The MUPPLE competence continuum

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Results of an exploratory study on what competences are required for and what competences may be developed by running a personal learning environment.

Citation preview

The MUPPLE competence continuum

Joanna Wild1), Fridolin Wild2), Marco Kalz3), Margit Hofer1), Marcus Specht3)

1) Centre for social innovation – ZSI, Austria2) The Open University, UK

3) Open University of the Netherlands

Outline

• Context: Literacies• Methodology• MCC (overview)• MCC (details)• The MCC and literacies• Conclusion & future work

Literacies

Methodology• Qualitative study: – Viewpoint of participant– Social context

• Interviews with stakeholders (learners, facilitators, learning designers, researchers)– 15 persons in 5 sessions (each 40 min to 1 hour)

• Transcripts > analytical memos > coding > large display

Competence Continuum

Planning competence refers to those skills, abilities, habits, attitudes, and knowledge that fix how goals, schedules, and paths are set.

Reflection is creative sense making of the past and enables planning.

Monitoring refers to how progress control is performed.

Last but not least, the pair acting and interacting group social & collaboration and information & tool competences.

Plan

Reflect

Monitor

Act

Interact

Minimal

condition Necessary

trigger Intended

outcome

Plan

(Astrid Walter)

- inquisitiveness- offer-oriented selection- adopting 3rd party planning

- ability to design your own portfolio- ability to match formal and personal requirements

- ability to explicate intentionsand objectives- ability to set priorities to tasks

Reflect

willingness to change own attitudes

collecting (digital) traces

ability to identify strengths and weaknesses

reviewing traces creative sense-making of the past

Monitor

control & direct facilitator(s) self disciplineability to autonomously control

own progress

adopting external evaluation criteria

systemic 'more-knowledgeable-other' evaluation

ability to set evaluation criteria willingness for public exposure ability to network for feedback ability to compare with others

Act

willingness to try s.th. New instrumental skills: basic operational ICT skills information gathering skills: content-centred

productive and transformative ICT skills ability to assess quality & reliability of

(sources of) information process- & content-centred creative construction & maintenance of tool

set constant build up of the range of personal

experiences ability to match the right tool with the

intended purpose

capability to deconstruct your PLE ability to screen available tools capability to repurpose: change tool context ability to select tools comprehension that information outside

print has value

Interact

social interest basic social skills (foreign) language skills

networking competence ability to network for feedback decision competence when to work

collaboratively negotiation skills

willingness to open artefacts up to others

willingness to give willingness to not only read, but

publish extended social skills: knowing

how to handle mediated communication & criticism

The MCC & Literacy

plan

reflect

monitor

act interact

Conclusion

• PLEs promote development of higher level (strategic) digital literacy

• PLEs incorporate more recent IT approaches

• More active role of user in building and maintaining learning environment

• More challenging IT setting

Next Steps

• Counterpart: facilitator findings (conducted, but analysis missing)

• Extend in a second wave of interviews

• Complement with quantitative study to validate competence continuum

Thank you. And thanks to the union.

Recommended