supporting further and higher education effective practice in e-learning sarah knight programme...

27
Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e- learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Upload: anthony-wilkinson

Post on 28-Mar-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Effective Practice in e-learning

Sarah KnightProgramme Manager,

JISC Development Group

Page 2: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Key Questions

• How can we enhance current knowledge about what constitutes ‘effective’ practice in e-learning?

• How can we support practitioners with their developments in the use of e-learning?

• How can we promote the development of terminology that will improve understanding and sharing of practice in e-learning?

• What are the current approaches to the design of e-learning activities and how can these be developed in the future to ensure that we are using sound pedagogical models?

Page 3: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

e-learning Programme

• JISC works with post-16 and higher education by providing strategic guidance, advice and opportunities to use ICT to support teaching, learning, research and administration.

• The JISC Committee for Learning and Teaching (JCLT) is funding a new e-learning Programme to run until August 2007.

• The overarching aim of the e-learning Programme is to identify how e-learning might be used to facilitate and support learning and to advise on how these approaches might be effectively implemented.

• The Programme focuses on four areas: e-learning and Pedagogy; Technical Frameworks for e-learning; Innovation and Distributed e-learning.

Page 4: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Some Definitions

• Communities across post-16 and HE:– Practitioners – whose role it is to support, facilitate and

direct student learning– ILT Champions, e-Guides, educational developers and

learning technologists– Staff Developers– Researchers into learning and e-learning– Developers of e-learning related software, systems and

standards

• E-learning – learning facilitated and supported through the use of ICT

Page 5: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

A view of e-learning

A Model of e-learning and e-living, Killen, Davies and Smith, adapted

from the e-learning Fan, B Powell/J Scribbins,

Demonstrating Transformation, http://ferl.becta.org.uk/fpp6

Page 6: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Effective e-learning?

• Relevance• Accessible• Fun• Interactive• Engaging• Range of materials• Stimulate• Encourage feedback• Motivate

• Enthusiastic teachers and receptive learners

• Encourage communication – peer-2-peer and peer-2-tutor

• Work at own pace• Differentiation• Individualised

learning

…or effective learning?

Page 7: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

e-learning and Pedagogy

• Overall aim: to ensure that e-learning as practised in UK post-16 and Higher Education is ‘pedagogically sound, learner-focused and accessible’.

• What this means in practice:– To provide the post-16 and HE community with

accurate, up-to-date, evidence- and research-based information about effective practice in the use of e-learning tools.

– To promote the application and development of e-learning tools and standards to better support effective practice.

• Practical outcomes which are relevant to practitioners, researchers and developers.

Page 8: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Two related themes• Designing for Learning (Practitioner focus):

– Models of learning and e-learning• practitioner planning perspective

– Understanding and moving on practice– Case studies of effective practice (14-19, FE, HE,

ACL)– Evaluating learning design tools

• e.g. Coppercore, Eduplone, LAMS, mindmapping…– Practitioner consultation (14-19, FE, HE, ACL)

• Understanding my learning (Learner focus):– Models of learning and e-learning

• learner perspective and learner differences– Exploring the potential of e-portfolios– Mapping effective assessment for e-learning– Peer learning, collaboration and vicarious learning – Learner consultation (14-19, FE, HE, ACL)

Page 9: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Models of learning and e-learning

• Explore how different approaches to (e)learning can be represented and shared.

• Develop a general framework within which approaches can be evaluated and compared.

• Model/represent a limited number of approaches within this framework

• Provide tools to evaluate these approaches in specific learning contexts

• Advice and guidance for practitioners on effective use of e-learning

Page 10: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Understanding and moving on practice

• Explore how practitioners make effective choices about e-learning

• Develop an understanding of how different resources support practitioners, e.g.– Case studies, examples, ‘stories’, video-clips– Guidelines, staff development materials– Tools (e.g. LAMS) and toolkits/planners– Practices e.g. mentoring, workshops

• Investigate which are effective in practice:– Broad (e.g. survey, review of existing materials) – Deep (e.g. interviews, personal case histories)

• Influence the way in which information/advice and guidance from the e-learning Programme is disseminated

Page 11: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

… potential outcomes– lesson plans/learning designs for different environments– representations (e.g. video) of different approaches in use– an e-learning planning tool– a database of activities indexed to specific learning

outcomes, contexts, or needs– re-usable ‘activity sequences’ e.g. for use in a LAMS-type

environment– an online ‘knowledge garden’ in which participants

contribute, refine and link e-learning concepts– materials for use in staff development, e.g. integrated into

FPP modules – publication ‘Effective Practice in e-learning’ with supporting

video clips for October 2004– development of more effective learning design tools and

standards– new digital library functions and services– …

Page 12: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Case studies of effective practice

• Describe and evaluate a range of different approaches to e-learning:

• in a range of organisational contexts:– 14-19, FE, ACL and HE– Blended, face to face and virtual

• using a range of technical environments:– specific uses of Virtual Learning Environments – use of Learning Design tools (e.g LAMS, ReLOAD)– use of modular tools (e.g. simulations, scenarios,

activities, discipline-specific tools…)

• Publication ‘Effective Practice in e-learning’ with supporting video clips – for October 2004.

Page 13: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Further evaluation studies

• Further evaluated case studies – different technologies and contexts

• Review of existing case study resources– build links with repositories, e.g Ferl, Jorum

• Regional workshops on ‘Designing for Learning’• Evaluation of learning design tools, e.g. LAMS

– usability– learner impact– effective sharing of designs and approaches

• Learner consultation – towards the second theme, ‘Understanding my Learning’

Page 14: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Practitioner consultation

• Opportunities to participate – through the experts’ working group– through consultation exercises (see delegates’ pack)– through workshops and focus groups (forthcoming)

• Impact on programme– Feedback on outcomes of individual projects and

studies– Interpreting outcomes and developing

recommendations– Identifying priorities– Building links with other ongoing work– Taking part in further studies

Page 15: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Activity

• What are the key ingredients for effective (i.e. pedagogically sound)e-learning?

• Give an example of effective e-learning in your community

• 3 Priorities for the e-learning and Pedagogy Programme

Page 16: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Designing for Learning

Helen BeethamConsultant, e-Learning and Pedagogy

http://www.jisc.ac.uk/elearning_pedagogy.html

Page 17: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

What do we mean by…

• Designing for learning (broad term)?– Designing, coordinating, planning, orchestrating

and managing learning tasks as part of a learning session or programme

– A ‘practitioner planning’ view on a learning situation, e.g. resulting in a lesson plan or a LAMS design

• Learning Design (narrow term)?– A new IMS specification for sequences of interaction

between learners and system components (compare LOM for content, PDPs/LR for learner data)

– A sequence of interactions specified according to LD

Does ‘Learning Design’ in this narrow sense provide a good framework for understanding and supporting the process of ‘Designing for Learning’?

Page 18: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Why the interest inlearning design?

• Widespread adoption of designed, standards-based learning environments and tools – Pedagogical issues… appear to have been of

secondary concern until now. JISC/UCISA (2003)– First generation VLEs do not obviously support

innovative or diverse learning activities… [They are] strongly based around information transmission .. with little consideration given to the activities that the learners themselves might engage inBritain and Liber (2004)

• Convergence of pedagogical research and practitioner education around ideas of– learner-centredness, ‘active’, constructive learners,

outcomes-based teaching with emphasis on relevant tasks

Page 19: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Why the interest inlearning design?

• Practitioner demand (from consultation):– ‘curriculum design’, ‘practical examples of learning

activities’, ‘designing activities within VLEs’ – (note the popularity of Salmon’s (2003) e-tivities)– ‘a means of describing practice’, ‘a means of

mapping theory onto practice’ ‘a means of mapping activities onto outcomes’, ‘a common set of terms for all of this’

• E-learning strategy:– Engaging teachers and lecturers through simple e-

learning design tools would bring them closer to experimenting with pedagogical design DfES (2003)

Page 20: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

What is effective practice in designing for learning?

• a process that is acceptable to practitioners, i.e.– supports or enhances their approach to learning– makes acceptable demands on their time and skills

• effective outcomes for learners, i.e.– planned learning outcomes are achieved and/or– the learner experience (motivation, participation,

enjoyment, collaboration) is enhanced

• a means of sharing (and reflecting on?) practice – e.g. through sharable sequences, ‘designs’ etc– or through more explicit representation of practice

Page 21: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Key tasks (from Review: e-learning models)• Define a range of practice models, i.e. distinct but

comparable approaches among which practitioners, working in a specific context, can make an informed choice.

• Ensure any framework or terminology has recognition and usability in the practitioner communities

• Consider theoretical (explanatory) models insofar as these provide general frameworks for discussing, comparing and evaluating practice models (especially in relation to learner experience).

• Map practice models to technical standards and specifications to ensure that future systems are compatible with the needs of learners and teachers.

• Evaluate tools to support designing for learning• Focus on learning activity/task as the basic unit of

modelling:– fits with conclusions from UKeU, CANDLE, Dialog+ and

work at the OU (eLTN)

Page 22: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Developing models and frameworks

apply

specific instances of e-learning in context

Building case studies

Descriptive framework(modelling tool)

refinegenerate

Models/descriptions of different approaches

Evaluation framework (evaluation tool)

applydescribe

evaluate

Evaluated and enriched models/

descriptions

Framework with

examples of effective practice

analyse review collate evaluate

Practitioner consultation & needs analysis

Designing for Learning (1)

Page 23: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Reviewing interventions in practice

Designing for Learning (2)

Researching/evaluating interventions

Review of resources, toolkits and guidance

Research into effectiveness of

different interventions

define elaborate

Review of learning design tools

Series of evaluations of

tools in use

support develop evaluate

Framework with

examples of effective practice

Tools, resources & standards to

support & communicate

effective practice

develop

recommend

Page 24: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Outcomes to date

• Review of e-learning models• Review of learning design tools • Consultation events and online forum (eped-

experts) • Draft framework for planning e-learning

approaches and activities– completion by end July

• Draft framework for ‘moving on practice’– completion by end July

• Case studies and video case studies – published October

• LAMS evaluation programme– outline available: training begins 7th July

• Recommendations, and refined research/ development programme– ongoing

Page 25: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Key issues in designing for learning

• Is ‘learning activity’ the best focus of e-learning research and development?

• How should we describe, differentiate and share (e-)learning activities?– Need for a common framework of description

• How do practitioners currently conceive and plan (e-)learning activities?– What tools, resources and opportunities for dialogue

do they have? – What tools, resources etc are most effective?

• Which approaches to designing for learning are effective in which learning contexts?

• Does the LD specification offer:– a good fit with definitions of learning activity used by

learners, practitioners and theorists?– a sound basis for design of supporting systems?

Page 26: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Activity‘interaction of learner

with environment, leading to planned

outcome’

Knowledge represented in specific media and formats; skills facilitated through specific tools; impact of learning environments on the meaning of knowledge and skills

Prior subject knowledge and

skills of learner(s), prior

conceptions, motivation to

achieve specific outcomes, match

of style/ approach to

content

Prior experience of learner(s) with tools, environments, services; match of learning style and approach to affordances of learning environment

Environmentavailable tools,

facilities, services, resources,

environments etc

Learner(s)needs, motives, prior

experience of learning, social and interpersonal skills,

learning styles and approaches

Outcomesubject/discipline area, target knowledge/ skills

A specification for learning activities (H.Beetham, Feb ‘04)

Page 27: Supporting further and higher education Effective Practice in e-learning Sarah Knight Programme Manager, JISC Development Group

Supporting further and higher education

Further information

[email protected]

www.jisc.ac.uk/elearning_pedagogy.html

[email protected]