using internet technology for learning

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Using Internet Technology for Learning Fiona MacCool, CLEONet Project Manager www.cleonet.ca Presentation for Clinic New Caseworkers Brainstorming Session Law Society of Upper Canada Friday November 27, 2009

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Using Internet Technology for Learning

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Page 1: Using Internet Technology for Learning

Using Internet Technology for Learning

Fiona MacCool, CLEONet Project Manager

www.cleonet.ca

Presentation forClinic New Caseworkers Brainstorming Session

Law Society of Upper CanadaFriday November 27, 2009

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What I plan to cover…• Strategic Questions• Online courses• Webinars• Collaborative web publishing• Social Networking• Q & A

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VisioningStart by thinking of the three main things any online project can do:

• Provide information - What information/knowledge do we want to provide and how can we best provide it? (in-person &/or online)

• Gather information - What information could our organization(s) get from “learners”, from each other, that would help in our work?

• Work together online - For what purpose? With whom? What will NOT translate well online?

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Strategic Questions to Ask• What learning goals are we trying to accomplish? • How could working online help achieve these goals?• Who will be involved in the work of developing and

maintaining the learning materials and how can this be shared?

• What are the unique characteristics of the intended audience? (technical, work-flow, learning styles)

• What resources are already out there that we can link to or work with? (hint …CLEONet)

• What would “success” look like for this project?

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Considerations in Choosing a Tool• Will learning environments or tools be centralized or distributed?• Will this be a resource that people access during specific work hours

or on their own flexible schedules?• Are you hoping to develop the kind of learning materials that can be

“self-directed” or is facilitation/instruction required?• How important is a one-on-one experience or personalized access

to mentors/instructors or other learners?• Is it important to be able to create new modules, courses or

webinars on an ongoing basis? Will this need to be done by “non-technical” people?

• How much reliance should there be on collaborative, ongoing content creation?

• How can mentorship and social networking connect us as a system of learners?

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Example 1: Online Courses Self-directed – Usually involves a series of

facilitated modules and can end in a certificate of completion. Instructor(s) may offer “office hours” at various times and peers may help one another as well. Although there may be integrated live chat technology, generally the learning is asynchronous (not “live”) and can be accessed over an extended period of time to registered subscribers.

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Specific Examples Settlement.org - Family Violence against Immigrant &

Refugee Women: Community Development Strategies – Using Moodle, this training is intended for immigrant service and other community-based organizations that are in a unique capacity to reach vulnerable and/or isolated immigrant women and their communities. It addresses the need to enhance domestic violence prevention strategies to reach immigrant and refugee women, including women without legal immigration status, trafficked women and women from racialized low-income communities. There are 4 modules, quizzes, a discussion forum and an evaluation survey.

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More about MoodleWhat is Moodle? (taken from Moodle.org)

Moodle is an Open Source Course Management System (CMS), also known as a Learning Management System (LMS) or a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). It has become very popular among educators around the world as a tool for creating online dynamic web sites for their students. To work, it needs to be installed on a web server somewhere, either on one of your own computers or one at a web hosting company.

Many institutions use it as their platform to conduct fully online courses, while some use it simply to augment face-to-face courses (known as blended learning).

It allows for a range of activity modules (such as Forums, Wikis, Databases and so on) to build richly collaborative communities of learning around their subject matter. Others prefer to use Moodle as a way to deliver content to students and assess learning using assignments or quizzes.

Visit the Demonstration site (Teacher - username teacher, password demo)

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Other Online Course Examples Springtide Resources & York University - E-Learning for Working with Women

Leaving Abusive Relationships

This series of courses is designed to introduce participants to the most critical family, immigration and refugee law issues for women leaving abusive relationships. They will provide participants with current, relevant and accessible legal information so that they can assist their clients in navigating the legal system. This professional development package will be invaluable to those who provide services to women who may disclose abuse.

FORMAT: Each module is comprised of a video lecture with accompanying power-point presentation. Additionally, resources and information, including relevant legislation, will be provided to supplement the learning of each module. Successful completion of the course will require participation in a weekly online discussion forum for the duration of the course as directed by the course instructor. For more information see: http://springtideresources.net/events/news_show.cfm?id=78

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Example 2: Webinars “Live” events that use the Internet to place

people in a meeting together using the web, live chat, streamed video, desktop sharing and in some cases the telephone. Can be tied to an in-person live event such as a conference. Webinars can also be recorded and archived and made available as Podcasts or DVDs.

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Webcasting In October 2008 CLEO partnered with the

Centre for the Legal Profession, University of Toronto Faculty of Law to host the Learn, Grow, Connect Conference. Participants shared information, learned from experts, and took steps towards building a practice of community legal education. A number of sessions were recorded as webcasts.

http://www.cleonet.ca/conference/

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CLEONet Legal Information Webinars CLEONet is partnering with community

organizations to deliver workshops about legal issues online. They are delivered through a telephone conference call integrated with a web meeting that lets participants hear the presentation, look at Power Point slides, browse web sites together, and ask questions using live chat. We also record these webinars so that they can be accessed on CLEONet on an ongoing basis. See: www.cleonet.ca/legal_education_webinars

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What you need to participateAs a presenter• A presentation that you

have developed that you would like to adapt to a webinar

• Presentation slides (Power Point) that can be inserted into web meeting so that participants can have visuals

• An audience to invite • A willingness to test,

experiment and learn as you go

As a participant• A phone (toll free number is

provided) • An Internet-connected

computer with a sound card and speakers and/or headphones

• An e-mail account to receive invitations and log in instructions

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Webinar Features• Sharing Power Point slides• Live Chat• Integrated Telephone conference call• Letting users “see” your desktop• Granting control of your desktop• Great tool for online meetings/training or interactive Q&A • Low-cost tool for producing video-based information in other

languages • Can be produced as a Podcasts, Uploaded to YouTube, or embedded

in social networking sites• Some webinar tools feature video conferencing via webcams and

computer microphones. Others allow for VoIP integration (Skype)

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Manage meetings, registrations and recordings

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Participant View

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Co-presenter View

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Best Practices to Consider• Gear material toward the intended audience • Length – Our attention span online and on a conference call

is shorter than for in-person event• Visuals – Audiences need to follow along as they listen• What supports will people need to join in?• Online facilitation can be challenging – Like hosting a dinner

party in the dark• Remember to pause – Try to draw out the audience with

questions• Have a co-presenter help you take questions from users,

provide you with the feedback for follow-up• Provide opportunities for evaluation afterward

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Example 3: Collaborative Web Publishing

Use of content management system (CMS) tools such as blogs or Wikis to allow people to collaboratively publish and maintain a web site of information that is subject to continuous change. This would be worth considering if we were to create a learning web site for the clinic system.

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Content Management Systems A content management system (CMS) is a system

used to manage the content of a Web site. Content management systems are deployed primarily for interactive use by a potentially large number of contributors. For example, the software for the website Wikipedia is based on a wiki, which is a particular type of content management system. The OPICCO site uses Drupal. ISAC uses Wordpress for the Social Assistance Review site. The SAGE site uses Sharepoint.

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Specific Examples: Blogs Blog is short for weblog. A weblog is a journal (or newsletter) that is frequently updated. A number

of terrific free blog tools are available and can be used to produce an entire web site that is easy to use and update. Blogs can also be entirely password-protected allowing them to be used for online learning in closed environments. They also integrate well with RSS and Web 2.0 “Widgets”.

• An example of a social justice web site that uses a WordPress CMS is 25-in-5: Network for Poverty Reduction a multi-sectoral network comprised of more than 100 provincial and Toronto-based organizations and individuals working on eliminating poverty at: http://25in5.ca.

• A research blog with a focus on public legal education is CLEONet Expansion http://consult.cleonet.ca - created to support CLEO’s research into the development of a centralized legal information web site for Ontario. This blog is created using Wordpress.

• The Provincial Learning Community on Knowledge Management and Transfer (KMT) has created a project web site using Drupal to help them develop ways to identify, share, and encourage the creation of knowledge within and among community legal clinics, Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) and other collaborators. http://kmt.agentic.ca/

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Specific Examples: WikisWhat is Legal Services Toronto? This Wiki is a referral guide to the various types of legal services in Toronto, designed for the use of service providers. It was created by the Toronto Legal Clinics Management Group to enhance the quality and efficiency of client services, and to increase collaboration and co-ordination between various kinds of legal services. Our purpose is to provide an integrated database of information about a comprehensive range of public and private legal services, covering the spectrum from full representation through to summary advice and self-help materials. It is organized with the idea that while each service provider represents a different entry point to the legal aid system, the Wiki gives us all access to a common source of up-to-date information to use in serving our clients and promoting social justice. http://legalservicestoronto.wikidot.com/

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Click the “Edit” button to change the text

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Make changes and hit “Save”

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Example 4: Social Media Social Media is people using tools (like blogs &

video) and sites (like Facebook & Twitter) to share content and have conversations online. How can the clinic system use social media tools to create simple peer-to-peer and org-to-org opportunities to share relevant research, news, PLE, CD initiatives etc?

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Where does social networking happen?

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Why should clinics work with Social Media?

• Because the statistics on its usage are staggering and growing

• Because it is cheap and easy (even for non-techies)

• Because it is designed to be transparent and user-centered and it encourages dialogue and action

• Because it allows information to move so quickly • Because it gives us other places to be heard but

also new places to listen

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Getting Started with Social Media• Join and participate in existing social networks (Twitter, Facebook,

LinkedIn) – It’s more than just a way to waste time… 8>)• Experiment with free tools that help you manage all of this new

information (Tweetdeck, Twitter lists, iGoogle Homepage)• Figure out what content you have to contribute and find a tool/way

to get it online easily (Start a blog, set up your web site so you can publish more easily or just use Twitter/Facebook)

• Promote your message/information on social networking sites and allow users to share your content through their networks

• Create campaigns and integrate your messages across traditional outreach and social media

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CLEONet’s Approach

Created Facebook “Page” for CLEONet, created a Twitter feed and a CLEONet Group on LinkedIN in September. These free “widgets” show what is happening on these sites and let people “join” more easily. We have seen a 60% increase in traffic in 2 months.

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Integrating the Tools• “AddThis” makes it easy for CLEONet visitors to add our content to their pages

• We have RSS feeds across our site that allow people to add our new content to their web sites, their iGoogle Home page or get an e-mail of the latest CLEONet postings

• When we schedule a webinar we promote it on Facebook and Twitter and we post the PowerPoint slides to SlideShare to help spread the word

• When we have a new piece of content – we add it to CLEONet and then post it to Facebook. The Facebook CLEONet Group automatically updates the CLEONet Twitter Feed and (through RSS) our page on LinkedIn – 3 Networks from 1 posting - Less work for us!

• A Consultation blog I created for CLEONet is automatically updated in my LinkedIn profile (www.consult.cleonet.ca) and features the CLEONet RSS Feed and the CLEONet Twitter feed

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Integrating the “Fans”• Each new “Fan” of CLEONet on Facebook will now be posting information, news

and opinions to their profiles we were otherwise unaware of . Some of it will be personal and silly – but lots of it will be relevant – especially when all of YOU start doing it.

• Our “followers” on Twitter are making us aware of tons of new articles, organizations and networks. If we click through to see who they are following, the network starts to expand even faster and with a click of a button (often on a phone), the information is spread very quickly. Imagine if we knew what one another were reading, attending, organizing?

• When people on SlideShare select our webinars as their “Favorites” or embed them in various web sites it makes us aware of who is interested in our work but also others out there doing similar presentations on related topics

• All of this can mean new audiences but more importantly new sources of content, opening up new networks of people to involve in future events, campaigns, surveys, new projects, volunteer opportunities, job postings etc.

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What some others are doing…• Canadian Council for Refugees (Twitter feed, Facebook

groups, YouTube videos) http://twitter.com/ccrweb • Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (Blog, RSS,

Facebook, Twitter) www.policyalternatives.ca

• ISAC Social Assistance Review (Blog, rss-to-email alerts) http://sareview.ca

• Community Advocacy & Legal Centre in Belleville (Employment blog, Twitter feed, Webinars) www.communitylegalcentre.ca/

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Tools Mentioned• Moodle http://moodle.org/• ReadyTalk http://www.readytalk.com• Facebook http://www.facebook.com• Twitter http://www.twitter.com• Feedburner http://feedburner.google.com• SlideShare http://www.slideshare.net• Wordpress http://wordpress.org/• Blogger http://blogger.com• Drupal http://drupal.org/• Wikidot http://www.wikidot.com/

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Keep in touch!Fiona MacCool

Community Legal Education OntarioT: 416-408-4420 ext. 29

E-mail: [email protected] site: http://www.cleonet.ca