (Learning 2.0?)• Despite Prensky’s mantra that Gen Y brains are wired

differently, the physiology of learning has not changed• But learning no longer confined to the classroom or

working with immediate peers• Teacher no longer the sole source of content• We now have a “decentralisation of resource provision”• the blurring of social and academic spheres of activity

Page 37: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Agency is on the learner to turn information into knowledge

• The new model supplies ‘stuff’; not knowledge, which an individual assembles according to their own interests

• Text WAS knowledge pushed; NOW text is a resource that learner must make sense of > self-knowledge

Page 38: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

Resources

• TAFE SA eLearning Website (still under development/almost ready) http://elearning.tafesa.edu.au/

• Blogs in Education http://blogsineducation.wikispaces.com/

• Podcasting for Educators http://podcastingforeducators.wikispaces.com/

• Teaching with Flickr http://teachingwithflickr.wikispaces.com/

• Wikis in Education http://whywikisineducation.wikispaces.com/

• Your Guide to Social eLearning - http://socialelearning.flexiblelearning.net.au/social_elearning/index.htm

Page 39: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

IN CONCLUSION:

Being a connected educator involves: • engaging with the world of participatory media• guiding students in this new disintermediated

world• modelling the use of technology for lifelong

learning• allowing time for ‘slow learning’ and reflection

• It’s all about connections……

Page 40: Social Networking, Web2.0 and Teaching and Learning

yammer.comAND DON’T FORGET: