All entries for Tuesday 25 January 2011
January 25, 2011
Abstract for a paper on reflexivity and understanding divergent responses to social media & web 2.0
On behalf of the HEA History Subject Centre, I will be doing a paper on this at the British Association of American Studies annual conference in April:
A common assumption: undergraduate students today are all technology-addicted, iPhone-wielding, web-savvy digital natives; so it's safe to assume that we can integrate the use of new web software and hardware gadgets into teaching; therefore, assuming that everyone has sufficient access to enough technology, combined with tasks that challenge them to use those technologies, they should all respond with equal enthusiasm and ingenuity.
Research being undertaken with the HEA History Subject Centre (based at the University of Warwick) is investigating the possibility that: although superficially most young people now seem able and happy to use these new technologies, in fact their are quite radically different and distinct ways in which they respond to them; these differences might be the result of deeper tendencies in modes of personal innovation, failure and reflexivity (drawing upon the work of the sociologist Margaret Archer amongst others); furthermore, as technologies become more personal, ubiquitous, instantaneous and connected (web 2.0, social) these differences may be amplified, having significant consequences for teaching and learning.
Framework for a learning journey design workshop
I've been asked to run a design workshop for a planned online distance learning course. This is the framework I use. The aim of the workshop is to get as much information about points 1 to 6, plotted along a timeline that gives a strong indication of how the course will be constructed. Points a to b are additional considerations that might be covered. We will use "open space" approaches, physically creating fictional students (and possibly tutors) on the floor of the studio space, and mapping out the journey along the timeline.