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AliteraturereviewoftheuseofWeb2.0toolsinHigherEducation
AreportcommissionedbytheHigherEducationAcademy
Prof.GráinneConoleandDr.PanagiotaAlevizou
[email protected];[email protected]
August2010
TheOpenUniversity
WaltonHall,MiltonKeynes
UK
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TableofContents
AliteraturereviewoftheuseofWeb2.0toolsinHigherEducation................................1
Introduction.........................................................................................................................................4
Methodology ........................................................................................................................................5
Changingtechnologies......................................................................................................................9TheemergenceofWeb2.0tools..............................................................................................................9AtypologyofWeb2.0tools .................................................................................................................... 11
Changinglearningandlearners ................................................................................................. 13Theoriesoflearning ................................................................................................................................. 13Newformsoflearning.............................................................................................................................. 16Patternsoftechnologyuseandthecharacteristicsoflearners................................................. 17Thechangingroleofteachingandteachers..................................................................................... 20
Strategiesforsupportingtheuseoftechnologies................................................................ 22Barrierstouptakeandlackofimpact ................................................................................................ 22Digital,networkedandmultiliteracies............................................................................................. 23Successfactorsandstrategiesforchange ......................................................................................... 25
Contextualexamples ...................................................................................................................... 28Blogs,wikisandsocialtagging.............................................................................................................. 29Twitter........................................................................................................................................................... 31Socialnetworking...................................................................................................................................... 35Immersiveenvironmentsandvirtualworlds.................................................................................. 37Summingup................................................................................................................................................. 40
Conclusions ....................................................................................................................................... 41
Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................................ 44
Appendices:FurtherissuesrelatingtotheadoptionofWeb2.0inHE:detailsfromtheresearchfield.................................................................................................................. 45Appendix1:AnopenapproachtoliteraturereviewsusingCloudworks............................... 46Appendix2:AtypologyofWeb2.0tools ........................................................................................... 47Mediasharing..........................................................................................................................................................47Mediamanipulationandmash‐ups ...............................................................................................................47InstantMessaging,chatandconversationalarenas ...............................................................................48Onlinegamesandvirtualworlds ....................................................................................................................49Socialnetworking..................................................................................................................................................49Blogging .....................................................................................................................................................................50Socialbookmarking ..............................................................................................................................................51Recommendersystems .......................................................................................................................................51Wikisandcollaborativeeditingtools ...........................................................................................................52Syndication................................................................................................................................................................53
Appendix3:Areviewofelearningmodelsandframeworks .................................................... 54Appendix4:Paradoxescreatedbythenetworkedanddigital .................................................. 57Knowledgeexpansion..........................................................................................................................................58Nohierarchyorcontrol.......................................................................................................................................58Networkedversusboundedspaces?.............................................................................................................58
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Collectiveownershipversuscommodification.........................................................................................59Appendix5:FactorsinfluencingthelackofuptakeofWeb2.0toolsinHigherEducation60Levelsofmaturity..................................................................................................................................................60Nationalstrategies ................................................................................................................................................61Marketingandstudentrecruitment ..............................................................................................................61
Appendix6:Barrierstochange ............................................................................................................ 64Access,accessibility,andconcernsonauthorityandtrivialisation.................................................64Literacyissues.........................................................................................................................................................65Qualityandeffectiveness ...................................................................................................................................65Legacysystems .......................................................................................................................................................65Pedagogicalrethinking........................................................................................................................................66
Appendix7:Differentapproachestoshiftingthinkingandpromotingchange................... 66Design‐basedresearch ........................................................................................................................................66Promotingchangethroughthetechnologies ............................................................................................67
Appendix8:OpenEducationalResources ........................................................................................ 70Fromlearningobjectstoopeneducationalresources ..........................................................................70Educators’motivationsandOERteachingpractices..............................................................................75OERclassroomcommunities............................................................................................................................78Repurposingandreflecting:designingresources,designingcollaborativecommunities ....80
Appendix9:Issuesraisedbytheintroductionofnewtechnologies........................................ 84Institutionalarrangements ...............................................................................................................................84Theeducators’role ...............................................................................................................................................85Theattitudesandrolesofstudents ...............................................................................................................87Tensionsaroundtheconceptofopenness .................................................................................................87Assessmentpractices...........................................................................................................................................88
References ......................................................................................................................................... 89
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IntroductionThisreviewfocusesontheuseofWeb2.0toolsinHigherEducation.Itprovidesasynthesisoftheresearchliteratureinthefieldandaseriesofillustrativeexamplesofhowthesetoolsarebeingusedinlearningandteaching.Itdrawsoutthebenefitsthatthesenewtechnologiesappeartooffer,andhighlightssomeofthechallengesandissuessurroundingtheiruse.ThereviewformsthebasisforaHEAcademyfundedproject,‘PearlsintheCloud’,whichisexploringhowWeb2.0toolscanbeusedtosupportevidence‐basedpracticesinlearningandteaching.Theprojecthasalsoproducedtwoin‐depthcasestudies,whicharereportedelsewhere(Galleyetal.,2010,Alevizouetal.,2010).Thecasestudiesfocusonevaluationofarecentlydevelopedsiteforlearningandteaching,Cloudworks,whichharnessesWeb2.0functionalitytofacilitatethesharinganddiscussionofeducationalpractice.ThecasestudiesexploretheextenttowhichtheWeb2.0affordancesofthesitearesuccessfullypromotingthesharingofideas,aswellasscholarlyreflections,onlearningandteaching.
Ouraiminthisreviewistodrawontheexistingbodyofinternationalliteratureinthisfield.ItsynthesisessomeempiricalevidenceonthepatternsofuseofWeb2.0toolsandsocialmediainhighereducationandstructuresfindingsinthemesrelevanttocommunitiesofeducators.AlthoughevidenceexistsregardingthebenefitsofWeb2.0ininformallearningenvironments,andwithinadministrativecontexts,resultsfromlongitudinalstudiesshowingthedepthofchangeinpedagogicalpracticeineithertertiaryorpost‐tertiaryeducationareeitherscarceorfarfromconsensual.Andwhileanemergingbodyofliteraturefocusesonexperiencesoflearners,structuredevidenceregardingtheissuessurroundingintegrationinformaleducation,suchasthoseoutlinedabove,isonlyslowlyemerging.Thenextsectiondescribesourmethodologyforthestudy.Thereportisdividedintothefollowingsections:
• Introduction• Methodology• Changingtechnologies• Changinglearningandlearners• Changingteachingandteachers• Strategiesforpromotingtheuseoftechnology• Contextualexamples• Conclusion• Appendices
o Appendix1:AnopenapproachtoliteraturereviewsusingCloudworkso Appendix2:AtypologyofWeb2.0toolso Appendix3:Areviewofe‐learningmodelsandframeworkso Appendix4:Paradoxescreatedbythenetworkedanddigital
o Appendix5:FactorsinfluencingthelackofuptakeofWeb2.0inHigherEducation
o Appendix6:Barrierstochange
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o Appendix7:Differentapproachestoshiftingthinkingandpromotingchangeo Appendix8:OpenEducationalResourceso Appendix9:IssuesraisedbytheintroductionofWeb2.0technologies
• References
MethodologyWehavedrawnonexistingevidencefromlargerandsmallerscalereports,anecdotalaccountsofinnovativepracticesofmainstreamWeb2.0ineducation,andconferencepapersandjournalarticlestoidentifyandsurfacetrends,experiencesandchallengesregardingthetakeupanduseofWeb2.0informallearningcontexts.WehavealsoscrutinisedaccountsofcollaborativeprojectsregardingthepedagogicalintegrationofWeb2.0withinHEcontexts,andsearchedforrecordedexperiencesofpracticefromrelevantedu‐blogsandestablishednetworksonscholarshipineducation,aswellaspeer‐reviewedpapers.Beingreflectiveandexperimentalinourresearch,wesoughttoopenupthedebate,solicitinsightsandshareresourcesinapublicspace.Thereviewwasinformedbysecondaryresearchpointingtotheimpactofsocialmedia/softwareandWeb2.0inlearningandteaching.ThefocushasbeenonemergingtrendsandevidenceonpracticesandchallengesinthefieldofhighereducationinOECDcountries.FollowinganinitialreviewofexistingrelevantreportswithaUK,USoraninternationalfocus(e.g.BECTA,2008;2009;NSFCyberlearning,2008;FranklingandArmstrong,2008;Ala‐Mutkaetal.,2009;JISC,2009;Redecker,2009;OECD,2009),wedevisedaninitialstructureandsetofsub‐categoriesandstartedperformingsearchesoneachtopicinprogressivelymoredetail,reducingthesetuntilalistingofthemesregardingtrends,projectsandevidencerelatingtopracticesandchallengeswasselected.
Inordertocollectevidencefromresearchpublications(peerreviewedjournalarticles,booksandbookchapters)weperformedsearcheswithspecialisedjournalandconferenceproceedingsdatabasesincluding:
• ERIC • Igentaconnect • Sagejournalsonline • Communicationandmassmediacomplete • ElearningandTEL • Informaworld • Relevante‐learningconferences,suchasALT‐C,ASCILITEandNetworkedlearning
AdditionalGooglescholarsearcheswereperformed,usingkeywordandbooleansearchesontermsincluding:‘Web2.0’‘socialmedia’‘socialnetworking’‘highereducation’‘learning2.0’‘virtualwords’,‘sociallearning’‘participatorylearning’'teachingpractices''reflection'and'teaching'.Finally,specialisednetworkingandcommunitysitesweresearched(includeECAR,EDUCAUSE,EvidenceNet,ELSIG,JISC,HigherEducationAcademysubjectcentresandCloudworks).Asthesecondcasestudywithinthe‘PearlsintheClouds’projectfocusesontheuseofCloudworksforsupportingpracticesanddiscussionsaroundOpenEducational
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Resources(OER),moretargetedsearchesregardingopennessandOERwerealsoperformedintheabovedatabasesandinspecialisedsitesthroughBooleanoperators.
Itwasclearfromthisinitialroundofsearchesthatthereislittleinthewayofmeta‐reviewsandempirically‐groundedorlongitudinalstudies.TherearehowevermanycasestudiesonspecificuseofWeb2.0toolsandarichbodyofevidenceinvestigatingthelearners’voice.Thislearnervoiceresearchisgivingvaluableinsightsabouttheexperiencesandexpectationsthatlearnershaveaboutusingtechnologiestosupportlearning.Researchlookingatthe‘teachervoice’andtheirexpectationsandexperiencesissmaller.Similarly,thereisadearthofevidencelookingatthewaysinwhichthesenewtechnologiesareorcouldchangelearningandteachingpractice.Thelargestbodyofevidencecomesfromscholarsandeducationaltechnologistswhoareinvolvedine‐learninganddistancelearningandfromproponentsofopenlearningandOER.
Inadditiontothetraditionalliteraturereviewstrategyoutlinedabove,wealsoconductedwhatwearelabellingan‘openreview’usingtheCloudworkssite.Wedefinean‘openreview’asonethatusesasocialnetworkingspacetoaggregateandcollectivelydiscussanevolvingbodyofliteraturearoundasetofcoreresearchquestions.Toinitiatetheopenreviewacloudscapewassetup1.ThenatureoftheprojectwasdescribedandanoutlineofhowweplannedtouseCloudworkstoconducttheopenreview:
WeareusingCloudworksasaplacetoshareawarenessof,andcriticallyevaluaterelevantliterature,butalsotoelicitviews,ideas,andexperiencessurroundingtheuseofWeb2.0inHigherEducation.TheresultantCloudscapewillbereferencedinthefinalreporttotheHEAandinappreciationofyourcontributions,youwillbeacknowledgedexplicitlyinthereportintheformofquotations.AllcommentswillbesubjecttoaCreativeCommonsAttributionlicence.Inpart,thisisaself‐reflectiveexerciseinthatwewanttoseehowthiscloudscapeevolvesasanexampleofWeb2.0practiceintheHEcontext.Theinitialcloudrepresentingthestateofthereviewandsomeinitialreferencesisbelow.
AdetailedoverviewofhowCloudworkswasusedtosupportanopenreviewisprovidedinthefirstin‐depthcasestudy,partofthe'PearlsintheClouds'project.The way that the site was used to support the Web 2.0 review outlined here, is discussed in more detail in Appendix 1, ‘An open approach to literature reviews using Cloudworks’2. Asummaryexplanationisprovidedhereforcompleteness.
Fivespaces(‘clouds’)weresetuparoundcorequestionsassociatedwiththereview,asameansofstimulatingthedebate:
• IsthereevidenceofproductiveandcreativeuseofWeb2.0inHE? • WhatarethebarriersandenablerstotheuseofWeb2.0inHE? • Whatarethebarrierstosharingexperiencesandteachingideasinapublicspace? • WhyhasgeneralWeb2.0practicesnottranslatedwell/extensivelyintoanHEcontext? • Web2.0toolsforbuildingpedagogicalwraparoundsinOERs?
1 Reviewing the use(s) of Web 2.0 in higher education: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloudscape/view/1895 2 Literature review of the uses of Web 2.0 in HE: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2294
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Inadditionweadoptedan‘open’approachtotheliteraturereview,usingCloudworksasaspacetoaggregateanddiscussresourcesandreferences.ThenatureoftheCloudworkssiteisthatitactsasameansofcollectivelyaggregatingresources,aswellasaspaceforshareddiscussion.Itcombinessomeofthefeaturesofcollectiveblogging,coupledwithadiscussionforumandsocialbookmarking.Ascreenshotofpartoftheliteraturereviewcloudillustratesthis.Afteradescriptionofwhatthefocusofthecloudis,underneathcanbeseenthestartofadiscussionthreadandanaggregationoflinksandacademicreferences(seecontributetabbelow,inFigure1below).
Morerelevantcloudswereaddedtothecloudscapeonanad‐hocbasis,bothbyusastheliteraturereviewresearchers,aswellasthebroaderCloudworkscommunity.Someoftheclouds(includingthoseoutlinedabove)focusedspecificallyontheliteraturereview,butinadditioncloudswereaddedthattouchedontopicsofrelevancetothereviewwhichwerealreadyavailableonthesiteorbecameavailableduringthereview.Theseincludedcloudsonnewliteracies,Web2.0pedagogies,andtheuseofspecificWeb2.0toolsineducation(suchasTwitterandblogs).Thespaceactedasameansofharnessingabroadrangeofviewsontopicsrelatedtothefocusofthereviewandactedasaconduitforsharingofrelevantresources,academicreferencesandemergingdiscussions.Afewcontributorsputforwardempiricallybasedstudiesaswellasanecdotalevidencetosupporttheirarguments.
TheaimofusingCloudworksasasupplementarytoolinresearchingforthisreviewwastogetbroaderinputintotheconsultationthanwouldhavebeenpossiblewithdeskresearchalone.Itwasalsoasanexperimenttoworktowardsdevelopingamodelforsocialscholarshipthatcouldsupportthedevelopmentofcollectivewisdomaspartofthebroaderin‐depthcasestudywork.Thishasworkedtoanextent,andthoughmostcloudsillustrate‘outbursts’ofexpressionandcontributionforshortperiods(seeforexample‘Usingtwitterwithstudents’3).Sustainedinteractionisalsoevidentbyafewusersincloudssuchastheoneentitled‘literaturereview’.
3 Using Twitter with students: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2398
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Figure1:TheliteraturereviewinCloudworks(http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2294/)
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Anumberofothersourcesofevidencewerereviewed.Inparticular,alotiswrittenonthistopicthroughpersonalblogs,self‐publishedessaysandreflectivediaries.Thisincludesreflectionsontheimplicationsofnewtechnologiesforlearningandteaching,strategiesformoreeffectivetakeupoftechnology,identificationofbarriersanddriverstoadoption,andcritiquesofimpactonlearnerexperienceandteachingpractices.Althoughthesesoftersourcesofevidencearenotsubjectedtothestandardpeerreviewprocess,theycanoffervaluableinsightsintotheperceivedstateofthelandscapeofWeb2.0inHigherEducation;insomewaystheyareevidenceof‘practicingwhatyoupreach’,i.e.useofthemediumtounderstandthenatureofthemedium.Althoughasystematiccategorisationoftheseresourceswasbeyondthescopeofthisreview,weincludeaselectionofrelevantreflectionsinthesectionthatoutlinesthecontextualexamples.
ChangingtechnologiesThetechnologicalenvironmentwithinwhichmoderneducationoperatesisbecomingincreasinglycomplex;offeringnewpossibilitiesbutalsogivingrisetochallenges.WehaveseenacontinualevolutionoftechnologiesandhowtheyareusedsincetheintroductionoftheInternet.Web2.0tools,virtualworlds,simulations,hapticsandmobiletechnologiescontinuethistrendofco‐evolutionandweareonlybeginningtodevelopanunderstandingofwhatthetrajectoryofthisco‐evolutionwillbe.DeFreitasandConole(2010)suggestfivebroadtechnologicaltrendsthatarelikelytohaveasignificantimpactoneducation:
• Ashifttowardsubiquitousandnetworkedtechnologies • Theemergenceofcontextandlocationawaredevices • Theincreasinglyrichanddiversedifferentformsofrepresentationsandstimulatory
environmentspossible • Atrendstowardsmoremobileandadaptiveandadaptivedevices • Atechnologicalinfrastructurewhichisglobal,distributedandinteroperable
TheemergenceofWeb2.0toolsAppendix2offersadetailedtypologyofWeb2.0tools,categorisingthemaccordingtothewaysinwhichtheyareused.Thissectionconsiderssomeofthekeyfeaturesofthesetools.Itconcludesbydescribingsomeoftheoverarchingfeaturesandpatternsofbehaviourthatareemergingthroughuseofthesetools.
Theterm‘Web2.0’isattributedtoTimO’Reilly(2005).Sincethenithasgainedwidespreaduse,penetratingalsothediscourseoflearningandteaching.Relatedtermssuchasthe‘readandwriteweb’andthe‘socialweb’giveanindicationthatthetermreferstoashiftinwebtoolsandpracticestowardsmoreparticipatory,userinteraction.Althoughthetermhasnosingledefinition,thereisawidespreadagreementthatitappliestoawidesetoffunctionalcharacteristics,withinthecontextofcomputer‐mediatedcommunicationandnetworkeddigitalmedia.Thesenotonlypointtotheincreasedpossibilitiesforpublication(comparedtoearliergenerationsoftheweb),butalsoencourage,andaresupportiveof,userparticipationintheuploadingandsharingofdigitalartefacts.
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Inthelastfewyearsmuchhasbeenwrittenaboutthewaysinwhichthesetoolsarechangingpractices;practicesthatinvolveshiftingfromthewebasacontentrepositoryandinformationretrievalmechanismtoawebthatenablesmoresocialmediationandusergenerationofcontent.Newpracticesareemerging:
• sharingofimages,videosanddocuments(asisevidentwithsitessuchasFlckr,YouTubeandSlideshare)
• mechanismsforcontentproduction,communicationandcollaboration(throughblogs,wikisandmicro‐bloggingservicessuchasTwitterandsocialsiteslikeFacebook,ElggandNing)
• opportunitiestointeractinnewwaysthroughimmersivevirtualworlds(suchasSecondLife).
ThesocialinterfaceofWeb2.0offersnovelwaysforconnectingpeopleandsharinganddiscussingideas.Itcanbeusedtosupportandenhanceexistingcommunitiesortofosterthedevelopmentofnewcommunitiesofinquiryandexploration.Thereseemstobeatantalisingalignmentbetweentheaffordancesofdigitalnetworkedmedia(thefocusonuser‐generatedcontent,theemphasisoncommunicationandcollectivecollaboration)andthefundamentalsofwhatisperceivedtobegoodpedagogy(socio‐constructivistapproaches,personalisedandexperientiallearning)(ConoleandMcAndrew,forthcoming:2).
TheemergenceofWeb2.0toolssitswithinabroadercontextofcontinualtechnologicalchange.The2010HorizonReportidentifiesfourtrendsaskeydriversoftechnologyadoptioninhighereducationfortheperiod2010through2015:
• Theabundanceofonlineresourcesandrelationshipsinvitingarethinkoftheeducators’roleinsense‐making,coachingandcredentialing.
• Anincreasedemphasison,andexpectationof,ubiquitous,just‐in‐time,augmented,personalisedandinformallearning.
• TheincreaseduseofcloudcomputingchallengesexistinginstitutionalITinfrastructures,leadingtonotionsofITsupportbecomingmoredecentralised.
• Theworkofstudentsbeingseenasmorecollaborativeinnatureandthereforethereispotentialformoreintra‐andinter‐institutionalcollaboration(Johnsonetal.,2010).
WhiletheHorizonseriesofannualreportshavecontributedtoresearchintofuturetrendsandemergingprioritieswithinaUScontext(seeforexampletheNSFCyberlearningReport,2008),severalotherreportshavealsooutlinedrecentanddevelopinginternationalpracticeregardingthepatternsofadoptionand/oruseofWeb2.0ineducation(seeforexample,ArmstrongandFranklin,2008;OECD,NewMilleniumLearners,2008;OECD‐CERI,2009).Inparticular,Redecker(2009)andAla‐Mutkaetal.(2009)reportfindingsfromaEuropeanperspectivefocusingonformalandinformaleducationrespectively.IntheUK,BECTA’s EmergingTrendsoftechnologyinEducationandHarnessingTechnology:NextGenerationLearning20082014,aswellasJISC'sLearnerExperienceprogrammeshaveproducednumerouscasestudiesandreports(seeBECTA/Crooketal.,2008;DaviesandGood,2009).JISC’smostrecentcomparativereportlooksintothestrategicandpolicyimplicationsforhighereducationoftheexperiencesandexpectationsoflearnersinthe
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lightoftheirincreasinguseofWeb2.0technologies(JISC,2009).EngagementinWeb2.0environmentsprovides,ithasbeenargued,moreavenuesforself‐representation,expressionorreflectionandmoreorganizedformsofcollaborationandknowledgebuilding.Re‐generationofcontentthroughremixingandrepurposing,aswellasnetworkingandgroup‐interactionarecommonactivities.
Whileactivitiessuchasthesewerealsoevidentinearliergenerationsofnetworkedcomputingandonlineservices(forexampleUsenetgroups,bulletinboardsanddiscussionforums, Multi‐UserDomainsandMOOs,useofInstantMessagingprotocols,personalandinstitutionalwebpagestopromoteindividualorproject‐basedactivitiesandinterests;seeBECTA/Crooketal.,2008), ‘Web2.0’markedawatershedintermsofasignificantshiftinpractices.Anumberoffactorscontributedtothisshift.Theseinclude:advancementsinthetechnologicalinfrastructure,increasedInternetandbroadbandadoption,anduser‐friendlierinterfacesfornavigating,archiving,communicatingandcollaboratingontheweb.Together,thesehavecontributedtoscalingupuseraccessandinvolvement.IntheOECDcountries(OECD,2009)webservicesarebecominglessexpensive,faster,andincreasinglybasedonwirelesstechnology.Advancementsinaccessandspeedhavebeenaccompaniedbyasimilarlevelofadvancementintermsofdevelopmentsinsoftwareanddatamanagement.Atitssimplest,familiarwebbrowsershavebecomemoreversatile,allowingnotonlyawiderrangeofuserinteractions,butalsointeroperabilitywithnumerousdesktopapplications.
AtypologyofWeb2.0toolsThefollowingcategorisationofWeb2.0activitiesisderivedfromaBECTA‐commissionedreviewofWeb2.0toolsinschools(Crooketal.,2008):
• Mediasharing.Creatingandexchangingmediawithpeersorwideraudiences. • Mediamanipulationanddata/webmashups.Usingweb‐accessibletoolstodesign
andeditdigitalmediafilesandcombiningdatafrommultiplesourcestocreateanewapplication,toolorservice.
• Instantmessaging,chatandconversationalarenas.One‐to‐oneorone‐to‐manyconversationsbetweenInternetusers.
• Onlinegamesandvirtualworlds.Rule‐governedgamesorthemedenvironmentsthatinviteliveinteractionwithotherInternetusers.
• Socialnetworking.Websitesthatstructuresocialinteractionbetweenmemberswhoformsubgroupsof'friends'.
• Blogging.AnInternet‐basedjournalordiaryinwhichausercanposttextanddigitalmaterialwhileotherscancomment.
• Socialbookmarking.Userssubmittheirbookmarkedwebpagestoacentralsitewheretheycanbetaggedandfoundbyotherusers.
• Recommendersystems.Websitesthataggregateandtaguserpreferencesforitemsinsomedomainandtherebymakenovelrecommendations.
• Wikisandcollaborativeeditingtools.Web‐basedservicesthatallowusersunrestrictedaccesstocreate,editandlinkpages.
• Syndication.Userscan‘subscribe’toRSSfeedenabledwebsitessothattheyareautomaticallynotifiedofanychangesorupdatesincontentviaanaggregator.
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Appendix2(‘AtypologyofWeb2.0tools’)providesamoredetaileddescriptionofeachoftheseandsomespecificexamples.
ItisimportanttonotethatthecurrentwaveofWeb2.0toolshaveevolvedfromearliertoolsforsharingandcommunication(seealsoboydandEllison,2007).HoweverthefunctionalityofWeb2.0toolsmeansthatpreviouslydiverseonlineservicesandnichesocialnetworkscanbeintegratedmoreeffectively.Commonfeaturesincludetagging,commenting,rating,syndicationandthedevelopmentofrelationships(or‘friendships’).Thenetworkisseenasaplatformfordialogueandcollaborationanduser‐generatedcontentasamutuallyaddedvaluecomponentforcommunitybuilding.Inadditiontothevastecologyofinformal,professional,educationalorblendedcrowd‐sourced,openandsemi‐openprojects,thereexistcommunity‐basedscientificresourcesitesandsitesthatemergefromthecollaborationofpublicinstitutions,museumsandcharities;thesedependonparticipatoryexchanges,culturalandscientificcitizenshiptoscalecontributoryinterpretationsandusergeneratedcontent(seeVonHippel,citedinNSFCyberlearning,2008:28).Themultiplicityoftoolsandmediatedavenuesforcreativityandsocialisationthusnotonlycontributestoaboundarycrossingbetweenprofessionalcommunitiesandgroupsconcernedwithrecreationalandfandom4activities,butalso,havegivenrisetonovelwaysforinformationorganization,knowledgegenerationandlearningfacilitation.Inthereviewofsocialsoftwareforlearning,Grantetal.(2006)suggestatleastthreefundamentalshiftsinthinkingabouttherelationshipamongknowledge,culture,learningandpedagogy.First,theynotethatthemodesofinquiryencouragedbyWeb2.0practicestendtobelessorientedtothetraditionaldisciplinaryboundariesofknowledge.Instead,thelearnerisinvitedtoadoptaconceptionofknowledgeassomethingavailabletobepersonalisedorre‐appropriated.Second,Web2.0encouragesengagementwithknowledgeinnewways.Forinstance,itencouragesamoreanimatedbrowsingandscanningorientation.Third,practicesofknowledgeproductionarebeingaltered.Inparticular,learnersarebeingdrawnintoinquirymethodsthataremorecollaborativeandlesssolitary.Thecollaborativespiritandopenethosoftheactivitiesoutlinedabove,andmanyotherslikethem,areoftencombinedintoaprevailingsensethatWeb2.0‘hascreatedgreateropportunitiesforaccess,debateandtransparencyinthepursuitofknowledgethaneverbefore’(Wales,2008:np).ArecurrentdiscoursearoundtheapplicationofWeb2.0technologiesinaneducationalcontextpointstothenotionsofevolutionandtransformation;transformation,intermsoftranscendingformaleducationalcontexts;evolutionintermsoffacilitatingmoreinformalandnon‐formallearningcontextswhichblurtheboundariesbetweencategoriesoflearners(student,adult‐learner,orinformallearner,autodidact).Theargumentsforthisalsocentresaroundthenotionthatlearnersarenowabletobecomemoreactiveproducers,authors,evaluatorsandcommentatorswithinthelearningarenatheyareengagedwith.Thequestionthendirectsattentiontothenovelparadigmsoflearningandforknowledge4Fandom(fromthenounfanandtheaffixdom,asinkingdom,freedom,etc.)isatermusedtorefertoasubculturecomposedoffanscharacterisedbyafeelingofsympathyandcamaraderiewithotherswhoshareacommoninterest (Wikipedia, Entry on Fandom: ' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fandom)
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building,butalsotofoundationalissuesthatwillaffecteducationalinstitutionsandpracticeforthefuture.
Changinglearningandlearners
TheoriesoflearningThissectionconsidersdifferentpedagogicalapproachesspecificallyinrelationtoWeb2.0practices.Viewsoncategorisationoflearningtheoriesarestronglycontestedanddefinitionsfordifferentaspectsarenotclear‐cut.Furthermore,whilsttheoriesoflearninghaveneverbeenstatic,arguablythe‘fluidity’andcomplexityofnewonlinespacesandthewaysinwhichtheyarebeingusedtosupportdifferentformsoflearningmeansthatthedistinctionbetweenpedagogicalapproaches(suchasbehavioural,cognitive,developmentalandcriticalpedagogy)isbeingeroded.Nonetheless,itispossibletodrawoutsomepatternsastowhatconstitutesgoodpedagogy,irrespectiveoftheunderlyingepistemologicalbeliefsthatdifferenttheoristsandschoolsofthoughthold.Thissectionprovidesareviewofcurrenttheoriesoflearninginthecontextoftheirapplicationtoexploitationofnewtechnologiesforlearning.
MayesanddeFreitas(2004)groupedlearningtheoriesintothreecategories: • Associative(learningasactivitythroughstructuredtasks) • Cognitive(learningthroughunderstanding) • Situative(learningassocialpractice).
InadditiontothecategorisationprovidedbyMayesandDeFreitas,anumberofotherauthorshavewrittenaboutlearningtheoriesandhowtheyrelatetoe‐learning.Conoleetal.reviewedlearningtheoriesandmappedthemagainstapedagogicalframework(Conole,etal.,2004).Dykeetal.(2007)builtonthisworkbyprovidinganoverviewofthemainlearningtheoryperspectivesalongwithanindicationofthekindsofe‐learningpracticetheymostobviouslysupport.Ravenscroft(2003)linkedpedagogicaltheorytospecificexamplesofe‐learninginnovation.Learningtheoriesarefrequentlycapturedinpedagogicalmodelsorframeworksthatemphasiseaparticularapproach.Arecentreviewofthekeymodelsorframeworksthathavebeenusedine‐learningdescribedtwentycommonmodelsorframeworksacrossthedifferenttheoreticalperspectives(Conole,2010).Appendix3(‘Areviewofe‐learningmodelsandframeworks’)providesasummaryofthiswork.
Alotofearlyapplicationofe‐learningwasessentiallybehaviouristinnature.This‘pageturning’mentallyhasbeencriticisedresultinginresearchersexploringthewaysinwhichmoreinteractional,student‐centredandsociallymediatedapproachesmightbeapplied.Manyarguethatbehaviouristapproaches,whichfocusonprescriptiveshapingandsystematicguidanceofthelearnertowardsinscribedgoalsareinappropriateforWeb2.0environments.NonethelessWeb2.0toolscansupportassociativepedagogiesandbeusedeffectivelyintermsofprovidingstructuredguidancethroughtasksandthroughprovisionofeffectiveandtimelyfeedback.Thismightincludetheadaptionofalearner’spersonallearningenvironmenttoprovideastructuredlearningpathway,usinginteractivee‐
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assessmentactivities,aggregationofresourcesaroundlearningthemesoreffectiveuseofcollectiveintelligencetailoredtoindividuallearningneeds.
Cognitivismemphasisesthemetaphorof‘informationprocessing’toexpressthedevelopmentofthinkingandargumentation.Thisincludesreflectionofone’sownthinkingandoutwardarticulationororchestrationofseveraldifferenttypesoflearningactivities(i.e.attention,selection,reasoning,prediction,andreviewing).Thereisgoodevidencethatoutwardlyarticulatingone’slearningcanenableself‐awareness(e.g.Chi,2000).Processesofself‐publishingandreflectivebloggingcansupportthistypeofmetacognition.Mejias(2006)describestheuseofsocialnetworkstofacilitatedistributedresearch.Hearguesthatsocialnetworkshavetheadvantageofbothengagingstudentsinscaffoldingexperiencesanddevelopingthepracticalresearchskillsneededtomakebestuseofonlineinformationnetworks.Hepointsoutthatthe‘powerofmany’exposesanindividualtofarmoreresearch,resourcesandideasthantheycouldpossiblygenerateontheirown.
Constructivismhasbeenakeystrandofeducationaldiscourseformorethantwentyyears.Technologieshavebeenseenasameansofenablingnewapproachestoconstructivism,bothintermsofenablingthelearnertotakecontroloftheirlearningandintermsofenhancingthesocialdimensionsoflearning.Dalsgaard(2006)arguesthatsocialsoftwaretoolscansupportasocialconstructivistapproachtoe‐learningbyprovidingstudentswithpersonaltoolsandbyengagingtheminsocialnetworks,thusallowinglearnerstodirecttheirownproblem‐solvingprocess.AgoodexampleofaframeworkthatpromotesconstructivismisonethatwasdevelopedbyJonassenetal.(1999;2003).ItcanbeusedasaguidelinetodevelopConstructivistLearningEnvironments(CLEs).Tointegratethesocialdimensionintothepedagogyofonlinelearningenvironments,Felix(2005)hasproposedthesynthesisofthecognitiveconstructivistandsocialconstructivistapproaches.Inthecognitiveconstructivistapproach,thefocusisoncognitionthatoccursinthemindoftheindividual,withthelearnermakingintellectualsenseofthematerialsontheirown.Thesocialconstructivistapproachemphasisesthesociallyandculturallysituatedcontextofcognition,inwhichknowledgeisconstructedthroughsharedendeavours.Theinteractionsintheonlineenvironment,forexamplethroughcollaborationsordiscussionsusingforums,orinwikisandblogs,enableknowledgetobeconstructedindividually,butmediatedsocially(seeforexampleMinocha2009:12forarecentexample).Theinter‐subjectivelyrich,opendialoguesthattheseenvironmentscanfacilitatearevaluableresourcesthatcanhelpshapethetrajectoryoflearningasanexchangeofstrategicguidance(Crooketal.,2008:31).
SocialtoolsandinteractiveWeb2.0environmentsenablelearnerstoadoptexploratoryandcreativepositions,withoutoverlookingthesocialdimensionoforchestrationanddesign(orindeedgovernanceifacommunityspaceisenabled).Buildingonthistheme,socialconstructivismemphasisestheimportanceofthelearnerbeingactivelyinvolvedinthelearningprocess.Whilethecognitiveapproachisconcernedmorewithknowledgearchitectureandmapping,theoriessuchasconnectivismanddistributedcognitionemphasisethenegotiated,networkedanddistributednatureoflearningacrossphysicalandvirtualspaces.MasonandRennie(2008)acceptSiemens'(2004)propositionthatWeb2.0methodsandtoolspermittheeducationalprocesstotranscendconstructivetheoriesbymovingfromisolated,individualactivitiestointeractiveexchangesamongstacommunity
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ofcollaboratinglearners(i.e.,collaborativeconstructivism‚orconnectivism‚putsanincreasedemphasisoninvolvingthestudentinactiveparticipationandintheprocessoflearning).Siemens(2006)placesthenetworkandnetworkinginthecentreofthelearningprocess.This'net‐centric'perspectiveseesknowledgenotnecessarilyasaprogressiveaccumulation,butratherasaprocessforbuilding,maintainingandutilisingconnections.Incontrast,Ackermann(2004)emphasisestheexperientialandactiveapproachtolearningandknowledgebuilding,pointingtotheprocessthatbuildsonbothindividualandcollectiveendeavours.
Socio‐culturalperspectivesemphasisethesocially‐situatedandculturaldimensionsoflearning,thatarearguablymissingfromtheotherperspectives.Acrosstheirlongculturalhistory,humanbeingshaveconstructedresourcesallowingthemtodrivecognitionfromtheprivateormentalworldof'thinking'intothepublicandexternalworldofactingwithtoolsandartefacts(e.g.diSessa,2001).Thiscollectionofresourcesforproblemsolvingandreasoningisattheheartofwhatismeantby'culture'.Withthisperspectiveoflearning,whatgetsdoneismainlyorganisedintheexternallydesignedspaceofaction(ratherthanjusttheinternalspaceofthementalworld).Thispromotestheviewoflearningasacculturationratherthanacquisition.Thesocialiscentrallylocatedinthescaffoldingapproachofculturalappropriation.Mediationofthelearningexperienceis,accordingtoVygotsky(1971),aformofintervention(aformofauxiliarystimulus).Byfocusingonexperienceduringtheprocessesofthinkingandlearning(metacognition),mediatingartefacts(suchaslinguisticmodesofaddressandtoolsthatenablereflectionanddialogue)cancontributetoeffectivelearningbehaviour.Usingmediatingartefacts,expertsandnovicescanco‐constructideasforproblemsolvinganddecisionmaking.Conoleconsidersthiswithrespecttotherangeofmediatingartefactsteachers,learneranddevelopersusedtosupportthedesignanddeliveryoflearning(Conole,2008).Personalisedlearningenvironmentsputlearnersincontrol,particularlyregardingmotivationaroundinterfacesoflearning.Participationincollaborativeactivities,andlearningcontextsasacommunityofpractice,isseenasanothercomponentintheprocessoflearningbeyondacquisition.
LaveandWenger’sworkonCommunitiesofPractice(CoP)(LaveandWenger,2001;seealsoWenger,1998)hasbeendrawnonextensivelyinthisfield.WengerdefinesaCoPasincorporatingimportantmechanismsformeaningnegotiation,learningandidentitybuilding.Participationinsharedgoals,andthroughsharedresources,canbeseenasaprocessofappropriationofsocialandculturalaspectsofknowledge,wherebythelearnerbecomespreparedforparticipationthroughtheprocessofparticipationitself(Rogoffetal.,2003).Althoughthenotionofinscribedgoals,boundaries,rules,monitoringpossibilitiesandsanctioningarecorecharacteristicsofcommunitysustainability(seeKoperetal.,2004),socialinteraction,co‐evolutionofactivitiesandtasksandhumourarealsocorecomponentsofsuccessandeffectiveness(seeKesteret.al,2006;Engstrom,2007).Mediatingartefactsplayanimportantroleandthesocio‐culturalapproachesmovethefocusawayfromthematerialityofthetoolsthemselves,towardstheactions/contextsinwhichthemediaareused.Ifthesocialwebshiftsmodelsofteachingfromtransmissiontodialogueandisindeedcapableofenableindividualstoconstructknowledgemedia(Dalsgaard,2009),theiruseinthemeaningmakingprocessiscore.
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Selwyn(2009)arguesthateducationalpracticesthatareconcernedwiththeexploratoryandsocial,thereflectiveorimmersiveaspectsofknowledgebuildingwillfindWeb2.0toolsandsocialmediapowerful.Atthesametime,itisalsoassumedthatthecoreaffordancesofWeb2.0toolsblurtheboundariesbetweenproductionanduse(BrunsandHumphreys,2007).Thiscaninturnhaveanimpactonallfourprincipleaspectsofthelearnerexperience:thecognitive,theconstructive,thesocialandthesituative(seealsoMayesanddeFreitas,2007).
NewformsoflearningHaving provided a general discussion of learning theories and their relationship to Web 2.0 tools, this section describes four specific examples of the ways in which these tools might promote new forms of learning, namely: • Inquiry-based and exploratory learning • Newformsofcommunicationandcollaboration • Newformsofcreativity,co‐creationandproduction • Richercontextualisationoflearning
Web2.0technologiesandpracticesprovidenewmechanismsforinquiry‐basedandexploratorylearning.Distributedcollectionofdataispossible,asarenewwaysoforganisingandrepresentingmultipledatasources.Newtoolsareemergingforinterrogatingandanalysingdata,alongwithrichsocialandinformationenvironmentstosupportresearchcommunities.Inthisrespect,cognitively,Web2.0invitesuserstofamiliarisethemselvesanddevelopconfidenceinnewmodesofinquiry.Italsobringschallengestobothlearnersandteachersintermsofablurringoftheboundariesofcontrolinthesecontexts,aswellasraisingissuesaboutthelegitimacyofinformationinthesenewdistributed,mixed‐environments(e.g.Keen,2007).
Theephemeralnatureofwebknowledgeisnotonlyanassetenablingmultiplelocations,usersandre‐mixing,butalsoaliability,whichcanleadtocognitiveoverload,confusedauthorshipandlossofcredibility.Newformsofmediaandinformationliteracyforfiltering,navigating,organizingandmanipulatingrelevantcontent(foramoredevelopeddiscussionofliteracy,seebelow)arerequired.
Socialnetworksenablenewformsofcommunicationandcollaboration.Theimportanceofcollaborationisacommoningredientinmanyofthelearningperspectives,asitisgenerallyconsideredtobeanimportantmeansofdevelopingunderstandingthroughshareddialogueandco‐construction.Anecologyofsocialnetworkshasnowdeveloped,rangingfromthosecongregatingaroundcommoninterestsorkinship,throughtothoseassociatedwithmoreformalcommunitycontexts(suchasformallearningcontextsorprofessionalnetworks).Theseecologiesarefacilitatedbyarangeofprocessesofengagementinstantiatedthroughthenewtechnologies,makingpeerguidance,reflectionandsupportpossibleinavarietyofnewwaysandatascalenotseenbefore.Forexample,theabilitytoopenlycommentuponandcritiqueotherpeople’sworkhasbecomeastandardpracticewithintheblogosphereandhasbeentakenupbyacademics(throughself‐reflectiveblogsforteachinganddigitalscholarship)andresearchers.Inteachingcontexts,studentscansocialisewithpeersthroughsocialnetworks,providingmutualsupportandaforumforshareddialogue.
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Typicalactivitiesinthesespacescanincludepracticingwritingskills,contributingtocollectivecohortblogs,orcritiquingeachother’spersonalportfolios(EllisonandWu,2008).Assuchsharedperspectivesorcrowdsourcingpracticeshavebecomemorecommon‐place,thereisagrowingargumentthatthesepracticesarekeytoinnovativethinkingandproblemsolving(Leadbetter,2008;Surowiecki,2004).Useofsuchsocialnetworksbetweenstudentsandteachershasbeenarguablylesssuccessful,withstudentsoftenseeingthisasanintrusionintotheirmorepersonal,learningandsocialspaces(Farmer,2006).
Similarly,creativityandnewformsofco‐creationandpublicationarealsopossible.ThedistributednatureofWeb2.0technologiesmeansthatlearnersmayhaveeasieraccesstotheexpertiseofothers,toauthenticenvironmentsandtodistributedaudiences.Thecreationofanaudienceforlearnerscanbemotivationalinanumberofrespects:asameansofprovidinganoutletfordemonstratingtheirlearningandasamechanismforgettingfeedback.Web2.0technologiesnotonlyblurtheboundariesbetweenlearnersandteachers,butalsobetweenteachingandresearch,meaningthatlearnerscanparticipateinandcontributetorealresearchwork.Atthesametime,participationandcoordinationinonlinesocialandcreativespacescanappearinvaryingdegreesofscaleanddepth,includingmoresophisticatedlevelsofinterpersonaldialogueanddeliberation(Farmeretal.,2008;Kim,2008).Suchnetworksandenvironmentsneedtobecarefullyconstructed;itisimportanttobuildcapacityforcollaborativeengagementunderfluid,heterarchicalstructures.Similarly,participants(boththelearnersandtheteachers)needtodeveloptherelevantsetofskillstobeabletobeeffectiveco‐creators.Keycharacteristicsinsuchcontextsincludetheabilitytotakeflexibleroles(learnerasteacherandviceversaforexample),aswellasthedevelopmentofanindividualandcollectivesenseofresponsibilityandpride(Burgess,2006;EllisonandWu,2008;seealsoBrunsandHumphreys,2007inrelationtowikis).Suchnotionsofco‐dependence,constructionandfluidityhowevermayclashwithideasaboutownershipandinaformaleducationalcontextraisingfundamentalissuesaboutwhattypesofassessmentareappropriateandmeaningful.
Sociallysituativelearningperspectivesemphasisethecontextwithinwhichlearningoccurs.Web2.0toolsprovideparticularopportunitiesforpersonalisingandcontextualisinglearning.Itisnowpossibletodeconstructresources,toolsandactivitiessothattheycanberecombinedorremixedaccordingtoindividualpreference(i.e.theeducationalapplicationofthenotionof‘mashups’describedearlier).Learnerscanalsocreatetheirowncontentandresources,enablingincreasedcreativityandflexibilitywithinthecurriculum.Suchpersonalisationandre‐appropriationofexistingresourcesalsohasclearpotentialtosupportbetterformsofindependentstudyandtofacilitatepersonalresourcemanagement.Suchuser‐centredapproaches,manybelieve,areimportant,notleastbecauseoftheaffectiveandmotivationalbenefitsderivedfromtheabilitytopersonalise,butalsobecausetheprocessofappropriationbydefaultleadstothelearnerdevelopingtheirdigitalliteracyskillsandfostersparticipatorylearning.
PatternsoftechnologyuseandthecharacteristicsoflearnersAccordingtothe2008ECARsurveyofstudents’useofcomputers,studentsareusingtechnologiesbothforacademicpurposesandforsocialactivities.Similarly,theOECEreport
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onMillenniumLearners(OECD,2009)listsaccesstothelibrarywebsite(93.4%)andtheuseofcoursemanagementsystems/VLEs(82.3%severaltimesaweek)asthetwolargestusesoftechnologiesforacademicpurposes.ThesignificantuseofVLEsdemonstratesthattheyarebecomingincreasinglyamandatorycampuscommodity(OECD,2009:14).Oftheentertainment‐relatedandnetworkingactivities,useofsocialnetworkingsites(daily85.2%),InstantMessaging(73.8%daily)andmusic/videodownloads(77,3%weekly)wasalsohigh.AnIpsosMorisurveyrevealedthat79%ofBritishfirst‐yearstudents(IpsosMori,2008)accesscourse‐specificmaterialsatleastonceaweekand97%ofthisgroupfoundituseful.Amongtheentertainment‐relatedactivities,useofsocialnetworkingsitessuchasFacebookisincreasingonanannualbasis.AsimilarpicturecanbeseeninAustralia,whereasignificantnumberofstudentsfrequentlyusetheuniversitylearningmanagementsystemtoaccesscourse/relatedmaterials(81%;Kennedyetal.,2006).
TheconvictionthatWeb2.0applicationswouldtransformInternetusersincreasinglyintocontentproducers(OECD,2007)isalsoconfirmedonthebasisofthisdata.Forexample,morethanone‐fifthofUShighereducationstudentsareactivelycontributingcontenttoblogs,wikis,photoorvideowebsitesand18%contributeregularlytoatleastthreeofthese.However,39%declarenottohavecontributedtoanyofthese(OECD,2009:15).ThepatternofAustralianandBritishstudentsseemstobesimilartotheoneintheUnitedStates(Kennedy,etal.,2006,JonesandCross,2009).AstudyfromPewInternetandAmericanLifefoundthatintheUnitedStatesmorethanhalfofthe12millionteensonlinecreateoriginalmaterialfortheweb,withoriginalartwork,photosorvideo(Lenhart,Madden,RankinMacgill,andSmith,2007citedinOECD,2009:p.21).
AlthoughstudentsintheOECDcountriesappeartobeheavyusersofsocialmediaandnewtechnologiesingeneral,theprofileofstudentsisnotuniform;theintensityofattachmentwithtechnologiesaswellasthepatternsofusesbearssocio‐demographicandgendervariation.Thefiguresforparticipationinrole‐playinggames(MMORPGs)islowerthanmightbeexpectedandgenderedusesareevident:moremalesusersthanfemales.Similarlytheuseofvirtualworlds,suchasSecondLife,islow;intheUSlessthan9%ofstudentsareusing3D‐virtualworldsinhighereducation(OECD,2009:15).Thisisdespitetheperceivedbenefitstheseenvironmentsofferpedagogicallyandthehighexpectationsintermsoftheirvalueforhighereducation(ChittaroandRanon,2007;DeLucia,Francese,Passero,andTortora,2009;DiBlasandPoggi,2007).
TheprevioussectionreviewedthewaysinwhichnewtechnologiesmightsupportmoreWeb2.0‐orientatedformsoflearning;emphasisingtheiruser‐generated,participatoryandsituativenatureinparticular.Abodyofresearchhasemergedinrecentyears,whichhasbeenfocusingspecificallyoncollatingevidenceoftheextentthisistrue.Theinitialdiscoursearoundlearnerstendedtoforegroundthepositives;apicturewaspaintedofanewgenerationoflearnerswhoweredigitallysavvyandtechnologicalimmersed,termssuchas‘digitalnatives’,‘millenniumkids’andthe‘netgeneration’pepperedthisdiscourse.Howeverasthesub‐fieldhasmaturedandalargerbodyofevidencehasbeengathered,thegeneralconsensushasbecomemoreconsideredandrealistic.So,althoughitistruethatmanyyoungerlearnershavegrownupinatechnology‐mediatedenvironment,thisdoesnotmeantheyhavethenecessaryskillstobeabletoharnesstheseforacademicandlearningpurposes.Itisalsotruethatthereisawidespectrumoflearners,withdifferent
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preferencesinthewaystheyliketolearn,thedegreetowhichtheywishtoengagewithtechnologiesandthestandardoftheirgeneralstudyskillsandacademicperformance.
SomeoftheoriginalrhetoricaroundtechnologiesbeingassociatedwithsignificantshiftsinthenatureofcontemporarylearnerscanbetracedbacktotheworkofresearcherslikeOblingerandPrensky.Prenskycoinedthephrase‘digitalnatives’(Prensky,2001)todescribeagenerationoflearnerswhohavegrownupinaworldofcomputers,mobilephonesandtheweb;i.e.agenerationreliantupondigitalmediaandtools.Prenskyandothersarguedthatthesedigitalnativesareseentostandinstarkcontrasttooldergenerationsof‘digitalimmigrants’,whoadopteddigitalmedialateronintheirlives.Termssuchas‘Internetgeneration’,‘generationM’(media),‘generationV’(virtual),‘googlegeneration’(Brabazon,2007),‘generationC’,‘Nintendokids’,‘Millennials’(OECD,2008)typifythismovement(see,forexample,OblingerandOblinger,2005;Tapscott,1998;andKennedyetal.,2008amongothers,foranempiricallygroundedcritiqueofsuchrhetoric).
CertainlyOblingerandOblinger's(2005)book,‘EducatingtheNetGeneration’,providesausefulstartingpointforrecentresearchexploringstudents’useoftechnologies.Itprovidesakindofwatershedintermsoftuningintotheincreasingresearchinterestinstudyinghowlearnersareinteractingwithnewtools,andhowthismightbechangingthewaysinwhichtheyarelearning.Intheirintroduction,OblingerandOblingernote,‘wehopethisbookwillhelpeducatorsmakesenseofthemanypatternsandbehaviorsthatweseeintheNetGenerationbutdon’tquiteunderstand’(2005:7). Constantlyevolvingtechnologyliesattheheartofmobile,connected,andasBauman(2005)andUrry(2007)havecalledit'liquidlifestyles'.Thesedigitalnativesarethoughttoexpecttechnologytoassistfluidityinallaspectsoftheirlives,includingthewaysinwhichtheylearnandareeducated.Theyarethoughttohavedistinctexpectationsofeducationthatinvolvelearningwhichispersonalised,accessibleon‐demand,andavailableatanytime,anyplace,oranypaceandareoftencontrastedwithteachersandparents,whoarelabelledasbeing‘digitalimmigrants’or'visitors'(White,2009).
Theuniformityofsuchlearners,andindeedtherhetoricalarticulationofthetechnologicallydeterministic,generational,regionalortemporaldefinitionshavebeenwidelycontested(DavisandGood,2009;JonesandCross,2009;White,2009;Buckingham,2006),andthemultipledimensionsofthedigitaldividehaverepeatedlybeenaddressed.Increasedconnectedness,immediacy,multitasking,mediaandcriticalliteracy,networkedskills,butalso,emotionality,timemanagementandindeedlearnerdifferencesandtutorinfluencesaresomeofthethemesewhichhavebeenconsideredacrossarangeofin‐depthcasestudiesandsurveys(Richardson,2008;Sharpeetal.,2008;Thorpeetal.,2008). Oneofthemainreasonscitedbystudentsforusing technologiesintheircoursesisconvenience.Technologiesareseenasaddingvaluetocourses,notasmechanismsforradicaltransformation. For example, CarusoandKvavik(2006)foundthatthemostcommonlycitedreasongivenforusingtechnologyincourseswasconvenience(51%ofstudents),followedbytheabilitytomanagecourseactivitieseasily(19%),andtoamuchlesserextenttheopportunitiestoenhancelearning(15%)ortocommunicatewithpeersandteachers(11%).Thisissupportedbyacomparativeanalysisonexistingstudiesaspart
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oftheJISC’slearners’experiencesprogramme(JISC,2009,seealso,SharpeandBeetham,2010).Fromthestudentperspective,technologyisnotnecessarilyasubstitute,butatoolforaddedconvenienceandcontrol(OECD,2009).AstheauthorsoftheJISC(2009)reportnote,‘imaginingWeb2.0forsocialpurposesinastudycontext,presentsconceptualdifficultiestolearnersaswellasachallengetotheirnotionsofspace.Theyneeddemonstration,persuasionandroomtoexperimentinthiscontext'. SharpeandBeetham(2010)capturetheessenceoffindingsemergingfromlearnerexperienceresearchintheirintroductiontoarecenteditedcollectiononresearchinthefield:
Whatbecomesclearistheextenttowhichlearnersarebecomingactiveparticipantsintheirlearningexperiencesandareshapingtheirowneducationalenvironments[…]Learnersarecreatingtheirownblendsofphysicalandvirtualenvironmentsandofinformalandformallearningcontexts.
ThechangingroleofteachingandteachersHavingdiscussedthechangingnatureoflearningandlearnersintheprevioussection,thissectionconsiderstheimplicationsforteaching.AstheOECDreportonNewMillenniumLearninginHigherEducation(2009:28)notes,theassumptionthatmostteachersinhighereducationaredigitalimmigrantsmightbetrueonthebasisoftheirage,butiscertainlynottruewithrespecttotheirtechnologyskillsandcompetences.Asearlyas2003,aEuropaeumsurveyidentifiedhighadoptionratesoftechnologyintermsofcommunicatingresearchfindingsandnetworking(FlatherandHuggins,2004,citedinOECD,2009:28).AnAustraliansurvey(EducationNetworkAustralia,2008)foundoutthat90%ofhighereducationteachersconsideredtheInternetveryimportantfortheirwork.Interestinglytheystatedthatthiswasnotonlyforresearchpurposes,butalso,forimprovingteachingandlearningopportunitiesandresourcesforstudents.Over10%ofteachingstaffmadeaclearreferencetotheuseandintegrationofdigitallearningobjects.JustoveronethirdofAustralianhighereducationteacherswhorespondedtothesurveyareconvincedthattheyalreadypossesstheICTcapabilitiesrequiredtotransformpractice,especiallybymeansofintroducingnewwaysofengagingstudents(29%),orareproficientandconfidentintheuseofICTtosupportlearning(37%).Yet,thereappearstobeagapbetweentheexpertiseofteachersincontinentalEuropeandinAnglo‐Saxoncountries.Masteryofdigitallibrariesanddatabasesarecorecompetencesforacademicresearchers;mostusewordprocessorsandpresentationsoftwareforwritingpapersandpresentingfindings,manyusereferencemanagementtoolsandtoolsfordataanalysis.Blogsandwikisarealsousedtosomeextent–asameansofdisseminatingresearchandcollectivewriting.ForcollaborativeresearchprojectstherearearangeofWeb2.0environmentsenablingthesharinganddiscussionofresearchfindings.
Downesoffersanearlyreviewofthepotentialofthesetechnologiesforlearning(Downes2005)andAlexanderprovidesoneofthefirsttextbooksexploringtheuseofthesetoolsforteachingandlearning(Alexander2006).Bothoutlinemoreopen,participatoryandheterarchicalstructuresinteachingmethods.Reviewingtheuseofsocialmedialikeblogsandwikis,BrunsandHumphreys(2007)alsoarguethatthe(co‐)productionofcontentbytheuser(‘produsage’)requiresashiftinchangingteachingmethodstowardsapproachesthatsupportcommunitybuildingthroughcollaboration,heterarchicalstructuresofengagement,mentoring,fosteringcreativityandcriticalliteracycapacities.Siemens(2009),consideringthisfromtheperspectiveofnetworkedlearningandconnectivism,reflectsonroleoftheacademicteachingmethods:
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Giventhatcoherenceandlucidityarekeytounderstandingourworld,howdoeducatorsteachinnetworks?Foreducators,controlisbeingreplacedwithinfluence.Insteadofcontrollingaclassroom,ateachernowinfluencesorshapesanetwork.
Siemenssuggeststhefollowasalistofthenewrolesthatteachersneedtoadoptinnetworkedlearningenvironments:
• Amplifying • Curating • Way‐findingandsocially‐drivensensemaking • Aggregating • Filtering • Modelling • Persistentpresence(Siemens,2009:np)
Scalinguptothemajoritywillrequiredifferentapproaches,morestrategiccoordinationandstaffdevelopmentandsupport.Todate,onthewhole,onlyaminorityofenthusiasticteachersandthosewitharesearchinterestinthelearningsciences,educationaltechnologyornewmedia,haveundertakenexperimentationwithnewinnovationsinpedagogyandexplorationoftheuseofnewtechnologies.EmbracingWeb2.0approacheswillrequireradicallydifferentstrategiesintermsofdesigning,supportingandassessinglearning.
Essentially,thecreativechangeinthepracticesmayleadtodeliberateandsystemicinnovation–bothparamounttoknowledge‐creatingorganizations(Bereiter,2002),suchashighereducationinstitutions.ThelearningpotentialofWeb2.0isseentoderivefromtheco‐constructionofknowledgeandthecollaborativeethosinself‐organisednetworkedandvirtualspaces.Itisnecessarytoacknowledgethewebsofknowledgecreatedinthesocialprocessofteachingandlearning(Ruddetal.,2006b).ThoughitseemsunlikelythatWeb2.0willfundamentallydisplace‘teaching’perse,itisclearthatembracingWeb2.0practiceswillmeanthatmoreemphasisisplacedonteachingprocessesbeingsituatedasactive‘co‐learning’experiences.Adoptionofamorescholarlyandreflectiveapproachtoteachingpracticeisclearlyalogicalstrategytohelpachievethisshift.
DespitetherelativelysophisticatedtechnologicalinfrastructurethatisnowinplaceintheUKandotherAnglo‐saxonorOECDcountries,deploymentofsocialmediaatthecoreofthecurriculumwithinfurtherandthehighereducationismostlyatanexperimentalstage(seeOECD,2009).Educators’confidenceinandexperiencewithsocialmediaisstillperceivedasabarrierforsuccessfulimplementationwithinteachingandlearninginHighereducationcontexts.AlthoughstudiesinOECDcountriesshowthatteachersmayindeedbeamongstthemostskilledtechnologyusers,itappearsthattheyareunabletotakeadvantageoftheircompetenceandapplyittothewaytheyteach(OECD,2008:seealsoBlinandMunro,2008;Zang,2009).AccordingtotheOECD(2008)threereasonsemergeasthemostsalientforexplainingthisparadox:
• Theabsenceofappropriateincentivestousetechnologyintheclassroomand,moregenerally,gettinginvolvedinanyinnovationregardingteaching.
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• Thedominantcultureintheteachingprofessionisoneofappliedpractice,whichdoesnotrelyverymuchonresearch‐basedevidencetoidentifygoodteachingmethodologiesandstrategies.
• Theobservationthatacademicteacherslackthevisionandthepersonalexperienceofwhatatechnology‐enhancedteachingcouldlooklike.
Thelasttworeasonssuggestthatinitialteachertraininghastoberevisedandthatthereneedstobeanoverallchangeinthesocialandculturalcontextsurroundingteachingpractices.
StrategiesforsupportingtheuseoftechnologiesTheprevioussectionspaintapictureofavibrantlandscapeofresearchactivitiesanddevelopments,ofclustersofcommunitiesaggregatingaroundcommoninterestsandthemes.Onewouldassumethatcollectivelytheseactivitiesshouldhaveasignificantimpactonpractice,buttheydonot.Thesecommunitiessitalongsideactualteachingpracticesandrarelyinformthemtoanygreatextent.Theredoesnotyetappeartobeanevidence‐basedethostolearningandteachingpractice.However,initiativessuchastheHigherEducationAcademy‐fundedEvidenceNet5areattemptingtochangethisandsiteslikeCloudworks,whicharespecificallyharnessingWeb2.0approachestoencourageeducationaldebate,areindicatorsthatthingsarebeginningtochange.
BarrierstouptakeandlackofimpactDespitethepotentialapplicationoftechnologiesinaneducationalcontext,theirusealsoraisessomefundamentalparadoxes(SeeAppendix4‘Paradoxescreatedbythenetworkedanddigital’foramoredetaileddiscussion).SurveysontheuseofWeb2.0withineducationgiveanindicationofthelevelofuptake(seeforexampletheJISCIpsosMORIpolls,2008;theannualECARsurveys;alsoEducationNetworkAustralia,2008;LamandRitzen,2008).Collectivelytheysuggestthatuptakeisoccurring,butthatitisnotyetextensiveacrossallaspectsoflearningandteachingprovision.Itisimportanttocautionagainstover‐generalisationsfromthesesurveysintermsofextrapolatingtheuptakeofboth‘formal’and‘informal’Web2.0toolsasitisdifficulttodrawcomparativeconclusionssystematicallyfromsurveysthatusedifferentresearchinstruments.
InarecentpaperConoleconsidersthebarrierstouptakeoftechnologies,drawingonthebroaderliteratureonresistancetochangeandinnovation(Conole2010)(SeeAppendix5‘FactorsinfluencingthelackofuptakeofWeb2.0inHigherEducation’andAppendix6‘Barrierstochange’).Conoleidentifiesthefollowingascommonlycitedreasonsforlackofadoption:
‘Ihaven’tgottime’,‘Myresearchismoreimportant’,‘What’sinitforme?’,‘Whereismyreward?’,‘Idon’thavetheskillstodothis’,and‘Idon’tbelieveinthis,itwon’twork’.Commonresistancestrategiesincludesayingyes(anddoingnothing)orunderminingtheinitiativeand/orthepeopleinvolved.Depressinglyclassicmistakesarerepeatedoverandoveragain:anoveremphasisonthe
5http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/evidencenet
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technologiesandnotthepeopleandprocesses;fundingforthetechnologydevelopmentsbutnotuseandsupport.
Inadditiontothislist,therearealsobarriersaroundthechangingnatureofprivacyandownershipintechnologicalenvironments.Thereisalackofunderstandingoftheimplicationsofadoptingmoreopenapproachesandindeednegativeattitudesandfearofopenness.Identificationandunderstandingofthebarrierstobroaderuptakeisessentialsothatstrategiescanbedevisedtoovercomethem.Greenhowetal.(2009a)discussthreeideasthatillustratethetensionsbetweenthepotentialadvantagesofweb‐enabledpracticesandthechallengesofimplementation:a)developingteachers’professionalscholarshipandpractice;b)buildingcapacitiesforqualityscholarship,andc)bridgingdisciplinarydivides.Strategiestoovercometheseissueswillneedtoincludemechanismsforgivingteacherstimetoexperimentwithnewtechnologies,supportandguidancetoenablethemtodevelopthenewskillsneededtoembracethesenewtechnologiesandashiftinthinkingtowardsmorescholarlyandreflectiveapproachestoteaching.
ToexplorethisinalittlemoredepthsomeexamplesofdifferentapproachesthatcanbeadoptedtoenablethisshiftinthinkingaredescribedinAppendix7(‘Differentapproachestoshiftingthinkingandpromotingchange’).Thefirstisaroundapplicationofideasfromdesign‐basedresearchasamechanismforengagingteachersinmorereflectivepractice.Thesecondfocusesonwaysinwhichchangesinpracticearoundtheuseoftechnologiescanbeachieved.
Digital,networkedandmulti‐literaciesNewtechnologiesarebothchallengingexistingteacherpracticeandrequiringnewskillsandwaysofthinking.LankshearandKnobelprovideausefulsummaryofthewayinwhichtheterm‘digitalliteracies’isbeingused(LankshearandKnobel,2006).Exactdefinitionsaroundthetermdigitalliteraciesvary;however,Gilster’sdefinitionofdigialliteracies,whichpointsto‘theabilitytounderstandanduseinformationinmultipleformatsfromawidevarietyofsourceswhenitispresentedviacomputers’,isinclusiveofsomethesedefinitions(Gilster,citedinLanksearandKnoble,2006;seealsoKress,2003).
Literacynowhastobestretchedtoencompassotherformsofrepresentationalfluencythanthoseassociatedwiththeprintedword.‘Digitalandnetworkedliteracies’aremuchmorethansimplybeingaboutunderstandinginformationavailableinadigitalcontext.Theyarealsoaboutskillsofinterpretationofmultiplerepresentations,theabilitytodevelopaholisticandinterconnectedperspectiveandtounderstandhowtobepartofandinteractwithawiderparticipatorycommunity.AslearnersengagewithdigitalartefactsthroughWeb2.0,sothecurriculummustaddressthechallengeofdevelopingtheirconfidencewithnewliteraciesandtheirincreasedpotentialforcreativity.Goodfellowsummarisesthecomplexityofthefieldbyarguingthatliteraciesaremulti‐faceted…
…withstrandsandtribeslike:multiliteracies,situatedliteracies,newliteracystudies,academicliteracies,digitalliteracies,etc.etc.(Seebroaderdiscussion,ofwhichthisispart,athttp://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2669).
Jenkinsetal.(2006)arguethattherearetwelveskillsneededforfullengagementintoday'sparticipatoryculture:
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• Play‐thecapacitytoexperimentwithone’ssurroundingsasaformofproblem‐solving • Performance‐theabilitytoadoptalternativeidentitiesforthepurposeof
improvisationanddiscovery • Simulation‐theabilitytointerpretandconstructdynamicmodelsofreal‐world
processes • Appropriation‐theabilitytomeaningfullysampleandremixmediacontent • Multitasking‐theabilitytoscanone’senvironmentandshiftfocusasneededtosalient
details • DistributedCognition‐theabilitytointeractmeaningfullywithtoolsthatexpand
mentalcapacities • CollectiveIntelligence‐theabilitytopoolknowledgeandcomparenoteswithothers
towardacommongoal • Judgment‐theabilitytoevaluatethereliabilityandcredibilityofdifferentinformation
sources • TransmediaNavigation‐theabilitytofollowtheflowofstoriesandinformationacross
multiplemodalities • Networking‐theabilitytosearchfor,synthesize,anddisseminateinformation • Negotiation‐theabilitytotravelacrossdiversecommunities,discerningand
respectingmultipleperspectives,andgraspingandfollowingalternativenorms • Visualization‐theabilitytointerpretandcreatedatarepresentationsforthepurposes
ofexpressingideas,findingpatterns,andidentifyingtrends(Jenkinsetal.,2006:np.)
Thislistshowsthemultifacetednatureofdigitalliteracies.Jenkinsetal.(2006)defineparticipatorycultureasbeingaboutinvolvementandparticipation,aboutbeingabletocreateandshareworkandaboutpeermentorshipandsupport.Theygoontosuggestthatthishasimmensepotentialeducationally;providingopportunitiesforpeer‐to‐peerlearning,diverseculturalexpression,skillsdevelopmentacrossdifferentcontextsandachangingattitudetothenotionsofopenness,ownership,intellectualproperty.
Manyfactorsmayspecificallyinfluencetheuseofresources,andengagementwithsocialmedia,includingculturalperceptionsregarding‘learning’and‘information’;perceptionsregardingthevalueofwrittenresourcesandevaluationofinformation,butalsocompetencesinusingmediaandcomputersortocriticallyreflectoninformationresources.Usesmayalsobeshapedbyotheractivitiesconductedonline–expectationsregardinginteractivity,hypertext,‘Internetliteracy’developedacrossonlinesitesandservicesand,possibly,conventionsregardingauthorship,citationandplagiarism(Livingstone,2008,MetzerandFlanagin,2008;RiehandHilligoss,2008).Alsoimportantarethetensionsassociatedwiththeblurringboundariesbetweenproductionanduse,ownershipandauthorship,expertauthorityandamateurcreativity,opennessandcompleteness,aswellasformalandinformallearning(e.g.Jamesetal,2008;McPherson,2008).
Basedonanextensivereviewoftheliterature,Beethametal.(2009)provideacomprehensiveframeworkoftypesofliteraciesrelatingtosocialandsituatedpractices(includingmeaningmakingandsituatedknowledge);technologicalandmedialiteracies(includingmultimodalskills,informationandcriticalliteracy);andscaffoldedandmeta‐cognitiveliteracies(includingthenewpedagogiesassociatedwithmediatedlearning).Such
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frameworkscanbeappliednotonlytoyounglearners,buttoallthatareinvolvedinthelearningprocessandmediaeducation.Astheynote:
Thesocialandeconomicagendasofupskillingmoreofthepopulation,wideningparticipation,andsupportinglifelonglearning,meanthatuniversityandcollegelearnersaremorediversethaneverbefore,withawiderrangeofeducationalandICTexperience.Sinceliteracyprovisionideallystartswithlearners'existingpracticesandconceptions,itneedstobecomemorewide‐ranging,moreflexible,andmorepro‐active.Italsoneedstorecognisethattheprocessofdevelopmentwillbeincremental,andchallenging.Learnersneedscaffolding,directionandmodellinginthefirstinstance,followedbypracticeandpersonalisation,givingwaytounstructuredtasksthroughwhichtheycanlearntochoosestrategiesandtechnologiestosuitdifferentsituationsandtheirownpreferredwaysofworking.(Beethametal,2009:67)
SuccessfactorsandstrategiesforchangeStrategiesforencouraginggreateruseoftechnologiesandsharingofresourcesandgoodpracticehaverangedfromsimplymakingteachingresourcesavailable(suchaslearningobjectsandOpenEducationalResources,orOERs)throughtomorespecificcasestudiesdescribingpracticeorcommunity‐basedsupportmechanismsandnetworks.Inadditionanumberofinitiativeshaveattemptedtopromotingsharingandcommunitybuildingamongstteachers;forexample,theinitiativeClassroom2.06andtheInternationalSocietyforTechnologyinEducationinEducationIslandinSecondLife.Theseinitiativesaregivingusinsightsintowhatmethodsworkintermsofsupportingbettersharingofgoodpracticesandmechanismsforfosteringtransformationinteachingpractice.Howevertheimpactofsuchworksofarissmall,andthesecommunitiesarenotwithoutdesignflawsorchallenges(seeEvansetal.,2008citedinGreehowetal.,2009b:281).Inaddition,thereareanumberofrelatedprofessionalanddisciplinespecificnetworksthathavearoleinpromotingandsupportinggoodteachingpractices(andhencealsoeffectiveuseoftechnologies).TheseincludethenowwellestablishedHigherEducationAcademysubjectcentrenetwork7,HEFCE'sCentresofExcellenceforTeachingandLearning8andthemorerecentlyestablishedHigherEducationAcademyEvidenceNet9.Despiteallthis,theimpactonactualpracticeispoor.Takencollectively,theimpactofthenowlargebodyoffreeresourcesandoutputsandfindingsfromprojectsinnovatingintheuseoftechnologyislow.ThereisstillnoclearevidencethattherehasbeenasubstantialchangeinteachingmethodsnoristhereevidencethattherehasbeenasubstantialincreaseintheuseoftechnologiesandOER.
ThereisastrongcollectivevoicethatarguesthatsocialmediaandWeb2.0toolscouldenableuniversitiesto‘reinvent’themselves.ThisencompassesashiftinthinkingaboutICTsolelyintermsoftheirrepresentationalcapabilities(i.e.,theirabilitytorepresentcommoditisedinformationaldeliverymodesofhighereducation)toavisionofthemfacilitatingmorediscursive,relationalandcollaborativeapproachestolearning(seePedro,2003;Selwyn,2007:91;FranklinandvanHarmelen,2007;Armstrongetal.,2008;Dalsgaard,2008;Redecker,2009).Apartfromitsroleinfacilitatingknowledgetransferand6Classroom2.0http://www.classroom.2.0.com;InternationalSocietyforTechnologyinEducationinEducationIslandinSecondLife:www.iste.org/secondlife7http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/subjectcentres8http://www.hefce.ac.uk/learning/tinits/cetl/9http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/evidencenet
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collaborativeactivities,Web2.0isoftenpresentedasalsohavingthepotentialtofacilitateinnovationsinprofessionaldevelopment,teachertrainingandteachingpractices,aswellasimprovementsinthequalityofstudentlearningandexperiences.
Evidenceofaconcertedeffortwithininstitutionstosystematicembeddingoftechnologiesanditsuseforlearningandteaching,canbetracedbacktotheearlytomid2000s.Institutionsbegantohavemoreexplicitpoliciesonhowtechnologieswerebeingusedtosupporttheircoreactivities.Websitesweredevelopedandusedexplicitlyformarketingpurposesandformaintainingalumnirelations.VLEswereintroducedtosupportthedeliveryofonlineteachingandpresentationofmaterials.ThepopularisationofWeb2.0technologiesfrom2005begantoextendtheinformation‐focuseduseofthetechnologiesandenabledtheemergenceofinformalcommunitiesandcommunicationalongsidethe‘formalprovision’withininstitutions(FranklinandvanHarmelen,2007;Ala‐Mutkaetal.,2009).Arangeofe‐learninginitiativeswasfundedwhichprovidemechanismstoexperimentwiththesenewtechnologies.Theserangedfromsmall‐scaleprojectsfocusingonlocalpractice(forexampleexplorationofaparticulartoolinaparticularteachingpractice),throughmoreinstitutionallyfocusedinitiatives(forexampletheJISC’sManagedLearningEnvironmentprogramme)throughtointernationalcollaborations(suchastheNSF/JISCdigitallibraryprogrammeandtheHewlett‐fundedOERinitiatives).Collectivelythesecanbeseenasprimarilybottom‐up,oftendrivenbyindividualinterests,althoughfundingbodiesdoprovideasteerandvisionfortheoverallfocusanddirectionofinnovations(e.g.JISC,2009;OECD,2009;seealsoArmstrongetal.,2008:15).ForexampleintheUK,severale‐learninginitiativeshavebeenalignedtotheHEFCEe‐learningstrategy(HEFCE,2009).JISC’sprogrammeofactivitieshasdirectlyderivedfromandiscloselyalignedtoHEFCE’se‐learningstrategy(seeJISC,2009b).
Table1providesasummaryofsomeofthestrategiesforchangesthathavebeenadopted.Evidencefromtheliteraturegivesanindicatorofthefactorsforsuccess:
• Scaffoldingandguidancetoteachers.Amongstthemostimportantfactorsistheneedtoensurethatthereisappropriate‘scaffolding’andsupportofhowWeb2.0toolsareembeddedincourses.Thisincludesguidanceandsupportonthedesignofcourses,thenatureofactivitiesandtheroleoftheteacher. Itrequiresteacherstorethinktheirpositionfromoneofexperttofacilitator.
• Strategicalignment.Anotherareaofimportanceisensuringthatappropriatestrategiesareinplacetosupportthisshift.
• Understandingthestudentexperience.Carefulconsiderationofthestudentperspectiveisneeded,particularconsiderationofaffectiveissues.Whatarethekeyfactorsthatmotivatestudents,thatwillensuretheirengagement?
• Appropriatesupportstructures.Althoughcloselyalignedtoconsiderationsaroundateacher’sroleandthedesignofthecourse,theneedforeffectivesupportstructurescannotbeunderestimated.Thisinvolvesensuringthataccesstomaterialsiseasy,thatthestructureandroleoftheonlineenvironmentisclearandhavinginplacecontingencyplansifthereareproblems.
• Staffincentivesandrewards.Theprojectsthathavebeenmostsuccessfularethosewherecarefulconsiderationhasbeengiventostaffmotivation.Ensuringthatstaffareawareofthevisionofwhythesenewtechnologiesarebeingintroducedandgetting
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themonboardiskey.Theyneedtofeelasenseofownershipandcontroloftheirownteachingpractice.
• Sharingofgoodpractice.Finallyifwearetobuildcollectivelyonexperiences,mechanismsareneedtosharegoodpracticeandenableteacherstoadoptmorescholarlyapproaches.
Table1:Summaryofdifferentstrategiesforchange
Nationallevels BroadgovernmentstrategiesthatincludetheuseofWeb2.0andprovideincentivestodeliverintegratedservices(e.g.forstudentretention,innovationinteachingandlearningsuchastheAustraliaLearningPerformanceFund(DEEWR,2008)orinvestmentintoinfrastructureandtraining.
HEfundingagenciesandpolicymakerswhocanprovidedriversforinstitutionsthroughspecificmandates,someofwhichinvolvetheadoptionofsocialmedia(intheUK,JISCharnessingtechnologyforlearningprogrammes/CETISOERprogramme;HEA[inparticularEvidenceNetandELESIGNing].
Centralinvestmentinagenciesthatpromote–oftenthroughfunding–thedevelopmentofinnovationsthroughresearchprojects,deliverytools,resourcesandinfrastructureforcommunitiesofpractice(Australia/Edna;US(LibraryofCongress;NSF;TheLearningFederation).
Intergovernmentalagenciesandnonprofitfundingagencies
IntegratedpoliciesandfundingstrategiestosupportresearchonthewaysinwhichICTsarechangingthewaysthatpeoplelearn,playorparticipationincivicactivities(e.g.UNESCOIIEP;OECDCERI;OECD’sEducationManagementandInfrastructureDivision(DirectorateforEducation).AlsointermsofpromotinginnovationandcollaborationforthedevelopmentofdigitalliteracycurriculaandOpenEducationResources(OERs).Projectsfocusingonunderstandingtheimpactofwidespreaduseofdigitalmediainyouthlearning(seeforexample,MacArthur;Carnegie,Hewlett;NSF,EDUCAUSE,NationalInstituteforTechnologyandLiberalEducation(NITLE)intheUS;ESRC,EPSCR,AHRC,BECTAintheUK).
Institutionalstrategies
Institutionalstrategicplansandsupport:SomeHEinstitutionsaredevelopingmoreintegratedstrategiesthroughadministrative,marketingandpedagogicalmandates(forexampleWarwick,Edinburgh,OpenUniversityintheUK)andformoreeffectiveuseofWeb2.0.Regulatory,legal,securityandethicalfactorsaredrivingconcerns.Positiveinstitutionaldriversappeartobemoreprominentin:distancelearningandlife‐longlearningcontexts.
Professionalmotivations
(academic/administrator)
Thereisnowasignificantbodyofevidencearoundtechnologyinterventions.Theseprojectsareprovidingrichdataonthebarriersandenablerstosuccessfulintegrationoftechnologies;aswellasdataontheattitudesofstaffandwiderpatternsoftechnologicaladoption.Aspectrumofusersisemerging(e.g.earlyadopters;‘digitalresidents’,etc.).Explorationoftheopportunitiesforcommunication,sharingandcollaborationacrossbordersoftenfitswithspecificpedagogicalorcommunicationstrategies.Popularpatternsofmotivationinclude:a)sustainableresourcesbeyondcourse/degreeduration(e.g.alumnirelations;studentrecruitment;lifelonglearningcommitments);b)professionaldrivestoenhanceteachingpractices;andc)extensiontonewformsofknowledgeande‐scholarship.
Curricularneedsandelearning
Technologyuptakeanduseisdifferentindifferentsubject.Forexamplemedia,computerscienceandinformationsciencecoursesappeartobemoreopentoadoptingWeb2.0practices.Thefunctionalitiesoftoolsemployed,theirsuitabilityfor
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chosentasksandthelearners’familiarityand/oracceptanceofthesetoolswithinthecurriculumarekeyinterrelateddriversforeffectiveuse.Students’positiveattitudestosocialcomputingisnotonlydependentonfamiliarity[thoughdifferencesintypesofusesareevidentincountriesOECDcountries],butalsouponperceptionssurroundingthedegreeofautonomyandtheabilitytoappropriateorpersonalizetoolstospecificneeds.E‐collaborationandopencommunication/publicationisseenasakeyskillforprofessionaldevelopmentandconductwithinHEsectors.
Scaffoldedpedagogicalapproachesandfosteringpedagogicalinnovation
ConstructivismandconnectivismarethetwopedagogicalapproachesthatalignmostcloselywithWeb2.0practice.Thefocusisonenhancingthestudentexperienceandmaximisingthepotentialrecreationalorcreativeuses.Networkedinteractionliteraciesandawarenessofmediatedlearningstructuresandhierarchiesarealsoimportant.
ContextualexamplesTheprevioussectionsofferedperspectivesonthekeytheoreticalandempiricaldimensionsthatemergefromevidence.Inthissectionwefocusonspecificcasestudiesfromexistingpracticesthathighlighttheseaspectsinparticularcontexts.Ouroverallimpressionfromthecasestudiesisthatthereisrelativelylittlereportingofactuallearningprocesses,orindeedteachingpractices.Occasionallyacomparisonpointhelpsevaluatetheimpactofinterventionsrelativetoalternativelearningstructures,butthisisrare.Peer‐reviewedjournalandconferencepapersofferevaluativereportsandare,occasionally,richonempiricaldetail,buttherearemanyquestionsthatneedtobeaskedregardingthelikelyconditionsthatcontributedtosuccessintheseareas.Amultitudeofblogsandreflexiveaccountsfromacademicteachersofferrichperspectives,butmoresystematiccontentanalysisisrequired.Thesocialnetworkingsiteforlearningandteaching,Cloudworks,hasalsogeneratedarichbodyofknowledgeonrelevantperspectivesthroughsolicitationofexperiencesinthefield.
Weincludecasestudiesthataddresssomeofthewaysinwhichlearningandteachingpracticeshavebeenimproved.Wehavelookedforevidenceoftheextendtowhichlearning2.0practicesarepresent:participatorylearning,co‐creationoflearningartefacts,peercritiqueleadingtoiterativeindividual‘improvement’andgroupunderstanding.Wearealsointerestedinseeingtheextenttowhichthisisinfluencingtheteacher’spractice:isthereevidencethattheyareadoptingdifferentrolesinthelearningprocess,suchasbecomingco‐learners?WealsowanttoseewherethereisevidencethatWeb2.0approachesarebeingusedtofosterandpromoteteachingscholarshipandwherethereareexamplesofteachersaslearningcommunities,i.e.inwhatwaysareWeb2.0technologiesbeinguseda)forreflectivepracticesandinteractionwithlearners;b)aspartofengagementinwidercommunitiesofpractitionersengaginginscholarlypracticearoundtheirteaching.Thestudiesaregroupedintothreebroadcategories:i)blogs,wikisandsocialtagging,ii)socialnetworkingandmicrobloggingandiii)immersiveworldsandsecondlife.Appendix8focusesonOpenEducationalResources(OER).AdetaileddiscussionisprovidedtherewithrespecttoOER,partlybecausepracticesaroundOERwithintheCloudworkssocialnetworkingsiteisthemainfocusofCaseStudy2forthe‘PearlsintheClouds’project.
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Finally,Appendix9(‘IssuesraisedbytheintroductionofWeb2.0technologies’)providesadiscussionofanddetailedempiricalinsightintosomeofthetensionsthatariseasaresultoftheintroductionofWeb2.0technologiesandinparticular,theirimpactonorganisationalstructuresandprocesses,aswellasonteachers’andlearners’individualroles,identitiesandperceptions.
Blogs,wikisandsocialtaggingTheexamplesfromtheliteratureprovidedhereillustrateprojectswhereblogsandwikishavebeenintegratedintocurriculardesign.Theyillustratearangeofpedagogicapproachesandgiveanindicationofstudentandteacherperceptionsandattitudestowardsusingthesetypesofsites.
Blogshaveevolvedfromtheconceptofa‘personalhomepage’andhencehavebeenreferredtoaspersonalpublishingspaces.Blogshavealsobeenlabelledreflexivediariesorlearningjournals;bothnamesemphasisethepersonal,chronologicalreflectiveelementofsharingideas.AsDownesnotes:‘theynowformonepartinamuchmorediverselandscape’[ofWeb2.0content].Allegiancestoparticulartechnologiesshiftovertimeandsomepeoplewhoformerlywroteblogs,nowusesocialnetworkingsitessuchasMySpaceorFacebookinstead.Othersuse‘microblogging'servicessuchasTwitter.Textualblogshaveevolvedintoothermediaforms,sothatitispossiblenowtohavebothaudioblogs(alsoknownas‘podcasts’)andvideoblogs(‘vlogs').Blogsareoftenlinkedtoarangeofmultimediarepositoryservices(suchasFlickrforphotos,Deviantartforartwork,YouTubeforvideosandSlideShareforslideshowsordocumentfiles).Itisalsopossibletouseembedfunctionswithmanyofthesesothattheyappearwithinthecontextofanindividualblogposting.Blogshavebeenusedforavarietyofeducationalpurposes,forexampleasplatformsforcourseannouncements,asmechanismstogatherorgeneratefeedbackandasacollectivepeersupportvehicleamongdifferentgroups(ofteachers,researchersand/orstudents).Theycanbeusedasamotivationaltooltoengagediscussionsinblendedlearningcontexts.Alternativelytheycanoffermorescaffoldedapproachestodistributedresearch.Finally,theycanbeusedasamechanismforaggregatingresources,i.e.asaformofe‐portfolioforuseeitherwithinformalcoursesoraspartofprofessionaldevelopment.InaBeCTAreviewof'Web2.0practicesineducation'Crooketal.(2008)statedthatthecleararticulationofthepurposesofblogswithineducationalcontextsandappropriateintegrationwithinformalassessmentshouldbeseenasbothafundamentalandimportantmotivationaltool.
Downes(2010)hasidentifiednearlyfiftypedagogicalusesofblogsinformallearning,themajorityofwhichcanbeorhavebeenusedwithinhighereducationcourses.Commonlycitedadvantagesofblogsineducationemphasisethecommunicative,motivationalandparticipatorybenefits(Farmeretal.,2008;Kim,2008).Somehighlightthefactthatblogsenableindividuallearnerstoexpresstheiruniqueauthorialvoicesandidentity(Burgess,2006;EllisonandWu,2008)andalsothattheycanencourageasenseofresponsibilityandpride(Farmeretal.,2008).Othersforegroundthemeaningfulinteractionswithothersandarguethatpeercritiquingcanfosterbothpsychosocialneedsandthedevelopmentofcriticalliteracyandcivicengagementskills.Over400,000educationalblogsarehostedby
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edublogs10alone.Teachershavebeenusingthemtosupportstudentlearningandalsoasavehicletoreflectontheirownpracticesinceabout2004(Downes,2004).
TheintegrationofbloggingandsocialnetworkingisevidentinsitessuchasNing11andElgg12.Thiskindofintegration,alongsidewiththeemergenceofmicroblogging,hasshiftedtheroleofblogsfromself‐publishingandrepresentationtowardssharing,peerreviewingandcollaborating.Thepurposeandfocusofeducationalblogsvaries.Someareonlyopenwithinacoursecohort,whilstothersmaybeviewablebyanyone.Someformanintegralpartofacourse,beingaformalpartofcourseactivitiesoractuallyformingpartoftheassessableoutput.Inothercasestheyareoptional.Suchvariedpracticesintermsofthedegreeofcurricularintegrationorassessmentgeneratetensionsregardingtherepresentationofhybrididentities,trustandauthorship(Hemmieetal.,2009).Davis(2007:np)arguesthatblogs:
aremorethanatoolforregularorirregularwritingtasks,andforthatreasonteachersneedtorememberthatbloggingissuigeneris[uniqueinitscharacteristics]–notonlinediary,nore‐portfolio,noronlinenewspaper,nore‐exercisebook,thoughitcanbeusedinanyofthoseways–andassertthemannerinwhichtheyexpecttheblogtobeused.
Similarly,thepotentialofwikisforfacilitatingcooperativelearninginaconstructivistenvironmentandforfosteringcommunitiesofpracticehasbeenargued.Wikisareconsideredtobeidealtoolsforcollaborativewritingandforscaffoldinggroupprojects.Examplesofuseincludeusingwikisasameansofcreatingcollectivestudyguidesandtextbooks,asamechanismforcreatingannotatedreadinglistsorsimplyascollective,subjectspecificrepositories.Anumberofstudiesdemonstrateinterestingempiricalfindingspointingtoanumberofobservablebenefits.Forexample,fora)fosteringactivelearning(AnsonandMiller‐Cochran,2009;ParkerandChao,2007;Augar,RaitmanandZhao,2004)b)facilitatingcreativityandsocialization(BrunsandHumphreys,2007)orc)asmechanismstofosterthedevelopmentofhigherordercognitiveskills.Theycanenablestudentstobecomeco‐creatorsofcoursecontentanddesign.Socialdimensionsofcooperation,suchastrustandconsensus,governanceandcontrolaredeemedimportantinself‐organisingcommunities,suchasWikipedia.Successfulimplementationofwikisinaneducationalcontextalsorequiresacleararticulationofthepurposeofthewikiandclearexplanationofitsproposedbenefitforlearners.Carefullyconstructedtutormoderationandguidanceisalsooftenneeded,particularlyatthestart,beforestudents’gainasenseofcontrol,ownershipofthespaceandacollectivesenseofcommunity(seeforexampleAnsonetal.,2009;Augaretal.,2004;Beachetal.,2008;Bruns,2008;Notari,2006).
Dimensionsofreflexivityandcollaborationarealsoattachedtosocialtaggingandbookmarking,collectivelyknownasfolksonomies.Folksonomiesarewordsormeaningsthatusersgenerateandthenattachtoparticularcontent.Theycanbecontrastedwithmorecontrolledpre‐definedvocabularies,whichunderpinnedmanyweb1.0repositoriesanddigitallibraries.Differentsocialbookmarkingsitesencouragedifferentuses:somesites
10www.edublogs.org11www.ning.com 12 http://elgg.org/
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encouragemoreplayfulandpersonaltagging(forexampleFlickrthephotographicrepositorysite),whilstothersaffordamoredeliberatestyleoftaggingwithaveryclearideaofaspecificaudience(suchasthebibliographicandacademicsiteslikeConnoteaorCiteULike).
Evidencefromformaleducationalusesprovidesexamplesofteachersinvitingstudentstorate,comment,contributeand/orbuildupcollectionsofresourcesbysharingpersonalcollectionsandalsoexamplesofwherestudentareencouragedtofiltercollaborativelythroughRSSfeedsinblogsandpersonale‐portfolios(seeFranklinandvanHarmelen,2007;Vuorikari,2007).
Hemmietal.(2009)offerempiricalinsightsfromstudentandteacheruseofWeb2.0technologiesinthreeformaldegreeprogrammesspanningundergraduateandpostgraduatelevelsintwolargeScottishuniversities.Theseprogrammesincludedfull‐timeundergraduatestudentsinDivinityandDesignEngineeringandpart‐timepostgraduatedistancelearnersatMasterslevel.Abroadlyvirtualethnographicapproachwastaken,inwhichtheresearchersontheprojectwereimmersedintheday‐to‐dayonlineandoff‐lineinteractionsoflearners.Dataweredrawnfromstudentweblogs,wikisandcoursediscussionboardsgeneratedthroughinterviewswithstudentsandteachers.TheEngineeringDesigncourseprovidedexamplesofvisuallyrichwikiteachingandlearningpracticeswithundergraduatestudents.TheDivinitycourseincludedtheuseofblogstoincreaseparticipatorycontributionsasapromptforclassroomdiscussionwithundergraduates.ThetworesidentialcourseswerebasedonablendedlearningmodelandtheMastersprogrammeonelearningcoveredamoreextensiveuseofWeb2.0technologies,includingfacebook,bibsonomies,SecondLife,wikis,andblogs.Theauthorsconsideredthepedagogicalappropriationsbybothlearnersandteachers.Theythenfocusedona)students'presentationoftheselfandidentityandnegotiationofself‐hoodthroughblogsandb)explorationoftheissuesaroundanonymity,etiquetteandgroupresponsibility,whicharoseasaresultofuseofblogandwikispaces.Theyalsoraiseimportantquestionsregardingassessmentandprivacy.
TwitterAsurveyconductedbyFacultyFocus(2009)intheUS,revealedthatlessthanhalfofthe2,000teacherssurveyedhadeverusedTwitter(44.6%),andofthe30.7%thatclaimedtobeactiveusers,onlyhalfhaveuseditasclassroomtool,ortocommunicatewithstudents.DespitethislowuptakeanumberofcommentatorsintheblogospherewriteaboutitspotentialuseinHE(seeGordon,2009;Hart,2009;Wheeler,2009).Earlypilotsontheuseofthistooloffervaluableinsightsintothewaysinwhichitcanbeintegratedintomorecoherentpedagogicalmodels.Someeducatorshaveuseditasanadditionalbroadcast,announcementordistributionavenueforsharingresources.Inasensethisisevidenceoftheuseofthetooltopromoteacontent‐orteacher‐centricapproach,nonethelessitdoesprovideamarkerforitsmoreextensiveandbroaderusewithincourses(Ramsden,2009).
Themostcommontypesofusesoftwitterineducationthathavebeenreportedthusfarinclude:• Useasabroadcastmedium.Opinionsharinganddistributionordispersalof
information,self‐promotionandcampaigning,publicrelationsandmarketing
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• Opinionsharingaboutevents,sharingofideas,informationandcommentary• Backchannelsatconferencesorevents(audiencechannels,serendipity/typesofreview
andreflection)• Crowd‐sourcingofnewsandevidencefromtheground• Amechanismforsurveyingandgatheringopinions.
Althoughfewempiricallygroundedstudieshavebeendocumentedsofar,severalsmall‐scaleevaluativestudiesofferinterestinginsights.McNeill(2009)hascollatedaninterestingcohortofsuchstudies:
DrRankinhasusedTwitterasameansofencouraginggreaterstudentparticipationinlarge‐groupclassesofaround90students.Herintentionwastopullmorestudentsintoaclassdiscussionwhich[she]wouldn'tordinarilybeabletodowiththatmanypeople.(McNeil,2009:10).
Reflectionsfromthiscasesupportclaimsthat,inspiteoftheissueofitbeinganaddedbackground‘noise’andthatasaninterfaceitisnotreallyconducivetoconversationaluse,short,dyadicexchangesoccurwithmultipleparticipantsthatcanbesurprisinglycoherent(HoneycuttandHerring2009).AsMcNeill(2009:10)reports:
Tweetedcommentsandquestionsalsowentsomeway,accordingtothestudentsfeatured,inmilitatingagainstsomeofthefactorsthatinhibitstudentparticipationinlarge‐groupdiscussion,namely'feedbacklag',orthesuppressionofquestionsduetothepaceofthelecture,'studentapprehension',orthefearofspeakingduetothesizeorclimateoftheclassandthe'single‐speakerparadigm'orassumptionthatonlyoneperson(usuallythelecturer)speaks(Andersonetal.2003).
Twitterhasalsobeenusedtoenhancesocialpresence.AcasestudyfromtheUniversityofColoradoDenverfocusesontheuseofTwitterinamoduleonaninstructionaldesignandtechnologycourse(DunlapandLowenthal2009).TheauthorsencouragedtheirstudentstouseTwitterinavarietyofways:topostquestionsandqueriestooneanotherortothecourseteam,tosendstudent‐to‐studentdirectmessages,totweetcommentsonrelevantnewsevents,toshareresources,toreportsonconferencesattended,tolinktostudentblogpostingsandtoexchangepersonalinformation.TheauthorsclaimthattheuseofTwittercanenhancestudents'perceptionofasenseof'socialpresence',animportantqualitythathelpspromotestudentinvolvement,commitmentandretention.TheyconcludethatTwitterisgoodforsharing,collaboration,brainstorming,problemsolving,andcreatingwithinthecontextofmoment‐to‐momentexperiences(DunlapandLowenthal2009).ThiscasestudyillustratessomethingoftheflexibilityofTwittertoenablearangeofinteractionsfromprivatemessagesbetweenpeers,tolightweightTwitter‐basedtutorials,or'twittorials'thatengagethewholecohort.TheevaluationalsosupportsthesocialnetworkingdimensionofTwitter,withstudentsclearlycomfortablewiththevarietiesofinformationexchangeandtheheightenedperceptionofbelongingandofsocialconnectiontobothteachingstaffandfellowstudents.
BradshowreportsontheuseofTwitterinjournalismcourses(Bradshow,2008).Hedescribesthedifficultyofengagingstudentswhohavenotusedsocialmediabefore.PartofhisaspirationwastoexposestudentstoTwitterasameansofhelpingthemseetheimplicationsofnewtechnologiesforthejournalismprofession.Hearguesthatteachingstudentsaboutthetools,throughthetools,willhelpthemhaveabetterunderstandingofthebroaderimplicationsofthesetechnologiesforjournalism.
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WhilstthereareevidentchallengessurroundingtheuseofTwitter,thereisalsobroadconsensusintheliteraturethatitcanfacilitatenewformsofengagementandgivestudentsaccesstoawideraudienceofparticipation.ThereisanecdotalevidencewhereuseofTwitterhasledtoincreasedmotivationamongststudentsandthereisagenuineexcitementformanyofitsincreasingpotentialineducation.However,oneimportantquestiontoconsideriswhethertheinterestinandrhetoricaroundTwitterisjustapassingfad.Whathappenswhenthenoveltyhaswornoff?DiscussionsonCloudworkssuggestthatthisisnotthecase.Infact,discussionssurroundingitsuseinacademiccontextsandwithintheHEcurriculasparkedoffseveraltimes,andcommentswereratherinsightful.The‘Usingtwitterwithstudents’cloudinCloudworks13aggregatedavarietyofcommentsandreferencesaroundtheuseofTwitterincoursesandtosupportdifferentformsoflearning.Someexamplesweregivenofembryonicexperimentationwiththetool.Anumberofpositiveeffectsforlearningwerecited,butlowlevelsofengagementwerealsoraisedasanissue.Therealsoappeartobeanumberofchallengesingettingawholeclassofactiveusers.Oneparticipantinthediscussionshasmixedviewsonitsvalue:
'Whilst twitter usage is high amongst the 'converted', I wonder how many actually use it withinlearningandteaching.Myusehasvariedquiteabit(seeblogposthttp://bit.ly/37ASy2),andIthinktherecouldbeconsiderablechallengesingettingawholeclassofactiveusers‐anythingelsewouldsurelyraisequestionsaroundequalityofexperiences'.
Otherchallengesraisedincludewhatconstitutesanappropriate‘styleofcommunication’inTwitter;issuesaroundhowitcanbeintegratedwithinaninstitutionalVLE,theextenttowhichitformspartofthestudent’sPLE,andtowhatdegreeitisformallyintegratedintolearningintentions.OneparticipantremarksonthewaysinwhichTwitterwasbeingusedtobuildcommunitiesandasanalternativesocialspace:
‘Ithinkabouthalftooktoit,thosethatdidn'thadtheusualreservations.WhatIthinkhasbeeninterestingisthatafewhavestayedactivebeyondthecourseandtwitterisamuchbetterwayofmaintainingthisnetworkthanhavingtocommittousingforumssay.It'salsoaverydemocratisingspace‐Ioftenforgetwhoarestudentsandwhoarepeers,whichIthinkisgreat.ForstudentsIthinkifweencouragedthemtogetgoingatthestartoftheirundergradstudies,thinkofthenetworktheywouldhaveestablishedbytheendoftheirstudies.Thisinitselfisavaluableoutcomeofadegree’.
Oneparticipantreflectsuponengagementinrelationtorecordingreflectionsanditsimpactonteachingpractice(monitoringandencouragingindividualstudents)andonlearningpractices:
‘Ithinkthebenefitsaretwo‐fold.Firstly,recorded,shortburstsofreflectionarebetterthannoreflectionatall.ItismyintentionthatthestudentswillutilisetheaggregatedTweflectionsasthebasisofalongerreflectiveessayattheendoftheunit.Secondly,Icanmonitorindividualstudentsandencouragethosewhoarenotparticipating.Icanalsoprovidesummativefeedbackwhereappropriate.’
AnotherparticipanttrialledtheuseofTwitterinmedia,culturalstudiesandEnglishliteraturecourses.Heaimedatexperimentingwithre‐enactmentsofShakespearean
13 http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2398
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dialoguesandatengagingstudentsinidentifyinglinkswithpopularculture.Heexperiencedreluctanceandextremelylowlevelsofuptakeorenthusiasmbystudents:
‘Thismaychangebutit'sclearthatthestudents‐mediaandculturalstudiesandEng.LitandPopularculture‐aren'tperceivingtherelevanceoftheactivitiesandtechnologytotheirlearninginthesamewayastheirtutorsdo.’
Othercommentsinthiscloudandrelatedclouds(e.g.‘Twitterinacademia’‘isTwitterkillingblogging’,‘Twitterforteachingandlearning’)revolvearoundtoolstoarchiveTwitterconversations,andmechanismsforlinkingTwitterthreadsintospecificcourses.Alsotherearereflectionsabouteffectiveteachingpractices,andalternativemeansofencouragingusewithoutresortingtocoercion.Severalparticipantscommentthataggregatingshortburstsoftextandcapturingtheserendipityofthemomentisapowerfulfeatureofblogging.Otherscitedthevalueofmicro‐bloggingasamechanismforsharinginterestinglinksandreferences.
Thewayinwhichuncertaintiesontheuseofsuchtoolsisdealtwithdependslargelyonthewaysinwhichtheteacherintroducesandpromotesthetool.TeacherswhohavebeensuccessfulwiththeuseofthesetoolstendtobethosethatareactivelyusingTwittermorebroadlyaspartoftheirprofessionalpractice.ThisisacommonpatternofWeb2.0tools,i.e.thatreallythesetoolsneedtobeappropriatedandusedpro‐activelybeforetheycanbeincorporatedintoacoursedesignandusedinalearningcontext.Thisisadistinctshiftfromearliertechnologies,wherehowthetoolscouldbeusedwasmoreself‐evident.Forexample,personaluseofaninteractivecomputerpackagewasnotnecessarybeforeateachercouldmakeajudgmentaboutitsuseintheirteaching.ThedifferenceliesintheextenttowhichWeb2.0toolsareindeedusedfornetworking,sharingandsocialising;henceunderstandingwhatconstitutesproductivebehaviourinthesespacesissomethingonelearnsbydoing.
ParrydescribestheuseofTwitterinhisclassandidentifiesthefollowingaskeyfactorstoconsideratthelearningdesignstage(seeBriggs,2008):
• Createasenseofclassroomcommunity.• Familiarisestudentswithbothdisciplinaryandprofessionaldiscourses.• Conductjust‐in‐timecasestudiesandencouragethemtobereflexiveabouttheirown
communicativepractices,throughthesharingofideasandnegotiation.• Developasocialandubiquitouspresence:AsParrynotes,‘Ithinkpeopleendupbeinga
lotmorecomfortablewithclassroomdiscourseandgetasensethat[theinstructor]isn'tjustsomeonewhocomesinandtalksforanhourand30minutestwiceaweek.Ithastheverypositiveeffectofalteringtheclassroomstatetonotjustbecontainedbythefourwalls,andbymeetingtwiceaweek.’(citedinBriggs,2008:n.p.).
• Usingbackchannelstogenerateinstantfeedbackwithinlecturesisanotherfactorforpotentialsuccess.ThisisconsistentwithYardi(2008:145)whonotesthat:
Onlinebackchannelchatroomsofferthepotentialtotransformclassroomlearninginunexpectedandpowerfulways.However,thespecificwaysinwhichtheycaninfluenceteachingpedagogyandlearningopportunitiesarelesswellunderstood.Activitiesinabackchannelmayincludethedisseminationofideas,knowledgebuilding,askingandansweringquestions,engagingincriticaldiscourse,andsharinginformationandresources.
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• Inbothclassroomsituationsandresearch‐ledteaching,usingsocialnetworkingandmicrobloggingtoconnecttotheepistemologyofdisciplinessuchasnewmediawithwritingorcriticalliteracyskillscanbefruitful:
We'realwaystryingtoteachstudents,especiallyinwriting,thatcontextdeterminesmeaning.AndbecauseTwitterhasveryrefinedrulesaboutwhatyoucando‐‐only140characters,forexample‐‐it'sdevelopeditsownsortofdiscursivegrammarset;thatcanserveasanexampleofhowrulescanbeproductiveforcommunicationandcanlimitcommunication.(ParrycitedinBriggs,2008:n.p.).
AnotherinterestingexampleoftheuseofTwitterasaconversationmediumforin‐classroomandpost‐lectureinteractionisdescribebyDrMonicaRankin,ahistorylecturerattheUniversityofTexasatDallas.HerpilotuseofTwitterisdocumentedinashortvideo,‘TheTwitterExperiment’,createdbyastudent14.
SocialnetworkingThereisagrowingbodyofevidenceontheuseofsocialnetworkingwithinhighereducationcurricula(seeforexample,EbnerandMaurer,2008;GrosseckandHolotescu,2008;Ebneretal.,2010;Ramsden,2009).Theseincludestudieslookingatarangeoflearningcontexts,includinginformalandprocessorientedlearning.
Theconversationalandcommunalqualitiesofsocialnetworkingservicesareconsideredbysometo‘mirrormuchofwhatweknowtobegoodmodelsoflearning,inthattheyarecollaborativeandencourageactiveparticipatoryroleforusers’(Maloney,2007:B26).Oneofthecorepromisesofsocialnetworkinganditsapplicationinformaleducationalcontextsliesinitssupportforinteractionbetweenlearners,forpeersupportintermsofthedevelopmentofsharedunderstandingsandmutualsupportanddiscussionspacestoaddressdilemmasabouttheirstudies(Madgeetal.,2009;Selwyn,2009).Anotherisitspotentialusetosupportthedevelopmentofteacherpractice,tohelpthemdevelopstrategiesforusingnewtechnologiestoaugment‘conventional’interactionsanddialoguewiththeirstudents.TheuseofSNSbyeducatorsintheirpedagogicpracticehasbeenreportedbyMason(2006),andMazer,Murphy,andSimonds(2007;2009).Moregenerallyitisabouttransferringthepracticesthatareevidentinwhatiscommonlyknownas'socialising'(informalknowledgebuilding,mutualpeersupport,discussionsonsharedinterests)toformaleducationalcontexts.
Selwyn(2009)exploredstudents'useofFacebooktosupporttheirformalstudies.Heusedanon‐participantvirtualethnographyapproach,drawingonGoffman'snotionsofself‐representationand'faceworking'toanalysethecommentsfromanumberofuniversitystudentsandcounsels:
Facebookappearstoprovideareadyspacewherethe'roleconflict'thatstudentsoftenexperienceintheirrelationshipswithuniversitywork,teachingstaff,academicconventionsandexpectationscanbeworkedthroughinarelativelyclosed'backstage'area'.[….]Itwasactingasareadyspaceforresistanceandthecontestationoftheasymmetricalpowerrelationshipbuiltintotheestablishedofflinepositionsofuniversity,studentandlecturer(BourdieuandPasseron1977).Thiswasperhapsmostclearlyevidentintheplayfulandoftenironicrejectionofdominantuniversitydiscoursesthroughouttheposts,
14TheTwitterExperiment:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WPVWDkF7U8
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withthestudentscertainlynotconfirmingtothepassiveandsilencedundergraduaterolesoftheseminarroomorlecturetheatre.(2009:170‐1)
Fitzgerald,Steeleetal.(2009)reportontheDigitalLearningCommunitiesprojectfundedbytheAustralianLearningandTeachingCouncil.Theyfocusedontheroleofsocialsoftwareandnetworkinginthreeuniversities.Asetofsevenpilotcoursesusingreflexiveblogging,wikis,folksonomies,collectivetaggingandmediasharingandaspecializedsocialnetworkingsiteforanimation(MyToons)wereevaluated.Twointerimsurveyswereconductedtocorrelateresultsfromtheevaluativepilotstowiderattitudesandvaluestowardsandcomparativeculturesonsharingandnetworking.ThestudiesrevealedthatstaffmotivationforexperimentationwithWeb2.0washigherintheseprojectsthanisnormallyfound,becauseitwasmorecloselytiedtoresearchandscholarlyagendas.ThepilotsincludedacohortofcoursesinNewmediaandInformationsystems,andacourseinAppliedEcology.Theintegrationofsocialmediawithinthecurriculumwasdeployedinordertoadvancefutureprofessionalpractice,andmorespecifically,toequipstudentswithindustry‐ready,creativeandcriticalliteracyskills.Educatorsintheinformationsystemsandmedia‐relatedcoursesdesignedthecurriculumpurposefullyandwitharangeofactivitiesusingparticularWeb2.0technologiessothattheywouldintroducingstudentstoauthenticandhands‐onissuesofcopyrightandmediapracticewhileinvitingself‐representationandcreativityaswritersandmediapractitioners.
TheiCampprojectisanexampleofaprojectthatisattemptingtouseWeb2.0technologiesinacross‐bordercollaborativeproblem‐basedlearningproject.Inthefirsttrialgraduateandpost‐graduatestudentsfromfourdifferentpartneruniversitiesinTurkey,Poland,EstoniaandLituaniaparticipated.Eightcross‐culturalgroupsoffourorfivestudentswereformed.TheiCampeducationalinterventionmodelisdesignedtosupportcompetencedevelopmentinself‐organisedintentionallearningprojectsindigitallymediatedenvironments.Theprojectsusedarichsetoftoolsincludingsharedworkspaces,InstantMessaging,videoconferencing,acontentrepositoryandane‐portfoliotool(forafullsetofinterventionsandseeKieslinger,2009).Theresearchteamadoptedadesign‐basedresearchapproach,withastrongfocusondesigningcoursesforreallifetrials,gettingfeedbackfrompractitionersandfeedingthisknowledgeintoadvancedpedagogicalconceptsandnewtechnologicaldevelopments.Althoughanumberofchallengeswerecitedregardingculturalvariationinteachingandlearningstyles,thebenefitstheenvironmentprovidedintermsoffacilitatingengagementacrossculturalcontextswasdeemedtoenhanceinnovativeteachingandlearningpractices.Thefindingsfromtheprojecthighlightedthebenefitsofexperientialapproachesandpeerlearningandthewaysinwhichtechnologiescouldbeusedtosupportthese.
Väljataga(2009),describinganonlinecoursefromanEstonianuniversitythatparticipatedintheiCampproject,reportedthatthefacilitatorsgainedalotbybeinginvolved,includinganunderstandingofthebenefitsofsocialmediatoolsandserviceswithintheirteachingpractices.Theexperiencehighlightedtherecognitionthattherewasaneedforadifferenttypeofroleintheseenvironments,onethatsimulatesmentoringratherthantop‐downteachingapproaches.InthesecondiCamptrial(involvingfacultyandstudentsinthefourinstitutions),LawandNguyen‐Ngoc(2008)demonstratethatalthoughthecollaborativelearningenvironmentcansupportself‐directedlearningforsomestudents,otherstudents
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mayactuallybecomemarginalised.Criticalsuccessfactorsincludepayingattentiontothestudents’intrinsicmotivationandputtinginplacemechanismstolowertheirinitialanxietyaboutthelearningsituations.Suchclearpedagogicalprofilesandrepresentationallearningdesignsareneededattheoutset.
ImmersiveenvironmentsandvirtualworldsAlthoughstillaperipheralactivity,virtualworldsareincreasinglybeingusedinhighereducation.Over250HEinstitutionsworldwidearenowteachingusingSecondLife,oneofthemostpopularVirtualWorlds.Such3‐Dworldsaresuitedtomirroringrealpracticeandenablethesettingupofauthenticandscenario‐basedlearningcontexts.Environmentsthatmimicreal‐lifesettingscanbecreated,suchasanArchaeologicaldigoraMedicalward.Theseenvironmentscanbeusedasthebasisforproblem‐basedlearningactivities(forexamplegettinglearnerstoinvestigatearchaeologicalartefactsfoundonadigsiteorgettingthemtoparticipateinaroleplayactivitydealingwithamedicalemergencyonaward).Theavatarswithintheseworldscanassumedifferentidentitiesandroles.TheyhavealsobeenusedinArts,topresentvirtualArtexhibitionsorpoetryreadings.RunningthesekindsofeventsinSecondLifemeansthattheinvitationtoparticipateorobservecangobeyondtheclassroomstudents,enablinginternationalexpertsinthefieldtocritiquethestudents’work.Theseenvironmentshavealsobeenusedtosupportprofessionaldevelopmentactivities,throughtheestablishmentofspecialisedislandsandtherunningofvirtualeventstofosterdiscussionandsharing.
OneofthereasonswhySecondLifeissopopularisthatitisarelativelystable,accessibleandinexpensive.Inaddition,thefactthatasignificantnumberofinstitutionshavenowsetupspacesinSecondLifemeansthereisacriticalmassofothereducatorsandlearnerstointeractwith.Thespacecanbeusedinavarietyofways,sothatitispossibletobuildbothsimulationsormimicspecificreal‐lifeprocesses(forexamplegeographical,biological,health,legal)orahabitat(seeCarr,2009;JISC,2009a).AcomprehensivecollectionofcommentsandinsightsfromdifferentUKeducatorsispresentedinseriesof‘snapshots’preparedbyKirriemuir(2008).SecondLifeisnotwithoutitschallenges.Therearetechnicalproblemsandissuesarounddevelopingtheappropriatesetofskillsneededtointeractinthespace.Alsodespitesomegoodexamplesofuseofthespaceforlearning,whichharnesstheuniqueaffordancesofthetechnologicalenvironment,therearemanyexamplesofbadteachingpractice;forexamplethemechanisticreplicationofPowerpointpresentationsintheserich3D‐spacesis,arguably,notusingthemtotheirfullpotential.Learnershavemixedviewsaboutthevaluesuchspacesoffer,manyinparticularareconcernedabouthowtimeconsuminginteractinginvirtualworldscanbe.Institutionsarealsoconcernedaboutwhatpoliciesneedtobeinplacearoundtheuseofsuchenvironments.Towhatdegreeshouldinstitutionallyownedspacesbepolicedorprotected?Kirriemuir’sreporthoweverdoesalsoindicateanumberofpositivereflectionsfromteachersaboutusingSecondLife(seealsoWhite,2009):
• Theimportanceofbeingcreativeandthinkingdifferently.Usingthespacetopromotediscussion,demonstrationandactiveco‐creationofartefacts,ratherthanreplicatingface‐to‐facelecturing.
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• Theneedtotakeadvantageoftheuniquepropertiesofthespace,enablingpeopletohaveexperiencesthattheymightnototherwisebeabletohaveorprovidingamechanismforthemtoconnectwithandinteractwithpeopletheymightnototherwisehavemet.
• Teachersneedtoadjusttheirthinkingwithintheseenvironments.Thelocusofcontrolisnolongerwiththemandthereisanevidentblurringofboundaries.Teachersneedtobecomfortablewiththisshiftandthinkabouthowtouseittobesteffect.
• ThebestuseofSecondLifeisnottoreplicatethedynamicsoftheclassroom,butrathertoinnovatewithnewwaysofteachingandattempttopassovertheactivityoflearningtoourstudents.
• SecondLifeappearstobeparticularlygoodforanumberofconstructivistpedagogies–suchasdiscoverylearning,learningthroughtrialanderror,problem‐basedlearning,scenario‐basedlearningandauthenticlearning.
• SecondLifeisalsoideallysuitedtosupportingplayfullearning
ApioneeringexampleofSecondLifebeingusedinlegaleducationis'CyberOne:Lawinthecourtofpublicopinion',amoduleofferedatHarvardLawSchoolduring2006.15AspartofthemoduleamocktrialwasheldonBerkmanIsland,theSecondLifepresenceofHarvard'sBerkmanCenterforInternetandSociety.Similarly,theGlasgowGraduateSchoolofLaw(GGSL)attheUniversityofStrathclydesetupthevirtualtownofArdcalloch,withtheobjectivetofacilitatethetransitionfromacademiclawstudiestovocationallegalpracticeinScotland.ItallowslearnerstotakeuptheroleoflegalpractitionersoperatinginArdcalloch,supportedbydatabasesoflegaldocumentsandtemplates,forumsfordiscussionwithpractitionersastutors,videocourselecturesandotheradditionalmultimediatools.Initiallystudentshadsomeconcernswiththedeparturefromtheconventionalmethodsofteachingandlearning.However,studentfeedbackismostlypositive,indicatingthatstudentsappreciatethetools'valueinsupporting‘transactionallearning’oractionlearning.Thus,immersioncanbeusedasabasisfor3D‐realworldsimulationsthatassistinintegratingscientificpracticeintotheoreticalandvocationaltraining(ChittaroandRanon,2007).
BrombyandJones(2009)describetheirexperienceofusingSecondLifeinlegaleducation.OneissueforthemwashowstudentswouldreacttotheimmersiveenvironmentinSecondLifeandhowthismightimpactonlearning.McCallumetal.(2009)designedamoduleforthedevelopmentofnon‐technicalskillssuchasdecision‐makinginnursingeducationatGlasgowCaledonianSchoolofHealth,usingascenario‐basedlearningactivity.Althoughonlyasmallnumberofstudentscompletedthestudy,itrevealsthatbothstudentsandstaffwerereflectiveaboutoutcomesandsimulatoryexperienceofparticipatinginSecondLife.Theextenttowhichlearnersandteachersarealreadyfamiliarwiththesekindofgameplayinganddecision‐makingactivitiesthroughrealsituationsandgamingworldsisimportantandhasanimpactontheirperceptionsandtheperceivedvalueofthesekindsofscenarios.Teachingstylesandthekindsofsupportofferedneedtobedifferentinthesecontext,sosupportforparticipationisimportant,asisunderstandingtheimmediacyand
15 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/cyberone/
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immersivenatureoftheenvironment.Bothteachersandlearnersneedsupportindevelopingconfidenceintermsofparticipatingwithintheseworldsandintermsofestablishingpatternsofpeersupport.
ResearchersattheLondonKnowledgeLabhavetaughtclassesinSecondLifeonvarioustopics,includingInternetresearchethicsandvirtualworldresearch.Distancelearnerswerefoundtobeverypositiveaboutthereal‐time,socialaspectsofthesessions.ThefacilitatorsalsofoundthattheobviouslyconstructednatureofSecondLiferenderedsessiondesignvisibletostudents,whoproceededtoquestionandreflectonteachingpractices.Themovetoavirtualworldwasfoundtoupsetsomeparticipants’preconceptionsofonlinepopulations,aswellastheirassumptionsabouttherelationshipbetweena‘researcher’andthe‘researched’.AsCarr(2009)reportsthesekindsofambiguitiesanddisruptionscanbehighlyproductive.However,judginganyaffectiveaspectsofthestudentexperienceinrealtimeinSecondLifecanbedifficult:
SecondLifesessionscanbeintenseandpotentiallyconfusingexperiencesforparticipantswhoareunfamiliarwithonlineworlds.Somestudentsmaystrugglewiththeinterfaceorwithcommunications,whetherbytextorvoice.StudentswhohaveplayedonlinegamesmaybedisappointedbythegraphicsandtherelativeemptinessofSecondLife.Whilevirtualworldsmayinviteexperimentalpedagogy,students’familiaritywiththeinterfaceandin‐worldsocialpracticesstillneedtobeconsidered,asdotheirexpectationsofwhatconstituteslearningandteaching(Carr,2009:15).
Thereisaparadoxaroundtheseenvironments.Ontheonehand,suchimmersiveenvironmentscanbehighlymotivating,offeringalternative,authenticlearningcontexts.Ontheotherhandthereareanumberofsignificantculturalandperceptualbarriers:issuesaroundidentitiesandrolesinthesespaces,thelackofcontrolorstructure,andadangerofreplicatingrealworldstereotypesandprejudicesinthevirtualspace.Therearealsoforsomenegativeperceptionsaroundtheblurringofboundarieswithinthesespaces.Somefindsuchinteractionsinfantile,superficialorindeeddismissive(Childs,2008)resultinginadangerofcreatingadigitaldisconnect.
Clearlyalotmoreempiricalresearchisneededtounderstandfullyhowthesespacescanbeusedforlearningpurposes,andwhatkindsoflearningdesignsareneededtoensureeffectiveuse.Researchonthepatternsofsocialinteractionwithinthesespacesisslowlyemerging,givingusabetterunderstandingofhowindividualsarebehavingandinteractinginthesespaces.Thereareanumberofactivewikis,mailinglistsandblogsdiscussingtheuseofvirtualworldsineducation,howevermuchreportingremainsexploratoryinrelationtoteachingandthechangingofteachingexperience.
AspecificexamplethatisworthmentioningistheresourceforteachersusingSecondLifesetupbytheNewMediaConsortium16.Asdescribedabove,SecondLifelendsitselftoconstructivistpedagogiesandthereisaneedtoappropriatetheextensivebodyofliteraturethatexistsonsociallearning,playfullearning,theuseofdrama,roleplaysandsimulations,learningbydoingandpracticalexperimentationandworkontheformationofcommunitiesofpractice.Virtualworldsalsopresenteducatorswithanopportunitytorevisitquestionsof‘presence’,‘identity’and‘immersion’.Againmuchcouldbegainedbyrevisitingearlier16http://sl.nmc.org/category/teachers‐buzz/
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researchon‘virtualreality’studies.Althoughdrawingonthisolderandbroadereducationalresearchworkisimportant,itisalsoimportanttorecognisethatthesenewenvironmentsalsochallengeexistingconceptsandtheoriesandindeedthesemightneedtobealteredwhenappliedtovirtualworlds.AsCarr(2009)notesitisalreadypossibletopointtogapsintheliteratureandsuggestthefollowingasareasforfutureresearchinthisfield:i)explorationofnewapproachestopedagogyandcurriculardesign,ii)betterunderstandingofthefactorsinvolvedinsupportingsociallearninginthesespaces,iii)identificationofviablealternativestoSecondLife,iv)addressingqualityandaccessissuesinrelationtodisabilityorbroadband,forexample,andv)identificationofwhatinstitutionalpolicywillneedtobeputinplace.
SummingupThecontextualexamplesdescribedintheprevioussectionillustratethewaysinwhichWeb2.0toolsarebeingusedinspecificcontexts.Thesereinforcethegeneralconsensusthatthesetechnologiesprovidenewandexcitingopportunitiesforeducation,providingstudentswithnewwaystointeractwithmaterialsandwithothers.Inparticularthereappearstobeagoodmatchbetweenwhatisconsideredtobe‘goodpedagogy’andthegeneralpropertiesofthesevarioustools.Table2demonstrateshowsomeoftheexamplesdiscussedheremaptodifferenttypesoflearningandteachingapproaches.Thetableshowshowthereisalsoamatchintermsofmechanismforsupportingteacherpractice,intermsoffacilitatingascholarly,reflectiveapproachandmechanismsforsharingandcritiquingpractice
Table2:ExamplesoftheuseofWeb2.0toolsindifferentcontexts
Typesoflearningandteachingpractices
Web2.0toolandapproaches Examples
Personallearning Theabilitytoadapt,customiseandpersonalise,useofRSSfeeds,mashupsandAPIs.
TheDigitalLearningCommunitiesproject
Situatedlearning,experientiallearning,problem‐basedlearning,scenario‐basedlearning,roleplay
Useoflocationawarefunctionality,immersive3D‐worlds.Useofsearchenginesandotheronlineresourcesassourcesofevidence,connectionwithpeersandexpertsviasocialnetworkingtools.Scenario‐basedandauthentictasksinvirtualworlds,applicationofgamingtechnologiesforeducationalpurposes
TheiCampproject,UseofSecondLifetosupportdifferentdisciplines(Kirriemuir).Cyberonelawrole‐play.
Inquirylearning,Resource‐basedlearning
Toolstosupportuser‐generatedcontentandfacilitatingeasilysharinganddiscussingthese.Theseincludemediarepositories(Flckr,YouTube,SlideShare),socialbookmarkingsites(Delicious),digitalrepositoriesandtoolsforcontentcreation.Useofsearchengines,participationindistributed,virtualcommunities,Useoffolksonomicesand
TheOpenEducationalResourcemovementandassociatedtoolsandrepositories.
WikiversityandWikieducator.
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socialbookmarkingasmechanismsforfindingandorganizingresources.
Reflectiveanddialogiclearning,peerlearning
Toolsforfosteringpeerreflectionsuchasblogsande‐portfolios.Commentingonotherstudents’blogposts,co‐creationoflearningartefactsinwikis.
Digitallearningcommunities,Peer‐to‐peermentoringframework(McLoughlinetal.)
CommunitiesofPractice
Useofsocialnetworkingtoolstoparticipateincommunitiesoflearningand/oreducators.
ApplicationoftoolssuchasFacebook,NingandElggtosupportinformalsocialinteractionsbetweenstudentsorasspacesforreflectiononprofessionalpracticearoundasharedinterest(eg.TheElesigcommunityinNing)
Scholarlypracticeandthesharingofdesignsandgoodpractice
UseofWeb2.0toolstoparticipateinadistributednetworkofeducatorsandresearchers.Useofblogsandwikistoco‐createknowledgeandunderstandingandtocritiquepractice.TheuseofblogsandTwittertoshareprofessionalpractice
Edublogs,LeMills
ConclusionsAsthisreporthasindicated,Web2.0toolsoffercharacteristicsthathaveclearpotentialinaneducationalcontexttosupportarangeofpedagogicalapproaches.ThereportdescribesillustrativeempiricalaccountsthatdemonstratethewaysinwhichWeb2.0technologieshaveindeedbeenusedtosupportinnovativeapproachestosupportingandfacilitatinglearning.However,anumberofchallengesremainintermsofgettinggreateradoptionofthesetoolsineducation.AlthoughnationalvariationsregardingthedeploymentandpervasivenessofWeb2.0exist,severalcommonthemesemerge:
• ThekeytheoreticalandpolicyunderpinningsforusingWeb2.0methodsandtoolsinhighereducation.Technologicalinnovationandparticipatorylearningculturescanonlybeimplementedeffectivelyinhighereducationiftheyaresupportedbyappropriatenationalpolicies.Theseneedtoensurethatinstitutionalstructuresareinplacetotakeadvantageofthesenewtechnologies,butalsolinktoawidervisionofinnovationinacademicinstitutions.WhileadoptionofWeb2.0inteachingandlearningisgrowingintheHEsector,theneedtoaddresstheseissuesinasystematicwayisparamount(e.g.JISC,2009;OECD,2009). Web2.0toolsprovidenewopportunitiesforlearning,whichcomplementsthegeneralshiftawayfromdidactictoconstructivistapproachesthatdominatescurrentdiscourseoneducation.Firstly,theyhavethepotentialtoprovidenewformsofimmersionthroughforexample3D‐environmentslikeSecondLife.Secondly,theyofferarangeofnewwaysinwhichknowledgecanberepresented,discussedandshared.Thirdly,theyofferarangeofwaysinwhichcollaborativelearningactivitiescanbesupported.Fourthly,theysupportreflectivepracticeandmechanismsforpeercritiquing.However,thereisalsoahostofassociated
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challengeswithtryingtoembedsuchpracticesininstitutionalsystems.PromotingWeb2.0approacheschallengestraditionalformsofassessmentandcurrentvalidationmechanisms.Weaddressthesequestionsinrelationtoexistingevidenceregardingdriversforadoptioninhighereducationatinternationalandinstitutionallevels.
• Teachersandlearners;teachingversuslearning.Thereisnowasignificantbodyofresearchonlearnerexperiencesandtheiruseoftechnologies.Whatisevidentisthatlearnersandteachersarenothomogeneous.Inaddition,thereisagapbetweentheexpectations/promiseoftheuseoftechnologiesandtheactualexperiencesanduses.Thedigitaldivideisstillevident;withinthestudentbody,butalsobetweentutorsandlearners.Aswenotedearlier,theexpansivelearningdomainchallengestraditionalteachingpractices,yetevidencealsosuggeststhatexpertguidanceisrequired(JISC,2009;IpsosMori,2008;OECD,2009)andthatamoreexplicit,learningdesignbasedapproachtothecreationofcoursesisneeded.Thisraisesasetoffundamentalquestions.Whataretheimplicationsofshiftingfromthenotionofteacherasinstructortoteacherasfacilitator?Whatarethebarriersforlowlevelsofexperimentation?Whatinstitutionalinfrastructuresandsupportmechanismswillberequiredtoshifttogreateruseoftechnology?Moreimportantly,whatarethewaysinwhichnewtechnologiescanenhancetheprocessofresearchintoteachingandasresult,teachingmethodologiesandstrategies?
• Skills,media,informationandnetworkedliteracies.Newliteraciesareneededtomakesenseofandtoparticipatewiththesenewtechnologies.Yet,despitewidespreadagreementabouttheimpotranceofdigitalliteracies,integrationoftrainingprogrammesinthefieldofhighereducationremainsscant.Whileacademictutorsneedtoensuretechnicalproficiency,reflectiononapproachestoteachingandlearning,e‐pedagogy(learningwithand/orthroughtechnology)isalsoparamount. Multi‐located/fragmentedcontentandthepotentialformultiplepathwaysthroughcontenthaveanimpactonhoweducationalinterventionsaredesigned.Andalthoughsuchmultiplicityoffersincreasedchoiceinaneducationalcontext,thisalsohasthepotentialtoleadtoconfusion.Howfamiliararelearnersandeducationpractitionerswiththetoolsofeditingandblendingdigitalmaterial?Whatarethenovelperceptionsofcreativityandoriginality?Whatisthescaleoftheresponsibilitiesthatthenuancesofliteracybringstoeducators?Istherearepresentationofthewiderliteraciesininstitutionsandintheprojectstheypursue?
• Theneedforabetterconnectionbetweenresearch,policyandpractice.ThereisnowasignificantbodyofresearchexploringtechnologiesandhowtheycanbeusedtosupportallaspectsofHigherEducationpractice–learningandteaching,research,andadministration.E‐scienceande‐socialscienceresearchisgivingfascinatinginsightsintoexploitationoflarge,distributedresearchdatasetsandmorerecentlyintotheuseofcloudcomputing.Opennessisbecomingatrend,bothintermsoftheproductionandsharingofeducationalmaterials,aswellasmakingresearchpublications(andevenresearchdata)freelyavailable.However,asConole(forthcoming)hasargued,thisresearchisneitherfeedingproperlyintopoliciesontheuseoftechnology,norisitimpactingonactualteachingpractice.
• Thechallengesoftryingtochangeembeddedpracticeandculture.DespiteincreasingevidenceonthebenefitsofWeb2.0insupportingconstructivistandsituativelearningapproaches,asthisreportreviews,thechallengeoftranslatingthis
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acrossthehighereducationsectorremains.Thereasonsarecomplexandmultifold:educationalrulesandrestrictionsindifferentcountries,access,technicalresources,ICTliteracy,teachingcapacity,andteachingculturesarewidelycited(e.g.OECD/Pedro,2009;Redecker,2009).Onekeyissueisconcernedwithculturalissues,teachers'beliefsystemsandtheirdaytodaypractice.Teacherpracticeisstillpredominatelybuiltaroundanotionofteacherasexpertandstudentasrecipient.Despitetheshiftineducationalthinkingtowardsmoreconstructivistandsituativelearningapproaches,behavouristanddidacticdiscoursesarestillevident.Teachersdrawonpastexperienceratherthanactualempiricalevidenceandresearchliterature.Despitethebenefitsandneedformorescholarlyactivities,thereislittleevidencethatthisactuallyoccurs.Arguablythereisaneedtoshifttomorescholarlyapproachesifthepotentialoftechnologiesistoberealised.Thevisionisoneinwhicheducatorsareco‐innovatorsinunderstandingthekeypossibilitiesintherelationshipbetweentechnologyandpedagogy,leadingtowardsaco‐evolvedprofessionalknowledgebasethatstemsfromreflectivepracticesthataremediatedandshared;apracticethatfeedsintothedevelopmentofcurriculardesignsthatcanactualiseeducationalvisions(seeZhang,2009:278).
WhilethereissignificantrhetoricaboutthepotentialofWeb2.0technologiesforhighereducation,theevidenceofactualandsituatedpracticesontheeffectiveuseofWeb2.0inthesectorisfragmented.Empiricalevidenceisslowlyemergingtosupportthenotionthatstudents’useoftechnologyanddigitalmediahasimplicationsforthewaytheylearn,aswellastheirbroadersocialvaluesandlifestyles.Thisalsolinkstotheirperceptionofhowtheywilllearninahighereducationcontextandhowtechnologieswillbeusedtofacilitatethis.Benefitsareoftenviewedinrelationtoaddedconvenience,perceivedautonomyandincreasedproductivitygainsinacademicwork.Althoughnetworkingandtheespousalofdiversityareseenaskeycomponentsfororganizationalandpedagogicalinnovation,lessevidenceexistsofthewaysinwhichdigitalnetworkedtechnologiesaresociallyshaped.However,thelandscapeoflearningemergingfromideasaboutsocialproduction(seeEngeström,2007)hasaffectedteachingscholarshipandmethodologies.DespitetheincreasinglevelsofuptakeintheUKandOECDcountries,thedisjuncturebetweenWeb2.0technologiesandcurrenteducationalsystemsorteachingpracticespersists;thisleadstopeoplereplicating–toalargeextent–face‐to‐facepracticesinanonlinecontext.Thequestionthenremains:howcanadvancesinthelearningsciencesandemergingresearchineducationaltechnologybeincorporatedwhenauthoringcurriculum,assessmentandresourcestoappropriatelyscaffoldlearningprocesses?
Toconclude,effectiveuseofnewtechnologiesrequiresaradicalrethinkofthecorelearningandteachingdesignprocess;ashiftfromdesignasaninternalised,implicitandindividuallycraftedprocesstoonethatisexternalised,explicitandshareablewithothers.Changeinpracticemayindeedinvolvetheuseofrevisedmaterials,newteachingstrategiesandbeliefs–allinrelationto‘educationalinnovation’(Conole,2010).Zhang(2009:277)alsounderscoresthispoint.Henotesthatsustainedinnovationanddeepreformineducationrequiresthedevelopmentofinnovativecommunitiesofeducators,whiledevelopinginparallelaneducationalresearchcyberinfrastructurethatcanbeharnessedtosupportprofessionalscholarshipandpractice.Heconsidersthisasfacilitatingthree
44
aspects:a)thesharingofexperiencesandcontinuallearning;b)deliberateinvestigationandreflection;c)collaboratinginthedevelopmentofresearch‐basedscholarshipandco‐createddesigns,instructionalapproachesorlearningopportunitiesforstudents(seealsoGreenhowetal.,2009b).
Ouraiminthisreviewwastodrawontheexistingbodyofliteraturefromtheinternationalterrain;itsynthesisessomeempiricalevidenceonthepatternsofuseofWeb2.0toolsandsocialmediainhighereducationandstructuresfindingsinthemesrelevanttocommunitiesofeducators.Althoughevidenceexistsregardingthebenefitsininformallearningenvironments,andwithinadministrativecontexts,resultsfromlongitudinalstudiesshowingthedepthofchangeinpedagogicalpracticeineithertertiaryorpost‐tertiaryeducationareeitherscarceorfarfromconsensual.Andwhileanemergingbodyofliteraturefocusesonexperiencesoflearners,structuredevidenceregardingtheissuessurroundingintegrationinformaleducation,suchasthoseoutlinedaboveisslowlyemerging.
Thefocusofthe‘PearlsintheClouds’projectistoexploretowhatextentWeb2.0toolsmightbeusedtopromoteandsupportevidence‐basedapproachesinlearningandteaching.ThisreviewhasprovidedadetailedaccountofthenatureofWeb2.0toolsandexamplesofhowtheyarebeingtosupportlearningandteaching.Asdiscussedelsewhereinthisreporttheboundariesbetweentraditionalroles(teacherandlearner)andfunctions(teachingandlearning)areblurring.‘Teachers’needtobelearnersinordertomakesenseofandtakeaccountofnewtechnologiesintheirpractices.Adoptinganevidence‐basedapproach,throughscholarlypracticeandreflectionharnessingthepowerfulaffordancesofthetechnologiesthemselvesseemsalogicalmeansofachievingthis.Thein‐depthcasestudiesthatfollowwithinthisprojectwillprovidemorespecificevidenceoftheextenttowhichthisistrue.
AcknowledgementsWearegratefultotheHigherEducationAcademyforfundingtosupportthiswork.ThisworksitsalongsideanexistingbodyofresearchwithintheOpenUniversity,notablytheOULearningDesignInitiativeandOLnet.
45
Appendices:FurtherissuesrelatingtotheadoptionofWeb2.0inHE:detailsfromtheresearchfield
46
Appendix1:AnopenapproachtoliteraturereviewsusingCloudworksInadditiontothestandardstrategiesfordoingaliteraturereview,weoptedtotakean‘open’approachtothereview.ThisinvolvedpostingourresearchquestionsontheCloudworkssiteandusingitasabasistoaggregaterelevantresourcesandactasaspacetopromotewiderdiscussion.
Wealsosawevidenceofcross‐communicationbetweenCloudworksandothertools.Inparticular,thereseemstobeacomplementaryuseofTwitterasameansofshortdisseminationorcommunication,withthisthenspillingoverintoCloudworksasacollectivespacefordiscussionandaggregationandthenontoindividualspacesforpersonalreflectiononthetopicsbeingconsidered.Anumberoftypesofparticipationwereevident.Theresearchteamplayedanumberofroles,primarilypointingtoinitiationoftopics,facilitationofdiscussion,andsummarisingatkeypoints.SomeCloudworksusersconcentratedmainlyonparticipatinginthediscussionsassociatedwitheachcloud,whereasothersfocusedonaddingrelevantlinksandreferences.Somewereclearlyinterestedinfollowingastheyweredoingrelatedactivitiesandcouldthereforepointtothisotherworkorcopyaspectsofthecloudscapeintotheirownspaces.InadditiontoactiveparticipantsthestatisticsshowthattheCloudsintheCloudscapewereactivelybeingviewedbyasignificantnumberofpeople.Asof20May2010theliteraturereviewCloudalonehasgenerate1050uniqueviews;ManyoftheCloudswithintheCloudscapehaveappearedconsistentlywithinthetoptenmostactiveCloudslistonthehomepage.Therehasbeenasenseinthesecommentsofsharedownershipwithinthereview.Participantsdescribedhowthisworkrelatedtotheirowninterestsandexperiencesandaddedrelevantlinkstosupportthis.
Thereissomeevidencethat–overtime‐thisspaceenabledaspectrumofdialogicalpracticestobeharnessed;sharingreflections,practicesandscholarlyresources.Cloudworksofferedaspecialisedsocialnetworkingspace,toenablescholarlydiscoursearoundlearningandteachingpracticestooccur.
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Appendix2:AtypologyofWeb2.0tools
MediasharingMediasharinghasbecomeanimportantexampleofWeb2.0practicethathasemergedinthelastfiveyearsorso.UserscandownloadanduploadavarietyofdifferenttypesofmediaobjectstotheInternet.Forexamplemusicfanshavebeenquicktousecentralisedwebsitesasameansofswappingdigitalfilesoftheirmusiccollections.Thepracticeofmusic‐sharinghastendedonthewholetobeonusers'copyingcommercialmaterial(oftenillegally).Incontrastphoto‐sharing(viasitessuchasFlickr)andartwork(forexampledeviantart)tendstoinvolveuser‐generatedcontent.Video‐sharing(viasiteslikeYouTube)tendstobeacombinationofboth,i.e.amixtureoforiginalorre‐appropriatedfilm/TVandhomemadeclips.AspecificlearningandteachingexampleistheeducationgrouponYouTube‘Reteachers’and'TeacherTube'.EducationalmediaofvideoandpresentationsarealsosharedinZentation.AcademiclecturesandconferencepresentationsareoftenhostedinspecialisedsitessuchasAcademicEarthandVideoLectures.net.TheseprovideaccesstovideoOERandaimtoengageusersusingsocialnetworkingandratingtools.Personalisedversionsalsoexistforindividualbroadcasting(Castpost).Othervisualmediathatarepopularforsharingincludeslideshowpresentations(viaSlideshare)andsketches(viaSketchfu).Sitesalsoexisttopackageandpresentthevariousshareablemediacreationsofindividuals(forexampleLoudblog).Manyofthesesitesnowincorporatemechanismsforpeerratingandcommentaryfromusers.
http://www.flickr.com
http://www.youtube.com
http://youtube.com/group/reteachers
http://www.teachertube.com/
http://videolectures.net/
http://academicearth.org/
http://www.castpost.com
http://www.slideshare.net
http://sketchfu.com
http://www.loudblog.com
Mediamanipulationandmash‐upsMediaenabledweb‐basedtoolstoproduceandrefinethefilestobeshared.Forexample,webtoolsareavailableforeditingphotographs(Splashup,Fotoflexer).Othertoolsfacilitatethecreationandsharingofcomicstrips(Toondoo),simpleanimationofimagesforwebpages(Gifup)orthecreationofpersonalwebpages(Protopage).Similareditingcanbeappliedtosoundfiles(Soundjunction).Imagesandvideoclipscanbeannotatedwithsoundorwithvisualnotes(Voicethread).Collectionsofimagescanbeconstructedintosequentialvideoclipswithmusic(Animoto)orbroadcastasTV‐stylevideo(MakeInternettv).Moreelaboratemixingofvisualdigitalmaterialintomontagesor'mashups'isalsopossible(Popfly).Sectionsofwebpagesthemselvescanbeselectedandpastedintosuchmontages(Kwout).
Servicesexistforcreatingandsharingdiagrams(Gliffy)andpresentationtoolsthatallowintegrationandinteroperabilitywithinabrowser(Thumbstacks).Sectionsof
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webpagescanbeextractedandfashionedintoanewwebrepresentation(Yoono).Suchcloningofresourcesenablesthecreationofeducationalmashups.Locationscanalsobeindicatedso,forexample,itispossibletolinkliteraturetolocations(Googlelittrips).Datacanalsobeaddedtomapstogivecoordinateposition(Frappr).
Typicallymashupshavebeenaboutdatavisualisation,suchasoverlayinggeo‐taggedphotosononlinemaps.However,themashupconceptmaymoveintothebusinessapplicationspace,allowingrapiddevelopmentandintegrationofapplications.Mashupsneedsometechnicalskilltocreateandtendtorelyonopenapplicationprogramminginterfaces(APIs).ToolssuchasMicrosoft’sPopfly,Google’smashupengineandYahooPipeshavemadetheprocessmorestraightforward.
http://www.splashup.com
http://fotoflexer.com
http://www.toondoo.com
http://gifup.com
http://protopage.com
http://www.soundjunction.org
http://www.ccmixter.org
http://voicethread.com
http://animoto.com
http://makeInternettv.org
http://www.gliffy.com
http://www.thumbstacks.com
http://www.yoono.com
http://www.googlelittrips.com
http://www.frappr.com
http://www.popfly.com
http://code.google.com/gme
http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes
InstantMessaging,chatandconversationalarenasNewserviceshavebuiltontheoriginalconceptofthediscussionforum,enablingusersto'post'theircontributionstoatopic‐centredexchange(livingwithstyle.com).Withlargenumbersofusersonlineandwithfasternetworks,thereisnowacriticalmasstomakereal‐timeconversationpossibleandworthwhile.Toolsfortextexchange(instantmessagingandchatrooms),makeiteasiertocreatedistinctivespacesforInternet,text‐basedconversation.Someservicesextendtextchatintohigherfidelityexperiencesthatincludevideolinksbetweenusers(Paltalk,Oovoo).Otherservicescreateamoregame‐likeatmosphere,wherebyexchangesarethroughscreen‐basedavatarcharactersthatuserscandesignandcontrol(Imvu).Othersfocusondeliberationanddebatingaroundspecifictopics–oftencombiningconceptmappingandsensemakingactivities(Deliberatorium,Argumentum).Teachersalsocanlinkthroughdiscussionforumsaroundspecificdisciplines(e.g.Schoolhistory).
http://livingwithstyle.com
http://www.msn.com
http://www.paltalk.com
http://www.oovoo.com
http://www.imvu.com
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http://franc2.mit.edu:8000/ci/[Deliberatorium]
http://arg.umentum.com/
http://www.schoolhistory.co.uk/forumOnlinegamesandvirtualworldsBeingabletointeractwithotherusersisalsopossibleinonlinegames.Oftenusersarestrangersandsothegamerulesneedtoavoidassumingmutualfamiliarity.Asimpleexampleisagamebasedaroundnamingasketchdrawnbysomeoneelse(Isketch).Asimilarideaisagamebasedonhavinganinvisibleuser/partnersuggestlabelsforrandomphotographs.Thishasadualpurposeinthatitenablesautomaticmetadatataggingthatcanthenbeusedbysearchengines(Imagelabeler).Moretraditionalpartner‐basedelectronicgamesarepossiblewithInternetconnectionsbetweenplayers(WorldofWarcraft).'Virtualworlds'createscreenenvironmentsthatallowuserstonavigatearoundthevirtualspaceandinteractwithothersthroughavatars.ThebestknownoftheseisSecondLife,aneducationalexampleistheUniversityofEdinburgh’sVue.Theydonotdemandgame‐likerulesbutpromotetheopportunityforsimulatoryexperiences.Thesehaveclearpotentialforlearningandhavebeenusedtogoodeffecttosimulatemedicalenvironmentsforexampleortosetupsimulationsaroundtheeconomiesfortradinggoodsorservices.Althoughbasicuseofthesesitesisoftenfree,manyhaveaneconomicmodelaswell,enablingthebuyingandsellingofobjects(suchasclothes,islandsorbuildings)inthevirtualspace.AnewOpenSourceproject,“Sloodle”aimstointegratetheSecondLifemulti‐uservirtualenvironmentwiththepopularMoodleVirtualLearningEnvironment(VLE).SecondLifeGridisanotherexampleofanumbrellagroupforsupportingeducatorsusingWeb2.0toolsinthecurriculum.Otherexamplestakeecology,climateorhumanrightsastopics(Powerupthegame,Gamesforchange).
http://www.isketch.net
http://images.google.com/imagelabeler
http://www.worldofwarcraftWorldofWarcraft.com
http://secondlifeSecondLife.com
http://www.habbo.com
http://www.virtualibiza.com
http://vue.ed.ac.uk/
http://www/sloodle/org
http://secondlifeSecondLifegrid.net/programs/education
http://www.powerupthegame.org
http://www.gamesforchange.org/
SocialnetworkingAnearlyformofInternetsocialinteractionwasbasedonthedatingagencyprinciple(Match).Recentsitesorganiserealworldmeetingsbetweenmembers,suchasmeetingforSaturdaybreakfasts(Fruehstueckstreff)orbytrackingmobilephonelocation(Dodgeball).Othersitesconvenedmembersonlinebasedonalumnirelations(Friendsreunited)oraroundbusinessprofiles(Linkedin).However,thegreatestsuccesshasbeeninsitesthatallowuserstocreatedigitalspacesintowhichtheycaninvite'friends'tosharemessages,texts,videosortoplaygames.Somehaveastrongstudentbase(Facebook),othersaremoremedia‐oriented(Myspace),andsomeareaimedatteenagers(Bebo).Somespecificallycreatesociallinksbasedon
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userstaggingtheirpersonalgoals(43things),ordeclaringthemedinterests,suchasgreenpolitics(Care2)orclubbing(Dontstayin).Finally,toolsexistforspecialinterestgroupstodesigntheirownsocialnetworksites(Ning,Elgg).Aspecificexampleofrelevancetolearningandteachingisthening‐siteforsupportingresearchersinterestedinlookingatstudents’useoftechnologies(Elesig).Thesocialnetworkingsite,Cloudworks,whichisthefocusofthePearlsintheCloudscasestudiesisspecificallydesignedtofosterthesharinganddiscussionoflearningandteachingideasanddesigns.Itisobject‐centredratherthanego‐centered.Mostofthemainstreamsocialnetworkingsitestypicallyincludeeducation‐orientedfriendshipgroups.Therearealsositesfocusingonteachers(Learnhub).Severalapplicationswithinthesesitesexisttoenableinstitutionalhostingortheestablishmentoftheirowncollege‐basedcommunitiesorcourseprofiles(Mynewport,OUcourseprofiles).Others(suchasElggandCloudworks)arespecificallyfocusedonknowledgeaccretionaroundlearningandteachingtopics.Othersitesprovideamoreexplicitlychild‐orienteddesignandsecurityserviceforcross‐sitecollaboration(Schoolnetglobal)orsimplycasualexchangearoundschoolinterests(Goldstarcafe).
http://match.com
http://www.fruehstueckstreff.org
http://www.dodgeball.com
http://www.friendsreunited.com
http://www.linkedin.com
http://www.facebook.com
http://www.myspace.com
http://www.bebo.com
http://www.43things.com
http://www.care2.com
http://www.dontstayin.com
http://www.ning.com
http://elgg.com
http://apps.facebook.com/mynewport
http://ouseful.open.ac.uk/blogarchive/010855.html
http://elgg.net
http://www.cloudworks.ac.uk
http://www.schoolnetglobal.com
http://www.goldstarcafe.net
http://learnhub.com
http://elesig.ning.com
BloggingTherearenowavarietyofwebservicesthatofferusersspaceandtoolstolaunchtheirown'blog'(blogger).Blogscanbeusedforarangeofpurposes.Someactaspersonal,reflectivejournals,othersaspromotionalsitesorasaconduitfordisseminatinginformation.Someencourageinteractionaroundthemedconcernsandthusresemblesocialnetworkingsites(Livejournal).Searchenginesexistforthe'blogosphere'ofblogpostingsandincludeindicatorsoftheperceived‘value’ofthesitebasedonthenumberofconnectionsandcross‐referencing(Technorati).Shorter,morewhimsicalandmultimediapostingsarealsopossible(Tumblr).Therearesomededicatedbloghostingsitesforstudentsandteachers(Edublogs).Insome
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cases,studentblogcollectionsarepublicallyreadable,inotherinstancestheyareonlyavailabletothosealsoenrolledonthecourse.Micro‐bloggingsites(suchasTwitter)onlyallowveryshortentries,buthavebecomeverypopularinthelastcoupleofyears.Themessages(Tweets)canbesenteitherfromawebpageorfrommobiledevices.CombiningtheseshortTweetswithlonger,morereflectiveblogpostsisnowcommonpractice.Anumberofconventionshavedevelopedaroundthesetools,suchastheuseofhash‐tagstoalignwithandaggregatearoundaparticulartopicoruseof@nametoindicateamessageisdirectedtosomeonespecifically.Twitterhasgainedenormousuptakeforcrowdsourcedjournalism,asabackchannelforconferences,andhasbeenusedsuccessfullyasatoolforengagingdiscussionsineducationalcontexts,especiallyindisciplinessuchasjournalismandlanguagelearning.Thesesitestendtothriveonbuildingacommunityofsigned‐up'followers'fortheirauthors.
https://www.blogger.com/start
http://www.livejournal.com
http://technorati.com
http://www.tumblr.com
http://twitter.com
http://edublogs.org
SocialbookmarkingSomesitescollectandaggregatetagsonbookmarksthatusershaveshared(Del.icio.us).Thisenablesorganisedsearchingbasedonpersonaltagsora'folksonomy'(oftendesignedspecificallyforeducationlikebibsonomy).Othersincorporateuserannotationswiththetagging(Diigo).Servicesexisttoextendthisbeyondwebpages,forinstanceallowinguserstoshare,tagandsearchonbooksthattheyarereading(Librarything).Suchactivityencouragesfolksonomiesorprivateoruser‐definedcategorisationschemesratherthanthemoretraditionalhierarchicalandconstrainedtaxonomies(Zotero).
http://del.icio.us
http://www.diigo.com
http://www.librarything.com
http://www.bibsonomy.orghttp://www.citeulike.org
http://www.zotero.org
RecommendersystemsRecommendersystemsenableuserstovoteonitemstodeterminewhichgetprioritisedinpublicationsornewsstories(Digg).Insuchsystems,'socialfiltering'encouragesindividualstofind'friends'withreliableselections.Oruserscansubmittheirowncollectionsoffavouritesbasedonplacesorregions(Backofmyhand).Sitesthatcalculaterecommendationsbasedonlookingatcollectionsthatusershavemadevisiblehavebeenparticularlysuccessful.ForexamplethesiteLast.fm,whichisbasedaroundmusiccollections.Thisprocessmaybebaseduponcollaborativefilteringwherebycomplementaryoverlapsinthetaggingchoicesofindividualusersformthebasisofrecommendations(Stumbleupon)
http://www.backofmyhand.com
http://digg.com
http://www.last.fm
http://www.stumbleupon.com
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WikisandcollaborativeeditingtoolsWikisenabletheco‐constructionofcontent.Thewikiconstructionprocessisbestknownthroughthepublic,collaborativeencyclopaediaWikipedia.Similarventuresexistformorefocusedinterestssuchastravel(Wikitravel.org.en)ortelevisionknowledge(Tviv).Userscanalsousethewikiconcepttodesignandmaintainapersonalorganiser(Tiddlywiki).Otherwebtoolsareusedcollaborativelytodesign,constructanddistributedigitalproducts.Forexampletherearesitesthatallowusersscatteredacrosslargedistancestocollaborateinmakingasingleentitysuchasafilm(Aswarmofangels).Bycentralisingdocumentsonasharedwebserver,agroupofusersmayeditthosedocumentsratherthanholdmanyindividualcopies(Docs.google).Morestructuredsitesallowtheproductionofcollaborativeartefactssuchasnovels(Glypho).Otherwebsitesincorporatemorevisualtoolsforcollaborators(Thinkature),andsomeemphasiscollectivemindmapsforbrainstorming(Bubbl.us)orwhiteboardsimulations(Virtualwhiteboard).Thesetoolscanalsobeusedfosterinternationalconnections,forexamplebylinkingclassroomsfromdifferentcountriestogether(Etwinning,Skoolaborate).Popularwikisarewellestablishedthathaveaneducationalemphasis(Wikiversity,Wikieducator)orwithmaterialformorespecialistinterests(Knowhomeschooling).
http://www.wikipedia.org
http://wikitravel.org/en/
http://tviv.org
http://www.tiddlywiki.com
http://aswarmofangels.com
http://docs.google.com
http://www.glypho.com
http://thinkature.com
http://www.bubbl.us
http://www.virtual‐whiteboard.co.uk
http://www.britishcouncil.org/etwinning.htm
http://www.skoolaborate.com
http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki
http://www.wikieducator.org
SyndicationRSSfeeds(orsyndication)enableuserstotailortheinformationtheyreceivefromasiteandmeanthattheinformationcanbedeliveredtothemintheformattheywantratherthanhavingtogototheoriginalsite.RSSbuttonsareacommonfeatureonmostsitesnowadays,allowinguserstosubscribetoandthusbepostedupdatedmaterial.Othersitesexisttoeasethesubscriptionprocessandallowuserstoselectaprofileoffeeds(Bloglines).However,thebestknownandperhapsusedformofthistypeoffeedingistheuseofpodcasts:audioorvideofilesthatcanbedeliveredtosubscribedsites.Websitesactasportalstofindingthesepodcastingsources(Podcast.net).http://www.bloglines.comhttp://www.podcast.net
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Appendix3:Areviewofe‐learningmodelsandframeworksLearningtheoriesarefrequentlycapturedinpedagogicalmodelsorframeworksthatemphasiseaparticularapproach.Arecentreviewofthekeymodelsorframeworksthathavebeenusedine‐learningdescribedtwentycommonmodelsorframeworksacrossthedifferenttheoreticalperspectives(Conole,2010).Inthereviewtheterms‘models’and‘frameworks’wereconsideredtogether,becausethesetermsarecontestedandappeartobeusedfairlyinterchangeablyinaneducationalcontext.Thetablebelowcomesfromthereview.Itarticulatestherelationshipbetweenlearningtheoriesandpractice.Perspectivesrelatetothefundamentalassumptionsabouttheprocessesandoutcomesthatconstitutelearning.MayesanddeFreitas’threeperspectivesdescribedearlier:associative(learningasactivity),cognitive(learningthroughunderstanding)andsituative(learningassocialpractice),canbesub‐dividedintoanumberofdifferentapproaches,eachemphasisingdifferentaspectsoflearning.Atafinerlevelofdetailitispossibletoidentifyanumberofapproacheswithinthethreeperspectives.ForexamplethecognitiveperspectiveincludesarangeofapproachestolearningsuchasProblem‐BasedLearning,Inquiry‐BasedLearningandDialogicLearning.Thecharacteristicsofeachoftheseapproachesisdescribed,alongwithexamplesofhowthesearereflectedinane‐learningcontext.Finallyindividualapproachescanthenbetranslatedintospecificframeworksormodels.
Table:Learningtheories,modelsandframeworks(derivedfromConole,2010)
PerspectiveApproach Characteristics ElearningapplicationModelsand
frameworks
Associative
Behaviourism
Instructionaldesign
Intelligenttutoring
Didactic
E‐training
Focusesonbehaviourmodification,viastimulus‐responsepairs;Controlledandadaptiveresponseandobservableoutcomes;
Learningthroughassociationandreinforcement
Contentdeliveryplusinteractivitylinkeddirectlytoassessmentandfeedback
1.Merrill’sinstructionaldesignprinciples
2.Ageneralmodelofdirectinstruction
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Cognitive
Constructivism
Constructionism
Reflective
Problem‐basedlearning
Inquiry‐learning
Dialogic‐learning
Experientiallearning
Learningastransformationsininternalcognitivestructures;
Learnersbuildownmentalstructures;Task‐orientated,self‐directedactivities;
Languageasatoolforjointconstructionofknowledge;
Learningasthetransformationofexperienceintoknowledge,skill,attitudes,andvaluesemotions.
Developmentofintelligentlearningsystems&personalisedagents;
Structuredlearningenvironments(simulatedworlds);
Supportsystemsthatguideusers;
Accesstoresourcesandexpertisetodevelopmoreengagingactive,authenticlearningenvironments;
Asynchronousandsynchronoustoolsofferpotentialforricherformsofdialogue/interaction;
Useofarchiveresourcesforvicariouslearning;
3.Kolb’slearningcycle
4.Laurillard’sconversationalframework
5.CommunityofInquiryframework
6.Jonassen’setal.constructivistmodel
7.N‐Quiremodel
Situative
Cognitiveapprenticeship
Case‐basedlearning
Scenario‐basedlearning
Vicariouslearning
Collaborativelearning
Socialconstructionism
Takesocialinteractionsintoaccount;
Learningassocialparticipation;
Withinawidersocio‐culturalcontextofrulesandcommunity;
Newformsofdistributionarchivingandretrievalofferpotentialforsharedknowledgebanks;
Adaptationinresponsetobothdiscursiveandactivefeedback;
Emphasisonsociallearning&communication/collaboration;
Accesstoexpertise;
Potentialfornewformsofcommunitiesofpracticeorenhancingexistingcommunities
8.ActivityTheory
9.Wenger’sCommunityofPractice
10.Salmon’s5‐stagee‐moderatingmodel
11.Connectivism
12.Preece’sframeworkforonlinecommunity
Assessment Focusisonfeedbackandassessment(internalreflectiononlearning,andalsodiagnostic,formativeandsummativeassessment)
E‐learningapplicationsrangefromin‐textinteractivequestions,throughmultiplechoicequestionsuptosophisticatedautomatictextmarkingsystems
13.GibbsandBoudmodels
14.NicolandtheREAPframework
Generic Donotaligntoanyparticularpedagogicalperspectivebutprovideausefuloverview
Oftentranslatedintounderpinningontologiesorlearningsystemsarchitectures
15.TheOU(SOL)model
16.TheOULD&CourseBusinessModels
17.The3D
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pedagogyframework
18.Bigg’sconstructivealignment
19.TheHybridLearningmodel
20.Gee’saffinitymodel
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Appendix4:ParadoxescreatedbythenetworkedanddigitalTheenthusiasmthatcurrentlysurroundsWeb2.0andlearningistemperedbyahostofmisgivingsandrealchallenges.Zhang(2009),amongothers,remindsusasresearchers,educators,anddesignersthatthepotentialadvantagesassociatedwitheducationalusesoftheWeb(e.g.,generativesocialinteractionsandsharing,adaptability,interactivity,dynamicupdating,richnessofinformation,publicaccessibility)canalsopointtochallengesforthewaysinwhichthedifferentpropertiesofWeb2.0are'transferred'intoaneducationalcontext:openandsharedpracticesalsodirecttoephemeralandchangingcontexts,andunstructuredrelationships.Sowhilesomecelebratetheexpansionofknowledge,arguingthatcollectiveaggregationofinformationcanleadtobetterdecisionsthanthoseanyindividualmightmake(Surowiecki,2004),orenablecognitiveimprovement(Levy,1997;TapscottandWilliams,2006),andotherscautionagainstthe'cultoftheamateur',arguingthatWeb2.0createsademocratisationofknowledgewhichmayunhelpfullyflattenexpertise,decimate‚culturalgatekeepers(critics,teachers,editors,journalists),engenderself‐promotion,disorientresearchersandencourageplagiarism(Keen2007).Likewisethechangingsocio‐technicalspacesoftheWebchallengeinterpretation,synthesis,andexplicitevolutionofideasorthestructurednatureofformaleducation.ThesefactorsunderscorethetensionbetweencontrolandfreedomthatcharacterisesmuchofthedebatesurroundingtheuseofWeb2.0insociety(includingdebatesaboutcopyrightandintellectualproperty(Lessig,2004),autonomy,andprivacy).
ThefollowingisadaptedfromaKeynotepresentationandpaperattheAsciliteconference,200917,thetablebelowlistsfivecommoneffectsassociatedwithdigitalnetworkedmediaandsuggestssomeoftheconsequencesorparadoxesthatariseasaresult.
Table:Causeandeffectindigitalandnetworkedspaces
Cause Effect
Expansiveknowledgedomain Deathofexpertise/everyoneanexpert
Hierarchy & control less meaningful, contentcanbedistributedandlocatedindifferentways
Multiple (co‐)locations/loss of contentintegrity
Increasinglycomplexdigitallandscape Beyond ‘digital space’/New metaphorsneeded
Powerofthecollective,collectiveintelligence Socialcollective/digitalindividualism
Freecontent&tools,openAPIsandmashups Issuesre:ownership,value,businessmodels
17http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2735
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Knowledgeexpansion.Aswementionedbefore,digitaltechnologieshaveanamplificationeffectintermsofknowledgeexpansioninanumberofrespectsl)theyprovideeasyaccesstoinformation,ii)newwaysofaggregatingresourcesandiii)enablemultiplewaysofdisassemblingandrecombininginformation.Inaworldofincreasingcomplexityandknowledge,itisnolongerpossibletoknoweverythingaboutadomain.WhereasacenturyagoaprofessionalChemistcouldhaveaprettygoodgraspacrossallthemainsub‐domainsofChemistry,today‚achemiststrugglestokeepupwiththeirownspecialism.Somecelebratethisexpansion,pointingtothewisdomofthecrowdswhereeveryonehadthepotentialtobeanexpert,toaccessanduseknowledge.Surowieckicoinedtheterm'wisdomofthecrowds'(Surowiecki2004)arguingthatcollectiveaggregationofinformationcanleadtobetterdecisionsthanthoseanyindividualmightmake.Otherscautionagainstthis,lamentingthedeathofexpertise.Keeninparticularcautionsagainstthe'cultoftheamateur'(Keen2007:17):
Icallitthegreatseduction.TheWeb2.0revolutionhaspeddledthepromiseofbringingmoretruthtomorepeople,moredepthofinformation,moreglobalperspective,moreunbiasedopinionfromdispassionateobserves.Butthisisallasmokescreen.WhattheWeb2.0revolutionisreallydeliveringissuperficialobservationsoftheworldaroundusratherthandeepanalysis,shrillopinionratherthanconsideredjudgement.
NohierarchyorcontrolItisalsonotlongerpossible(oradvisable)totryandcategoriseandcontrol.Thelongheldtraditionofcataloguesisbeingeroded.Somearguethatrigidhierachicalcategorisationnolongerhasmeaningorvalueinafragmenteddigitalspace.Weinberger'sbookEverythingisMiscellaneous(Weinberger2007)typifiessomeoftheseviewsanddescribeshowwehaveshiftedfromphysicalobjects,whichrequirespaceandauniquelocation,todigitalobjects,whichcanbefragmentedandmulti‐located.Soforexampleaphysicalbookhastobestoredinoneplace,ononeshelfatanyonetime,thedigitalequivalentcannotonlybelocatedinmultipleplaces,butcanbedisaggregatedandindeedpartiallycombinedwithotherdigitalartefacts.Althoughthisoffersgreaterflexibilityinhowabook,canbeused,taggedorlocated,thisalsobringsincreasedcomplexity:contentmayloseitsintegrity,itmaybecomede‐contextualisedandmayleadtomis‐interpretations.
Networkedversusboundedspaces?Theincreasinglycomplexdigitallandscapeischallengingourexistingvocabulariesandmeansofdescription.Theverytermsdigitalspacesandnetworkedlandscapesharkbacktoatimewhenthedigitalwasconsideredasamereextensionoftherealworld.Termssuchas'virtualuniversities'and'virtualcafes'givetheimpressionofthedigitalasa'boundedplace',whereasthekindsofpatternsofbehaviourwearenowseeinginthedigitalrealm,thedistributionofcontentandtools,themulti‐facetedandinter‐connectednatureofthedigitalmeansthatthevocabularyof'time'and'space'maynolongeradequate.Weneednewvocabulariesandmetaphorstodescribewhatishappening.
NewformsofsensemakingandcommunitiesofinterestareemerginginWeb2.0environments.Boundariesareblurring,withdifferenttechnologiesofferingoverlappingfunctionalityandtransient,associatedcommunities.Forexample,'spaces'canbecategorisedasfollows:personalspaces(email,IM,etc.),groupspaces(SNSforexample),or
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publishingspace(blogs,andsharingspaceslikeyoutube).Eachoftheserequiredifferentmodesofinteractionandrolesintermsofcommunicating,organisinginformation,contributingcontent,developingrelationshipsandthedegreetowhichtheindividualiscollaboratinginpublicspaces.CardonandAquiton(2007)arguethatthesuccessofWeb2.0servicesdemonstratesusers'hybridmotivations,wheretheindividualisationoftheuser'sgoalsmeetstheopportunityofsharingpersonalexpressionandtheperformanceofcreativityinapublicspace.RybergandLarsen(2008)arguethatthetrendtowards'networkedindividualism'isacontradictorytrend;i.e.althoughpersonalisationandindividualisationareintensified,usersareincreasinglymutuallydependenton,andconnectedto,eachotherforformsofcreditandrecognition(seealso,Wellman,2001).
CollectiveownershipversuscommodificationFinallytheapparentlyutopiandrivetowardsanInternetwheretoolsandcontentarefree,andwhereopensourceprinciples,ApplicationProfileInitiatives(APIs)andmashupsappeartoofferanevolving,collectivelyimprovedsetofcontentandtools,whichcanbeusedinamultitudeofways,maynotbeallthatclearcut.Suchpracticeschallengeexistingideasaroundqualityandownershipanddonotfitinwithcurrentbusinessmodelsforrepurposingknowledge.Thissuggeststhereisfarmoretodointermsofunderstandingsuchmodelsandredefiningourideasaroundownership,qualityandsustainability.
Theabovegivesrisetoaseriesofspecificeducationaldilemmas.ArecurrentrhetoricaroundtheapplicationofWeb2.0technologiesinaneducationalcontextisthenotionofhowthesecanbetransformativeintermsoftranscendingformaleducationalcontexts;thattheyfacilitatemoreinformalandnon‐formallearningcontextsandblurtheboundariesbetweencategoriesoflearners(student,adult‐learner,orthoseundertakingtrainingorprofessionaldevelopment).Theargumentsforthiscentrearoundthenotionthattheselearnersareempoweredtobemoreactiveproducers,authors,evaluatorsandcommentatorswithinthelearningarenatheyareengagedwith.Atthesametime,theboundariesofprofessionalandpersonalidentitiesareblurringandmediatedperformanceoccurseitherinindividualisticspacesvialooselyboundandoftentransitorycollectivesthroughtomoreestablishedandclearlydefinedcommunities(seeSiemens,2008;DronandAnderson,2007foradiscussionofcollectives,networksandgroupsinsocialnetworkingfore‐learning;seeRuddetal.,2006aontheblurringofboundariesbetweenteacher/expertandstudent/noviceroles).
Totakethisastepfurther,somedebatesontheeducationalnatureofWeb2.0pointtothedispensationofthecentralortraditionalroleoftheteacher.Theexpansionoftheknowledgedomainandtheconsequentialdiscourseonthe'deathoftheexpert'naturallychallengesthetraditionalroleofateacher.Itcannolongerbeassumedthattheteacherisexpertorthatthefocusshouldbeontransmissionofknowledge.Somearguethatsocietywillbe'de‐schooled'throughtheemergenceofcommunitylearningsites(suchas43things,SchoolofEverything,Wikiversity18;seeLeadbetter,2008).Othersarguethattheroleofformaleducationalinstitutionswillshifttoprovidingpersonalisedlearningenvironments,
1843things:www.43things.com;Schoolofeverything:www.schoolofeverything.com;Wikiversity:www.en.wikiversity.org
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whichputthelearnerincontroloftheirownlearning.Manyassumptionsarehiddeninsuchscenarios,particularlyinrelationtothemotivationoflearning.However,althoughitisunlikelythatWeb2.0willfundamentallydisplacethatimportantrelationship,thescaffoldingperspectiveonlearningdrawsattentiontothespecialforcethatarisesfromjointactivities.
Multi‐located/fragmentedcontentandthepotentialformultiplepathwaysthroughcontenthaveanimpactonhoweducationalinterventionsaredesigned.Andalthoughsuchmultiplicityoffersincreasedchoice,inaneducationalcontextthisalsohasthepotentialtoleadtoconfusion.Hencethereisanopportunityforteacherstoplayanimportantnewroleintermsofprovidingpedagogicallygroundedlearningpathways,tohelplearnersnavigatetheirwaythroughthiscomplexity.Thedigitaldivide(Norris,2001)haslongbeenaprominenttopicofdebateineducationaltechnologyresearch(SealeandBishop,2009;Kennedyetal,2007;Warschauer2004;Norrisetal.2003).Howeverwiththeincreasinglycomplexityofthedigitallandscapethegapbetweenthe'techsavvy'teachersandstudents,'non‐users'orthosewhoarenotengagedmaybecomedeeper.Thetablebelowreconsidersthefivefactorsconsidershereandliststheeducationaldilemmasthatariseasaresult.
Table:Educationaldilemmasarisingasaconsequenceofnewtechnologies
Cause Educationaldilemma
Expansiveknowledgedomain Challengestheroleoftheteacher
Hierarchy and control lessmeaningful, contentcanbedistributedandlocatedindifferentways
Needtorethinkthedesignprocess,offersthepotentialfornewlearnerpathways
Increasinglycomplexdigitallandscape Widening skills gap between ‘techsavy’/others
Powerofthecollective,collectiveintelligence Potential for new forms of learning; digitalandnetworkedliteracies
Appendix5:FactorsinfluencingthelackofuptakeofWeb2.0toolsinHigherEducation
TherearefourmainreasonsaccordingtotheOCEDreport(2009)forgapsregardingpositiveperceptionsorcapacitiesforadoptingnovelICTsforteachingandlearningandactualimplementation:i)thestateofreadinessofthetechnologicalinfrastructure,ii)theinvestingcapacityofinstitutions,iii)competenceandiv)predominantapproachestoteachingandlearning.
LevelsofmaturityFirstly,thereisacorrelationbetweenthematurityofthetechnologicalinfrastructuretolevelsofadoptionandpopulationdigitalliteracyskills.E‐learning‐readiness(seeSibis,2002)positionstheUSatthetop,followedbytheUK,DenmarkandFinlandinEurope.Similarpatternsareevidentfromrelatedresearch(TheEconomistIntelligenceUnit,2003citedinOECD,2009:32).
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NationalstrategiesSecondly,thenatureandscaleofnationalstrategiesregardinginvestmentsininfrastructure,theuseoftechnologyandthepromotionofe‐learningintheeducationisrecognisedasanimportantdriver.NationalinstitutionsliketheJISCintheUKandtheSURFFoundationintheNetherlandsactascontextualdriversandcatalysts.Similarlytheroleofstrategydocumentsisimportant,suchastheHEFCE’sStrategyfore‐learningintheUK(HEFCE,2009),theNSF’sCyberlearningreportintheUS(Borgemanetal.,2008),Australia’sLearningPerformanceFundandtheCampusNumériqueinFrance.Thesenationaldirectiveshaveplayedaveryimportantroleincoordinatingandinitiatinglarge‐scaleprojectsthatpromoteinnovation,butalsoprovidemechanismsfortrainingandsupportandforfacilitatingthesharingofgoodpractice.Amorelocalexamplewastheestablishmentof‘TheEvaluationofLearners’ExperienceofE‐learningSpecialInterestGroup’(ELESIG).ThiswasfundedbytheUK’sHigherEducationAcademy,tobringtogetherthoseworkingonpathfinderprojectsregardinglearners’experience.Sinceit’sinceptionin2008,ithasevolvedasaninternationalcommunityofover800members,‘workingtogethertoshareknowledgeandpracticeandtodevelopasharedrepertoireofresources,whichwillofbenefittothesector’(ELESIG,2009).AreviewoftheprojectsundertheELESIGumbrella(Sharpe,2009)showsthatlearnerexperienceresearchisaimingtohaveatransformativeimpactregardinga)theevaluationofinfluenceofnewtoolsandenvironments,includingWeb2.0,onstudentexperience(e.g.projectssuchastheUCLPathfinderprojectandELP2);andb)producingstrategicguidelines(e.g.e‐learningstrategiesininternationalenvironments).Likewise,broaderstrategiessupportedbyfundingagenciesatnationallevelsandinternationalorganizationsthatpromoteresearch,innovationandwideningparticipationthroughopeneducationhavealsoplayedanimportantrole.
MarketingandstudentrecruitmentThirdly,Anglo‐SaxonuniversitiesseemtocompetemoreforattractingstudentsthanthoseincontinentalEuropeandthusdeploymoreinnovativestrategiesforbothmarketing,pre‐entryorientation,aswellasexperimentationwithregardstoteachingandlearning.ExamplesincludeearlyadoptersexperimentingwiththeuseofWeb2.0technologiestoprovideasocialspaceforstaffandstudents,suchasWarwick,Leeds,EdinburghandtheOpenUniversityintheUK.Someoftheperceivedadvantagesincluded:theflexibilityofthetools,theireaseofuseandtheircompatibilitywithotherservicesofferedbytheUniversity.
AsArmstrongandFranklin(2008)havenoted,positiveinstitutionaldriversaremoreprominentinHEIswhereubiquitous,distancelearningandlife‐longlearningcontextsareprominentandininstitutionsthatrecognisethatopportunitiesforcollaborationandcommunicationalignwithbothpedagogicandmarketingstrategies.Whileregulatory,legal,securityandethicalfactorscontinuetobekeyconcerns,factorsthatareconsideredtotranscendtraditionalHEboundariesinclude:a)pre‐serviceandcontinuityofresources;b)lifelonglearningandprofessionalnetworkinginunder‐andpost‐graduatecourses;c)extendingthewaysinwhichnewformsofknowledgeareproduced,publishedandassessed.ManyhighereducationinstitutionsinEuropenowprovidesocialnetworkingtoolsalongsidetheirvirtuallearningenvironment,withtheaimoffosteringmoreinformationcommunitiesandnetworksalongsidetheformalteachingprovision.The
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UniversityofBrighton,forexample,setup'Community@Brighton',networkingsystemforstudentsandstaff,asaplacetoshareacademicinterest,personaldevelopmentplanning,andcreatee‐Portfolios.Similarly,theUniversityofLeedsusesElggtobuildacommunityofstaffandstudentsbasedonthecreationofpersonalandcommunityblogs.‘MyOUstory’isafacebookapplicationdevelopedbyteamsattheOpenUniversity,enablingprospectivestudentstoconnectandexchangeknowledgeandexperiencesurroundingspecificcourses.‘Connect’,arecentinitiativeattheUniversityofWestminsterprovidesasocialnetworkingspaceforstudentsandstaff.RedeckerlistsanumberofsimilarinitiativeswithincontinentalEurope(Redecker,2009:55‐58and89‐93).
Yet,despitetherhetoricaboutthewaysinwhichtheseinitiativescanbebeneficialintermsofenhancingstudentenrolmentormaintenanceofalumnirelations(FranklinandvanHarmelen,2007),obstaclesandchallengestotheiruseanduptakeremain.TheUniversityofBrighton’sexperiencesunderlinesomeofthemainchallengesforthedeploymentofsocialnetworkingapplicationsasplatformsforinstitutionalnetworksineducation.Oneofthemainobstaclesisalackofinterest.Whileallstaffandstudentshaveaccounts,onlyasmallproportionareactive.EvaluationstaffattheUniversityofWarwicknoticedthatitsbloggingsystemhaspositivelychangedsocialinteraction,butuptakeforteachinghasnotfollowed.Thisis,inpart,becauseteachingstaffhavenotintegratedthesetoolsintotheirteachingandhencetheiruseremainsaperipheralactivity.InthecaseoftheUniversityofLeedstheintroductionofsuchtoolswasstaff‐led,andsostudentsdidnotperceivethemaspartoftheirlearningandteachingenvironment.AsRedeckernotes,take‐upanduseseemtobeinfluencedbymanydifferentfactors(2009:57).Drawingonethnographicobservationsofstudents’fromaUKRussellgroupuniversity,Selwyn(2009)reportsonnegativestudentperceptionsoftheblurringofboundariesbetweenformalrelationstotutorsandinformallearningspacesonfacebook(seealsoMadgeetal.,2009andBoonandSinclair,2009onundesiredblurringofidentities,ownershipandingeneralcodesofpractice).
Surveyingthefindingsfromacrossprojectsandinitiatives,itisclearthattherelationshipbetweentheuseoftechnologyandcurrentteachingculturesremainsunbalanced.Useoftechnologiesneedstobecarefullyintegratedintotheexistingcurricularpractices.Staffneedconvincingofthebenefitsofthesenewapproachesandevidenceregardingenhancementofthestudentexperienceneedstobeclearlydemonstrated.Similarlythepatternofuptakeislikelytobedifferentacrossdisciplines.Forexamplesomecoursessuchasmediastudies,journalism,informationsystems,e‐learningandcomputerscienceorthosethatareprimarilydistance‐basedlearningaremoreamenabletosuccessfulintegration(seeArmstrongandFranklin,2008;Fitzgerald,Steeleetal.,2009).Inotherinstances,individualscandriveuptakeanduse,forexampleeducatorswhoseetheuseofWeb2.0toolsasameansofpromotingconstructivistbeliefsorenablingmorepersonalisedandstudent‐centeredlearning.Similarlymanyaredrivenbytheviewthatsuchtechnologiescanfostercreativity,providingavaluableopportunitytoequipstudentswithdigitalandcriticalinformationskillsforuseinfutureemploymentandprofessionalpractice(seeArmstrongandFranklin,2008,Fitzgerald,Steeleetal,2009,2008;Minocha,2009).
Minocha(2009)conductedstudieswith21initiativesin18institutionsintheUKhigherandfurthereducationsectorsandcollectedevidenceregardingtheuseofsocialsoftwarein
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supportingandenhancingstudentlearningandengagementintheeducationalprocess.Thestudyexaminesavarietyofsocialsoftwaretoolsandinscribedpedagogiesandexaminesthewaysinwhichthesewereembeddedincurriculumdesign.Althoughthefindingsmainlypointtoseveralbenefitsandpositiveprojectionsregardingenhancedstudentexperiences(e.g.personalisationandcontrol;peersupport,teambuildingandcommunityskills,developmentofdigitalliteracyskills),highlevelsofstaffmotivationandimprovementofteachingmethodsiscorrelatedwithinstitutionalprovisionandtechnicalfacilitation(e.g.easeofintegrationofopensourcetoolswithVLEs)aswellaspersonaltechnicalproficiency.Manystudentsacrossthecasestudiesreportpositivelyontheinterrelationofthepublicvisibilityofartefactsandthescaffoldedlearningprocessofworkingwithsocialmedia:structuringthecontentwithmultimediaassets‘mirrorstheprocessoflearning’(Minocha,2009:31).Blendedlearningandinteractioninitiativesandtheabilitytoenhanceintra‐andcross‐institutionalcollaborationinteachingandlearningwerealsoconsideredveryusefulbyacademicstuffwhowhereotherwisescepticalaboutWeb2.0learninginitiatives.
ThisconnectstothefinalpointraisedbytheOECDreport,regardingteachingcultures.Accordingtothereport(2009:33),despitetheeffortsmadesofarundertheframeworkoftheBolognaprocesstoharmoniseamoreintegrativeteachingcultureamongEuropeanuniversities,thepredominantapproachisstillmoreaboutlecturingthaninteraction.Thisdidactic‐perspectiveisseenasnotonlybeingasaresultofteachers'preferredstyleof‘teaching’,butisalsoafactorofinstitutionalstructures(forexampletimetablesessionsinlargelecturerooms)andassessmentdrivers(knowledgerecalltoapredefinedsubjectcurriculum).AnumberofEU‐fundedProjectsareattemptingtochangethis.Forexample:theiCamp19(project,whichismakinguseofnewmediaforcross‐culturalcollaboration,theEnhancingStudentMobilitythroughOnlineSupport(ESMOS)project20andVITAE21aprojectdedicatedtofacilitatingexchangeandWeb2.0TeacherTrainingacrossEurope.Theseprojectsareprovidingvaluableinsightsintothepromotionofknowledgebuildingcommunities,emphasisingmentoringsupportasareplacementtoauthoritativeandhierarchicalteachingapproaches(seeKeeganandFox,2009;KeeganandLisewsk,2009;Väljataga(2009).
19 http://www.icamp.eu/ 20 http://www.esmos.eu/ 21 http://www.vitae‐project.eu/
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Appendix6:BarrierstochangeSomeofthespecificbarriersevidentfromtheliteratureinclude:concernsaboutexpectations,experiencesandcompetenceswithrespecttousingWeb2.0technologies,theperceptionthatengagementinusingthesetoolshasanassociatedtimeinvestment;amismatchbetweenthecurrentsocialandculturalcontextofteachingpracticesandWeb2.0approaches(seealsoBlinandMunro,2008),alackofconfidencethatappropriateinstructionalstructuresareinplacetosupporttheseactivitiesandaninherentscepticismastowhetherornotthesetechnologieswillactuallymakeadifference.MoreontheseissuescanbefoundinanonlinediscussionaroundaresearchquestionweincludedinCloudworks‘whyhasgeneralWeb2.0practicenottranslatedwell/extensivelywithinaHEcontext?’22.Finally,thereareissuesaroundtheworkloadimplicationsofthesenewapproaches;bothforteachersandstudents.
Access,accessibility,andconcernsonauthorityandtrivialisationFirstly,therearearangeofissuesaroundnotionsofaccessandaccessibility.Accessibilityremainsamajorobstacletoequalopportunitiesandakeyproblemforinclusion(seeforexampleDaviesandCranston,2008).Furthermore,therearedifferencesinthefamiliaritywithICTingeneral,andinsocialcomputinginparticularamongdifferentlearnersandlearnergroups,givingrisetoa‘participationdivide’(HargittaiandWalejko,2008).SimilarlyarecentreportbyJISCsuggeststhatinformationliteraciesrepresentagrowingdeficitareaamongHElearners(JISC,2009).Therearealsonegativeperceptionsabouttheblurringofboundariesthatarisethoughinteractionwiththesetechnologiesandinparticulartheblurringofworkandsocialspheresofinteraction,aswellasinvasionofpersonalorprivatespaces.Manyareconcernedaboutshiftingtomoreopenapproachesandmakingcontentfreelyavailable,fearingitwillleadtoanerosionintheircompetitiveness(OECD,2007;Minocha,2009),whileissuesofauthority,authorshipandtrivialisationareevidenttoo.Aspecificexamplehelpstoillustratesomeoftheseissues.ArecentsurveyconductedbyFacultyFocus(2009)aggregated2000responsesfromeducatorsintheUS,andisasignificantsourceofdataregardingpractitioners’attitudestotheuseofTwitterinundergraduateandpostgraduateeducation.WhatwassignificantaboutthefindingswerethereservationsmanyexpressedaboutTwitter'ssuitabilityinhighereducation.Theperceptionoftrivialitypersistsinrelationtotimeconsumptionandrealengagement,leavingtoonesidequestionsaboutprivacy,securityandfaddism.MorespecificallypedagogicorintellectualconcernsemergedfromthedatathatfocusedontheperceiveddeleteriousinfluenceofTwitteronstudents'academicliteracypractices,withquoteslike‘logicalargumentscannotbedeliveredwellinshortbursts’or‘[It]perpetuatespoorwrittenandoralcommunicationskills'.TherewerealsoconcernsthatTwittercanencouragecommentwithoutthoughtandthatthisdoesnotencourageorenablethestudentstoadequatelyreflectonthecontentandconceptstheyarebeingpresentedwith;i.e.arguablytheantithesisoflearning‚(FocusFaculty:2009:13).Thereisasimilaritybetweensomeofthesecommentsandearlieranxietiesaboutthenegativeinfluenceof
22 http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2394
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'txtspk',thatresearchershavesinceproventobeunfounded(Carrington2005;Crystal2008;seeJenkinsetal.,2006).
LiteracyissuesSecondly,thereareliteracyissuesintermsofwhetherstudentsandteachershavethenecessaryskillstomakemosteffectiveuseofnewtechnologies.Trainingandsupporttoenableteachersandstudentstodeveloptherightsortsofliteracyskillspresentsrealchallenges.Youdon’tjust‘get’Web2.0byattendingaworkshoporreadingasupportguide.Youneedtoactivelyengagewithittofindareasonforappropriatingthetechnologiestoyourworkingpracticeandintegratethemwithyourprofessionalorteachingpractice.FurthermorethemajorityofWeb2.0technologiesareaboutconnectivityandnetworks,andhenceengagementrequiresindividualstobeactivelyparticipatinginappropriatecommunitiesofpractice.Web2.0approacheshaveinfiltratedtheteachingandtheresearchpracticesofacademicstodifferentextents.Likewise,althoughsomeeducators’familiaritywithWeb2.0toolsforpersonalandrecreationactivitiesgeneratesenthusiasmregardingpotentialexperimentationinateachingcontext,thismaynotbematchedbytheprofileofthestudents(whomaynotseethevalueofusingWeb2.0toolsormaylackthenecessarycompetencestousethem).
QualityandeffectivenessThirdly,concernshavebeenraisedaboutthequalityandeffectivenessofWeb2.0environments.Studiesfromformaleducationshowsthatthereareissuesaroundtheperceivedlearningvalueincollaborativeactivities.Benbunan‐FichandArbaugh(2006)foundthatthelearningperceptionofstudentsconstructingknowledgewithcollaborativeassignmentswaslowerthenstudentsadoptingatraditionalknowledgeacquisitionmodel,butthiswasalsoatoddswiththeknowledgedemonstratedinthefinalresults.Additionalchallengesincludethetypesofcriticalliteracyneededinevaluatingreliabilitythroughcross‐referencingandfiltering(Seeforexamplethe‘Literacyinthedigitaluniversity’project23).
LegacysystemsFourthly,Web2.0technologieschallengeexistinglegacysystemsandsothereareanumberofissuesaroundlonger‐termtechnologicalcohesion.CurrentinstitutionalstructurespresentabarriertoeffectiveuptakeofWeb2.0technologiesacrossthesector.ForexamplenotallinstitutionsallowWeb2.0toolstoworkontheirnetworkedsystems.SomeinstitutionalITmanagersarescepticalorunwillingtoallowlinkingtonon‐institutionallyownedandmaintainedsystems.Whilstthereisevidencethattheseattitudesarechangingandagrowinginterestinexplorationofcloudcomputingwithininstitutions,thereisstillasignificantresistance(seealsoArmstrongetal.,2008,Minocha,2009).Thepaceofchangeoftechnologyandtheinvestmentrequiredtoadapttoinstitutionalsystemsalsocausesproblems:balancinganexistingportfolioofsystemswithmigrationtonewonesisanongoingchallenge.Thereisagrowingdividebetweenthosethataresupportiveofcontinuingtoinvestininstitutionalsystemsandthosewhoadvocateamoreopen
23http://lidu.open.ac.uk/
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approach.ThisdivideisparticularlyprevalentindiscoursearoundVirtualLearningEnvironmentsversusPersonalLearningEnvironments24.
PedagogicalrethinkingFifthlyWeb2.0approachesrequirepedagogicalrethinking.Theychallengeexistingapproachestocurriculumdesign,deliveryandassessment.ForexamplethereisaclearclashbetweentheparticipatoryandcollaborativenatureofWeb2.0learningandcurrentstructuresofformalassessment.Thisraisestheoreticalquestionsaboutwhatconstitutesagoodorinnovativepedagogy.MinochaarguesthatuseofWeb2.0technologiesneedsthoughtfulintegrationandalignmentwithbothlearningoutcomesandassessmentstrategies(2009:34‐7).Shepointstoissuesaboutprivacyintheseopenspaces,butalsoraisesconcernsaboutunequalparticipation,distrustinpeerfeedbackandissuesofownership.ShecitesanexampleofwherestudentswereuncomfortableaboutuploadingontoFlickrthephotographstheyweretakingonthecourse,astheyfeltthattheyhadnocontrolaboutwhowaslookingatthephotographsandusingthem.Theconcernaboutsharingresourceswasraisedparticularlywherestudentswereaskedtosharereflectionswithagroupofpeoplewhowerepotentiallygoingtocommentonwhathadbeenwritten;commentingonothers’reflectionswasalsoconsidereduncomfortablebythestudents.Relatedstudies(Cole,2009)revealthatstudentsarenotpreparedtoparticipateinsuchactivitiesiftheyseeitasanadditional(albeitformative)task,especiallywhenneithertherewardnorlearningbenefits/outcomesareclear.Minocha(2009:44)foundthatmostoftheWeb2.0integratedactivitieswereusedaspartofformativeassessment.Therewereissuesraisedaboutattributionandidentification;performanceoncoursesandusesofsometoolswaspositivelyco‐related,butnosystematicevidencefromthestudies,norevidenceofsystematicassessmentofsuchco‐relation,exist.
Asdiscussedthroughoutthereview,thereareclearopportunitiestoenhanceeducationalpracticewiththespiritofWeb2.0.However,asthisappendixhashighlightedthisisnotwithoutitschallenges.Fundamentallytheshiftisaboutdevelopingwaysofteachingandlearningthataremorealignedwithasenseofplay,expression,reflectionandexploration,andaboveall,creatingratherthanconsumingcontent.IntroducingWeb2.0practiceshasaknockoneffect.IfWeb2.0supportslearningthroughcollaboration,publication,multipleliteraciesandinquiry,thewaythatlearnerslearnandaretaughtwillchange.Thecontentandassessmentoftheirlearningwillchangeaswell.ThiswillrequireeducatorsandeducationalinstitutionstoconfrontthehiddenchallengesthatWeb2.0toolspresent.
Appendix7:DifferentapproachestoshiftingthinkingandpromotingchangeTwoexamplesofthewaysinwhichchangesinpracticeandculturecanbepromotedaredescribedhere.
Design‐basedresearchThefirstexamplelooksathowapplicationofdifferentresearchmethodologiesmightprovidenewwaysofguidingteacherpractice.Action‐basedresearchhasastrongfollowing
24 Seeforexamplearecentdebateandassociatedlinksonthistopichttp://cloudworks.ac.uk/index.php/cloud/view/2162
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ineducation,andhasbeenusedextensivelyasanapproachtotrialandevaluateeducationalinterventionsontheuseoftechnologies.Researchfromdesignsciencemayprovideanalternativemechanismforsupportingscholarlyapproaches.Zang(2009)forexample,articulatesanumberofchallengesaroundtheuseofWeb2.0environmentstosupportknowledgecreationandthewaysinwhichsuchtechnologiesmightbeusedtosupportteacherlearningandinnovation.Integraltohisdiscussionisadesignscienceperspectivethatfocusesonidentifyingchallenges,envisioningnewpossibilities,andtestingimprovedlearningenvironmentsandinterventions.Theapproachinvolvesreflectivepractice,wherebyformativeresearchfindingsarefedbackintoongoingcyclesofinnovativedesign(Bereiter,2002).Zangarguesthatdesign‐basedresearchprovidesanapproachtodevelopingandtestinglearningenvironmentdesignthatistheoreticallyinformed.Design‐basedresearchcanputeducationalresearchersandpractitionersintoproactivepositions,sothattheycanactivelycontributetoevidence‐informedchangesinlearningenvironments(Zang,2009:274).Itmightalsoprovideamechanismforguidingteachersintheuseofnewtechnologiesandhelpdeveloptheirunderstandingofhowthesetechnologiescanbeused.Professionalwisdom,asdescribedbyDede(2009),isthereforepossiblewithsuchanapproach,asgettingpractitionerstoactivelyengageinonlinespacesandexplicitlyreflectontheirexperiences,willhelpthemacquirenewknowledgeandgivethemanunderstandingofhowtoapplyittonewteachingcontextcontexts.Anevaluativeapproachisinherentindesign‐basedresearchandprovidesamechanismforteacherstoformalisetheirunderstanding,alongsidemoreinformalmechanismsofsharingtheirknowledge‐in‐practice.
PromotingchangethroughthetechnologiesThesecondexampleexploreshowpracticecanbechangedthroughthenewtechnologies,usingthemtofacilitatethesharingofgoodpractice.Therehavebeenalotofstudiesandprojectsaroundmechanismsforsharingpractice.Theseincludeinitiativesthathavefocussedoncross‐institutionalsharing,thosethatexplorehowtoadoptmoreevidence‐basedapproachesandcollaborationoneducationalresearchactivitiesandsubject‐specificinitiatives.Someexampleswillbegivenaroundthefollowingapproaches:
• Professionalnetworksandsupportcentres • Promotionoflearningdesignasamechanismforarticulatingandrepresentingpractice • Useofpedagogicalpatterns • ThedevelopmentandfosteringofOERcommunities • EmergentcommunitiesaroundeducationaltoolssuchasLearnerManagementSystems • Research‐basedcommunities
Professional networks and support centres
Overthepasttenyearsorsoarangeofprofessionalnetworksandsupportcentreshaveemergedwhichhaveaspartoftheirremitaroleinpromotinggoodpractice.Somehaveaspecificfocusontechnologies25,othersareeitherfocusedoneducationalpractices26orsubjectdisciplines(theHigherEducationAcademysubjectcentres).Thesenetworksand25 See for example, forexampleALT,http://www.alt.ac.uk/ 26 Seeforexample,SEDA,http://www.seda.ac.uk/
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supportcentresprovidearangeofmechanismsforsupportingpractice–facilitationofworkshopsandconferences,onlineeventsanddiscussionsspaces,repositoriesofresourcesandcasestudiesofgoodpractice.
Learning design
Muchofthelearningdesignresearchisconcernedwithmechanismsforarticulatingandsharingpractice,andinparticularthewaysinwhichdesignscanberepresented.Lockyeretal.(2008)andBeethamandSharpe(2007)haveproducededitedcollectionsonworkinthisarea.TheAUTClearningdesignprojectwasoneofthefirstmajorpiecesofworkaroundthis27.Itpresentsacomprehensivesuiteofdesignsacrossdifferenttypesofpedagogy.JISChasfundedanumberofprojectsinthisareaunderitsdesignforlearningprogramme28andmorerecentlytheCurriculumdesignanddeliveryprogrammes29.AslightlytangentialapproachhasbeenadoptedbytheUniversityofAlbanyKnowledgeNetworkforInnovationsinTeachingandLearning30.Theirgoalis‘touseourknowledgeofinstructionaldesignandlearningtechnologytoproduceasuiteofprofessionaldevelopmentresources,organizedasanopenWikisite,thatcanhelpteachersofdifferentlevelstounderstandnewlearningapproachesandenvironmentsandworktowardsinnovativeclassroompractices’.
Pedagogical patterns
Acloselyrelatedbodyofworktolearningdesignisresearchintothedevelopmentanduseofpedagogicalpatterns.DerivedfromAlexander’sworkinArchitecture,pedagogicalpatternsisanapproachtodevelopingstructuredcasestudiesofgoodpractice(SeeforexampleGoodyear,2005foranoutlineofthefield).AnexampleofaninitiativethattriedtofosteracommunityaroundthecreationanduseofpatternsisthePedagogicalPatternsproject31.
Open Educational Resources
WiththeriseoftheOpenEducationalResourcesmovementinrecentyearsnotsurprisinglyanumberofsupportcentresandcommunitysiteshaveemerged.OpenLearn32,alongsideitsrepositoryofOER,createdLabspacewhichprovidesarangeoftoolsforfosteringcommunityengagement,suchasafreetoolforvideoconferencing(flashmeeting)andatoolforvisualisation(Compendium).TheaimistoprovideanenvironmentforsharingofgoodpracticeandpromotingthereuseofOER.LeMillisaweb‐basedcommunityforfinding,authoringandsharingopeneducationalpractices33.Similarly,Connexions34providesaspaceforeducatorsandlearnertouseandreuseOER.CarnegieMellon,throughitsOpen
27 AUTClearningdesignproject:http://www.learningdesigns.uow.edu.au 28 JISC Design for Learning Programme: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearningpedagogy/designlearn.aspx 29 JISC Curriculum Design and Delivery Programme: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning/curriculumdesign.aspx 30 UniversityofAlbanyKnowledgeNetworkforInnovationsinTeachingandLearning:http://tccl.rit.albany.edu/knilt 31 Pedagogical Patterns: http://www.pedagogicalpatterns.org/ 32 http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/ 33 http://lemill.net/ 34 http://cnx.org/
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LearningInitiative35,adoptsamoreevidence‐basedapproach.CarnegieMellonandtheOpenUniversityintheUKaredevelopingaglobalnetworkofsupportforresearchersandusersofOER,throughOlnet36.Therehasbeenashifttowardsfocusingonthepracticesaroundthecreation,useandmanagementofOER.TheOPALprojecthasrecentlyundertakenareviewofover60casestudiesofOERinitiativesandfromtheseabstractedeightdimensionsofOpenEducationalPractice37.Atthetimeofwritinganonlineconsultationandvalidationprocessaroundtheseisunderway.
Learner management systems
WiththeemergenceofLearnerManagementSystems(LMSs)/VirtualLearningEnvironments(VLEs)inthelasttenyears,anumberofsatellitecommunitieshavedeveloped.Theopensourcetool,Moodle38,hasaveryactivecommunitybutthefocusisprimarilyondevelopmentissuesratherthanthewaysinwhichMoodleisactuallybeingusedinteaching.TheLAMScommunity39isarguablymoresuccessfulintermsofconcentratingoneducationalaspectsandhasover500LAMSdesignsequencesavailableonline.Inaddition,manyinstitutionsinstigatedstaffdevelopmentprogrammeslinkedtotheirVLE,topromoteitsuseanduptake.
Research-based communities
Inadditiontothepractitioner‐orientatedsitesandcommunitiesdescribedaboveitisworthtouchinguponanumberofthemoreresearch‐focusedcommunities.Ase‐learninghasdevelopedasaresearchfield,arangeofprofessionalbodies,specialisedconferencesandjournalshavearisen.Inaddition,communitiesandassociatedactivitiestendtospontaneouslyarisearoundfundinginitiativesinthisarea,forexampleprojectssupportedbytheJISCandAcademyormoreresearch‐focussedinitiativessuchasthecurrentESRC/EPRSCTLRPTechnology‐enhancedlearningprogramme40.Similarpatternsofbehaviourareevidentaroundinternationalcollaboration,althoughunderstandablythisismorecomplex.ForexampleinEuropetheStellarNetworkofExcellence41aimsto‘buildupon,synergiseandextendthevaluableworkwehavestartedbysignificantlybuildingcapacityinTELresearchwithinEurope’.Onespecificexample,relevanttothediscussionhere,includestheELESIG(EvaluationofLearners'Experiencesofe‐learningSpecialInterestGroup)community42.Thisconsistsofover800membersinterestedinlookingatstudents'usesof,andexperiencewith,technologies.Elesigrunsarangeofeventsandhasaning‐basedonlinesiteandalsoonCloudworks.
35 http://oli.web.cmu.edu/openlearning/ 36 http://olnet.org 37 http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloudscape/view/2019 38 http://moodle.org/community/, 39 http://www.lamscommunity.org/ 40 ESRC/EPRSCTLRPTechnology‐enhancedlearningprogramme: http://www.tlrp.org/tel/ 41 EuropetheStellarNetworkofExcellence(http://www.stellarnet.eu/ 42 ELESIG: http://elesig.ning.com/ ; ELESIG team on Cloudworks: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/user/view/1973
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Appendix8:OpenEducationalResourcesOurfocusinthisappendixhasbeenonreviewingasnapshotofcurrentissuesrelatingtoeducators’motivationsandexperiencesaroundsharingandteachinginanOERcontext.ThecorenotionofopennessandcollectivebenefitthatarekeyprinciplesassociatedwithWeb2.0practicesalignwiththeprinciplesinherentinopensourceinitiatives.Inaneducationalcontext,themostprominentistheOpenEducationalResourcemovement,whichhasgainedscaleanddepthsincetheearly2000s.Atkinsetal.(2008)articulateasharedvisionthateducationalmaterialsshouldbemadefreelyavailable,sothattheycanbesharedandreusedbyothers.Aperceptionthatsuchsharingiseconomicallyviable,andwillleadtowardssharingofgoodpedagogicalpracticesineducationhasalsobeenarticulated(IiyoshiandKumar,2008).
Severalwell‐known–yetdistinct–initiativeswithintheOERworldcontinuetopurportamissionofeducationasa‘publicgood’.Inadditioncurrentthinkingaswellasemergingpolicyagendasoneducationareshiftingfromtheideaofsimplyprovidingaccesstocontent,towardsthenotionofcreating‘openparticipatorylearningecosystems’(cf.SmithandCasserly,2006;Seely‐Brown2007;Seely‐BrownandAdler2008).WebeginthissectionwithabriefoverviewofOERanddefinitionssurroundingsharingopencontentandeducationalpractices.
WebeginwithanoverviewofemergingresearchinthefieldandmorespecificallywefocusuponevidenceofopenpracticesdevelopedinrelationtotheuseofOERhaveanimpactonteachingandlearning.WedrawonsomeoftheemergingliteraturecomingfromourresearchaspartoftheOlnetinitiative43.Inparticular,wefocusonhowtheserelatetothedeploymentofOERandtomotivationsandexperiencesofeducatorsforaccessing,sharingandreflectinginteaching.AspartofadevelopingresearchportfoliowehavebeenconductinginterviewswithinnovatorsinopenaccessandtheworldofOER.TheframeworkforliteraturereviewedandforempiricalinsightsoutlinedinthelatersectionshasbeenbeendevisedbyPanagiotaAlevizouandhasbeenreviewedextensivelyinanumberofconferences(seeAlevizou,2009;Alevizou,2009a;Alevizou,2010;Alevizou,WilsonandMcAndrew,2010;AlevizouandForte,2010).
FromlearningobjectstoopeneducationalresourcesTheterm‘learningobject’,definedas‘adigitalresourcewhichhasanelementofintentionallearning’becamepopularinthe1990s(Littlejohn,2003;Wileyetal.,2002).SincetheestablishmentoftheMERLOTdatabase44,oneoftheearliestavailableontheweb,anumberofotherrepositoriesgainedprominenceduringthe1990s,atbothinstitutionaland
43www.olnet.org.Olnet,fundedbyTheWilliamandFloraHewlettFoundation,buildsonthebasisofworkonOERinitiativesatCarnegieMellonUniversity(theOpenLearningInitiative),togetherwithOpenLearnattheOpenUniversity.44http://www.merlot.org
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national‐levels.Examplesinclude:JORUM45WISC‐online46andGEM47.GLOBE48providesameta‐searchfacilityacrossotherlearningobjectrepositories.TheReusableLearningObjectCETL49hasaspecificfocusonthedevelopmentanduseoflearningobjects.
ThetermOpenEducationalResources(OER)emergedintheearly2000s;sincethenOERshavegainedincreasedattentionfortheirpotentialtoobviatedemographic,economicandculturaleducationalboundaries,throughfreeaccess,redistributionandreuse.AlthoughtheoriginsofthemovementcanbetracedtoRichardStallman’sFreeSoftwareFoundation,itbegantomaterialisein2002,withacoalitionformedbyUNESCO,theHewlettfoundationandMIT.In2002HewlettinitiatedanextensiveOERprogramme,thechiefaimofwhichwasto‘catalyzeuniversalaccesstoanduseofhigh‐qualityacademiccontentonaglobalscale’(Atkinsetal.,2007:1).AlthoughtheexactdefinitionofOERhasbeencontested,twoprincipaldefinitionshavegainedprominence:
Theopenprovisionofeducationalresources,enabledbyICTs,forconsultation,useandadaptationbyacommunityofusersfornon‐commercialpurposes(UNESCO,2002:n.p.)
Digitizedmaterialsofferedfreelyandopenlyforeducators,studentsandself‐learnerstouseandreuseforteaching,learningandresearch(OECD/Hylén,andSchuller,2007:133).
MIT,withtheirOpenCourseWareinitiative50arecreditedwithbeingthefirsttodeclarethattheyweregoingtomakeasignificantamountoftheircontentfreelyavailable,resultinginaswathofrhetoricabouttheimportanceandpotentialofOER(Caswelletal.2008;SmithandCasserly2006).In2006theOpenUniversity,UKfollowedsuitwithitsOpenLearninitiative51.
FundingforthesetypesofinitiativeshasbeensupportedinparticularbytheWilliamandFloraHewlettfoundationbutalsobyOECDandUNESCO.Morerecently,intheUK,theHigherEducationAcademy(HEA)andtheJointInformationSystemsCommittee(JISC)haveinitiatedalarge‐scalecallforthedevelopmentofOER52,buildingonexistinginitiativessuchasJORUMandOpenLearn.Theprogrammecurrentlycontains29projects.
AccordingtodatafromtheOECD(OECD/Hylén,andSchuller,2007)over300universitiesworldwideareengagedinthedevelopmentofOERwithmorethan3000openaccesscourses.Threeyearson,thenumbersaregrowing:200universitieshavesignedwiththeOpenCoursewareConsortiumalone,offeringmaterialsfrommorethan13,000courses,availablethroughtheConsortium’ssite(Carson,2010).Othersimilarinitiativesinclude:
45http://www.jorum.ac.uk),46http://www.wisc‐online.com/,47http://www.thegateway.org/.48http://www.globe‐info.org/49http://www.rlo‐cetl.ac.uk/joomla/index.php50http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/web/home/home/index.htm51http://openlearn.open.ac.uk52http://www.jisc.ac.uk/oer
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TheChinaOpenResourcesforEducation(CORE)consortium53;theJapaneseOCWConsortium54,theParisTechOCWproject55andtheIrishIREL‐Openinitiative56Atthesametime,Web2.0technologiesandsocialmediahaveacceleratedusergeneratedcontentandcollaborativeresources,manyofwhich(e.g.Wikipedia,Flckr,etc)havegainedlegitimacywithintheOERmovement(seeHewlett,2009)andanumberofonlinecollaborativecommunityprojects‐beyondmainstreameducationalinstitutions–haveemergedtofacilitateengagementinlearningwith,andthrough,openresources(e.g.Wikieducator,Wikiversity,thePeertoPeeruniversity,Smarthistory,etc)57.
Openeducationalresourcesthen,includelearningcontentatdifferentlevelsofgranularityforstudentsandteachersatalllevelsoflearning.Thisincludesvideos,books,lessonplans,games,simulations,fullcoursesandopen‐accesscontent;open‐sourcesoftwaretoolsthatsupportthecreation,delivery,use,andimprovementofopenlearningcontent,includingsearchingandorganizationofcontent;contentandlearningmanagementsystems(e.g.,Moodle,Sakai);onlinelearningcommunities;andintellectualpropertylicenses(e.g.,CreativeCommons)topromoteopenmaterialspublishing,designprinciples,andcontentlocalization.Open‐sourcecoursemanagementsystemsarebeingdeployedwidelyinuniversities,andtosomeextentinK–12.Whilenumerousrepositoriesandaggregatorsexist(seeforexampleOERCommons58),recentendeavorshavefocusedattentiononraisingawarenessanddevelopingguidelinesandtutorialsforfinding,producing,licensingandremixingOERs(seeforexampleWikieducator’sOERhandbook59)andUNESCO’sOERtoolkit60.Atthesametime,anumberoftoolsandplatformrepositories,licensingbodies,bestpracticesprojectsandimplementationprojects,aswellasresourceshaveemerged.Thefigurebelowdrawson,andexpandsfrom,Margulies'(2005)andConoleandWeller’s(2008)taxonomies(tools,content,implementation)tomaptheOERlandscape.
53http://www.core.org.cn/cn/jpkc/index_en.html54http://www.jocw.jp55http://graduateschool.paristech.org/56http://www.irel‐open.ie/57http://wikieducator.org/,http://en.wikiversity.org,http://p2pu.org/,http://www.smarthistory.org/58www.oercommons.org59www.wikieducator.org/OER_Handbook60http://oerwiki.iiep‐unesco.org/index.php?title=UNESCO_OER_Toolkit).
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Figure3:ConceptualMapofOER:ExpandedfromMarguliers(2005)(seeAlevizou,2010;seealsoOECD,2007,ConoleandWeller,2008)
ThreekeyreportsprovideacomprehensivereviewofthedevelopmentoftheOERmovement,describingmanyofthemajorinitiativesinthefieldandsomeofthekeyachievements(Atkinsetal.,2007;HylénandSchuller/OECD2007;Gaser,2007).AcollectioneditedbyIiyosh,KumarandSeelyBrown(2008),considersthewidernotionof‘openness’andwhatitmightmeaninaneducationalcontext.TheabilityofOERtoserveasequitableandaccessiblealternativestoincreasedcostsandcommercialisationofeducation(IshiiandLutterbeck,2001)continuestobeacentralroleforincentivisingindividualsandmobilisingactivists,advocacygroupsaswellasfundingandpolicyorganizations.Popularargumentsreviewedintheliterature–thoughmostlyspeculative–pointtothepossibilitythatOERproliferationmayfacilitatemeetingmorepersonalisedteachingandlearningrequirements;toopportunitiesforcollaborationamongpeersinthedevelop,useandreuseopenmaterialsgloballyandacrossdifferentdisciplines.Suchpossibilitiesmayultimatelypositivelyinfluencebothacademicendeavoursandthescholarshipofteachingandlearning.Yettwocoreissuesemergeregardingthenatureofopenness,peersharingandmodificationandarerequirefurtherempiricalexploration.ThefirstrelatestothedegreethatengagementinlearningthroughOER,meansalsoengagingindevelopingmoretransparentpedagogies;thesecondrelatestotherelationshipandtensionsbetweenaccessandtracingofre‐use.
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AsIiyoshandKumarargue'thekeytenetofopeneducationisthateducationcanbeimprovedbymakingeducationalassetsvisibleandaccessibleandbyharnessingthecollectivewisdomofacommunityofpracticeandreflection'(IiyoshandKumar,2008:10,emphasisadded).OpenEducationithasbeenarguednotonlycreatesavenuesfora)engagingeducatorsaroundtheworldandb)offeringadditionalresourcesforclassroomstudents;butalso,c)assupportforindependentlearners,auto‐didactsandself‐learners.Participation,whetherasaneducatororcasuallearnerisoftenframedasanopportunityforexperimentingandgaininginformation,digital,networkingandmedialiteracyskills,through,andwithin,thefieldofcurriculardesignandinstruction.Itistooframedasanopportunityfordevelopingasupportivedialoguefortherepresentationofpedagogiesandpedagogicalknowledge.InarecentdiscussionbetweenStephenDownesandDavidWiley–bothadvocates,scholarsandpractitionersinOER–whatwassuggestedwasthat:
Institutionsare invitedtoexploretheeffectivenessandviabilityofopensolutionstoaddresslarge‐scaleeducational reform.Teacher trainingand facultydevelopmenteffortsareareasofparticularinterest,alongwithopportunitiesforcontinuouseducation.[…]‘ifopeneducationalresources are to represent a rich tapestryof theways inwhichwemanifest ourselves – thewaysinwhichweimmerseourselvesinmultiplecreativities–theytooofferaninviting,lower‐riskand lower‐costplatform forbeingexperimentaland innovative in the fieldofeducation'(paraphrased from the Wiley‐Downes discussion at the OpenEd preconference, Alevizou,2009).
IndeedabodyofliteraturehasemergedfromresearchintoOERsthatcomefromconventionaluniversitiesandpointstowardsthesedirections(PetridesandJimes,2006;Petridesetal.,2008;Kanchanaraksaetal.,2009;SchuwerandMulder,2009).McAndrewetal.(2009)notethattheOpenLearninitiativehasprovidednewmeansofworkingwithbothformalpartnershipsandtobuildalsolessformalpartnershipsandcollaborations.Ithasalsohelpedtowardsexaminingandimprovingorganizationalstructuresandprocesses,aswellaspedagogicalphilosophiesamongeducatorsthatsharedtheirmaterialsinanOERform.Anotherstrandintheliteraturepointstoinformallearningcommunitiesformingaroundopeneducationalresources(Bourbules,2007;Ala‐Mutka,2009).Burbulesfocusesonwhathedescribesas'self‐educatingcommunities'groupsengagedinformal,informal,ornon‐formalteachingandlearningactivitiesamongstthemselves.Hisprimaryinterestiswithonlineself‐educatingcommunities,usingthewebasaneducationalmedium.Heoffersatypologyofthekindsofonlinenetworksof‘improvement’andco‐education.Healsodiscussestheinternalpracticesandnormsthatallowthesenetworkstoactsuccessfullyasself‐educatingcommunities,andpointstotheareasinwhichthesepracticesproducetensionsandcontradictions.
Whiletensionsbetweeninformalenvironmentsandgivenandmeasuredtasks(suchasaccreditation)needtoberecognized,establishingpresenceininformalspaceshelpsinstitutionstogetvisibility.Italsoenablesinstitutionstoconnectwithprospectivestudentsandself‐learnersthathavethepotentialtocontributetodevelopingpedagogicalinnovationscomingfrompeoplefromwithininstitutionsandexternalcommunities(GurleyandLane,2009).Community,creativeparticipationandcollaborationinbothformalandinformalcontextsarecentraltotheeffectivenessandsustainabilityofOER.
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Understandingthenatureandinterfaceofopennessinthecontextofarapidlychangingeducationalcontext,isimportantfromaresearchperspective,butalsohasanumberoftangibleandpracticalbenefits.Firstly,itislikelytoleadtobetterunderstandingofhowOERcanbedesignedandrepurposed,whichultimatelymayleadtoagreateruptakeanduse.Secondly,adoptingmoreopenapproachestothedesignprocesscouldleadtobetterunderstandingoflearningandteachingideasaswellthecreationofavibrantcommunityofscholarshiparoundlearningandteaching(Conole,2009/LearninginanOpenWorldVisionStatement61).
Educators’motivationsandOERteachingpracticesAsignificantbodyofresearchisnowavailableonhoweducatorsandlearnersareaccessingandusingOERmaterials(WileyandHenson,2006;Harleyetal,.2006;Hylen,2006)McAndrewetal.,2009).Inasurveyof452collegeinstructorsconductedin2007Petridesetal.(2008a)foundthat92%hadsearchedforcourse‐relatedmaterialsontheInternet.Reasonsincluded:
• thedesiretointegratenewmaterialsintotheircourses• toimprovetheirteachingmethodsandknowledge• toconnectwithcolleagueswhohadsimilarteachinginterests(Petridis,etal.2008a
citedinPetridisetal,2008:100).
TheseresultsareonparwithMIT’sconsecutiveevaluationreportsofitsOCWcollection,whichtoorevealthateducatorsareaccessingOERtosupporttheircourseplanningandpreparationandtoenhancetheirpersonalknowledge(MIT,2006;2009a).
Thesharingofone’sownmaterialsandthereuseofothers’OERsislessexpansive(seeHarleyetal.,2006;Hatakka,2009).InPetridesetal's(2008a)studyofonlineinstructors,evidencedirectstothefollowing:while67%ofthosesurveyedwerewillingtosharetheircoursematerialswithothersovertheInternet,only25%werewillingorintendingtomaketheircoursematerialsavailableinanOERform.Evidentintheliteratureandinourownresearchisthatissuesofownership,confidence,relevanceandqualityareprominentinhibitors,alongsideissuesrelatingtolegalconstraintsandtechnicalliteracy,lackofprofessionalincentivesandaculture(orexpertise)insharingandremixingopenly.Thelasttwoaspectsarecloselyassociatedwithawarenessraisingstrategies,policyandinstitutionalsupport.Asseveralintervieweesthatparticipatedinourstudy‘oncollaborationandcontextinOER’(seeAlevizou,2009a)note:
Theonethingistheuseofthetechnology,newtechnologyandwikis.Antheotherisopeningtotheworld,right.Sothat,thatbarrierhasbeenwelldiscussedIthink.It’sanemotionalthingIthink,cosplay it out rationally, its advantageous to teachers largely, and researchers. But emotionally it’sscary, they are unprepared, their resources aren’t good enough, they think there might becommercialgains(Wikieducator,Interviewee,13/08/09).
61http://cloudworks.ac.uk/index.php/cloud/view/2804
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Thereishighqualitythresholdandself‐censorshipthatisimposedbyteachersthemselves;andthat’sconsideredasbarrierforcreatingadditionalcoursesfortheOERplatform…Additionalawardsshouldmotivatepeople(OpenERInterviewee,24/07/09).
WeneedtomakesurethatOERsarenotstandaloneprojectswithininstitutions…Whenpeopleinvesttimeandresources,theyneedtoseeatangiblebenefit:thiscouldrelatetostudentsfeelingthattheyarebettereducated;inabetterway,inadifferentway.Butitalsodependsontheinstitutionhavingcreatedapolicyenvironmentthatissupportingfacultyhavingdedicatedtheirtimeandenergy(OERAfricaInterviewee,12/08/09).
Despitethesebarriersthereisevidencethatovertime,positiveattitudesregardingmotivationexistandarecognitionof–amongthosethatparticipateinrelevantinitiatives–positiveinfluenceinresearch,teachingandlearningpractices.AccordingtothemostrecentevaluationsurveysconductedbyMITOCW(2009a),17%ofeducatorscomingtothesitehavereusedcontentand32%expecttodosointhefuture,47%ofthetotalcohortofeducationscombineOCWmaterialswithothercontent;30%adaptcoursesyllabi;30%adaptassignmentsorexams.
Mostimportantly,evidencesuggeststhatteacherswhoindeedpublishinanOERplatformformenjoythebenefitsoflocalisedandglobalexposurewithrespecttoscholarlyandscientificcommunities,engagebetterwiththeirstudents(prospective,currentandalumni)andimprovetheirteachingpracticesandexperimentation.AsoneintervieweefromMITOCWputsit:
Facultyhaveaboutahalfdozenthingstheycarryaroundintheirhead,thatthey’dliketodototheircourseiftheyfoundtimetodoit,andpublishingopenlyprovidesthemtheoccasiontomakethosechangestheywereplanningtomake.AndsoaboutathirdoftheFacultytellusthey’veimprovedtheircoursematerialsthroughthepublicationprocess.Andanotherthirdsaythey’vebecomemorecomfortableinusingthewebasateachingtool,urthroughpublication.ThenwhenFacultyaregoingtoproducetheirowncourses,orgettheirowncoursesreadyforteachinghereoncampus,about80%gototheOpenCourseWaresitetofindmaterialstolookatwhattheircolleaguesareteaching,lookathowothercoursesarestructured(MITOCWInterviewee,08/08/2009).
ConnexionsandWikieducatorhavealsobeenusedasplatformsforeducatorstoexperimentwithandpublishwidelyinavarietyoffieldsforalllevelsofeducationincludingvocationaleducationandteachertraining;Thesitesservesasanapprenticeshipplatformforeducatorsbyallowingthemtoobservehowothersintheirrespectivefieldscommunicatewitheachotherandalsotopublishtheirowncontributions,orimproveothers’content,whichcanberelativelysmall–echoing‘legitimateperipheralparticipation'(LaveandWenger,1991)thatischaracteristicofopensourcecommunities:
Ithink,generally,wefitnicelyintothosemodelswhereyouhavenowtheopportunitytore‐use,infactteachersaregoing,‘oh…,youmeanIdon’thavetotakethisbookasitis,Icanre‐arrangethechapters’…That’sthefirstone,andthenthesecondoneis‘ohyoumeanIcanputmyownworkinthere,oh…’.Andsothose,thoseareevolutionsthattakeplace.Thenthey’lltrymore,andsomewillbeadopters,somewon’tbe…(ConnexionsInterviewee,10/08/09).
Thisallowseducatorsto'learntobe'open,co‐creators;inthisinstancebyperipherallyparticipatingin‘improving’andaddingtheirownperspectivesandexperiencesfromusing
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resourcesinrespectivecontexts.Suchperipheralparticipationcanresultinacycleofmoreexperimentationandengagementwithpeersandhencecontributetoagradualtransformationofdepartmental,andeventually,institutionalcultures.Insomeways,assomeofourintervieweesputit,theadoptionofanOERmindsetamongstfaculty,followsaclassicexampleofdiffusionofinnovations(Rogers,1962):
Weputsurveysinthefieldtostudents,toalumni,tofaculty,andwetriedtogetthatinformationoutsothatitbecamecleartothecommunitywhatthebenefitswereforMITinparticipating.ButoverallIthinkwhatwesawwasreallykindofaclassicdiffusionofinnovationoccur.Whereyouknow,wegottheearlyadoptersonboard,wegotthemtobecomeourbestadvocates,andsotheygotthenextgroupandthenextgroup,anditsortofledtoapointwherethequestiononcampusbecame‘whyhaven’tyoupublished’,ratherthan‘whywouldyoupublish’.AndIthinkthatstudentswerereallyimportantindrivingthat,becauseoncethestudentsbegantoseeitasatremendousresource,theywouldgoandlookforaparticularfacultymembersmaterials,iftheywouldn’tfindit,they’dgoandfindthefacultymemberandsaywellwhyhaven’tyoupublishedonOpenCourseWare(MITOCWInterviewee,08/08/2009).
Variationsinhighereducationinstitutionsregarding‘OER‐readiness’exist,withuniversitieswithexpertisein,andpre‐existingstructuresto,supportdistancelearninghavingacompetitiveadvantageoverresidentialinstitutions,bothintermsofinfrastructureandinstitutionalsupport.Buthavingandmaintainingastrongvision,alongwithadvocacyandinclusivestrategiesforsupportingteachersandstudents,isalsodeemedparamount,inbothdistanceandresidentialuniversities.Increasedengagementwithcontentforprospectiveandhomestudentsiscitedasacommonincentiveatbothinstitutionalandfacultylevels.Thisincreasestheopportunitiesforpre‐practicumandpersonalizedlearning.Inaddition,makingstudentcontributions(suchasseminarnotes,labreportsandpersonalreflectionsthroughblogging)alsoavailableinaopen‐coursewareform,isseenbyeducatorsasanimportantfactorforimprovingteachingandlearningandforcreatingmoreopenandparticipatorycultures.Assomeintervieweesnoted,involvingthestudentsintheOERmovementhasanumberofbenefitsandcancontributetobringingaboutchangesinculturalattitudesandthewayinwhichlearningandteachingisundertaken.Forothers,teachingusingOERhasbecomepartoftheirprofessionalpractice.BelowweprovidesomeexampleswherebyengagementwithOERcontentintersectswithteachingpracticesinanOERfashion.
AnewEU‐fundedinitiative,OPAL62isarticulatinghowOpenEducationalPracticesarecurrentlylocatedwithinthedevelopmentanduseofOER.ItsaimistoexplorewaystoimprovethequalityofOERandspiralinnovationaroundOER.HowmightWeb2.0technologiesbeusedasaformof‘pedagogicalwraparound’topromotediscussionaboutOER?IndeedOERresearchanddevelopmentactivitiesprovideusefulgroundsforexploringnewapproachesinlearningandteaching.Thisworkhasenabledtheteachingcommunitytoexperiment,toexplorehowtheseresourcesmightbeusedindifferentcontextsandhowtheycanbesharedandrepurposed,asisevidentbythediversityofOERinitiativesworldwide.Theserangefromwhole‐scaleinstitutionalprojects,tocross‐sectordisciplineinitiatives,aswellasindividualprojectswhichfocusonuseofOERforcollaborationand62OPAL:http://qualityoer.pbworks.com/FrontPage
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peerlearning.Thesamecanalsobesaidofothercrowd‐sourcedprojectssuchasWikieducator,Wikiversity,DeviantArtandSmarthistory.
OERclassroomcommunitiesGeorgeSiemensandStephenDownescreatedanambitiouscourseanddelivereditforthefirsttimein2009–notonlywerethetoolsandresourcestheyusedinthecoursefree,butsowastheexpertise.(SeethisblogpostforareflectionontheexperimentbyGeorgeSiemens63)Thetwelve‐weekcoursewascalled‘ConnectivismandConnectiveKnowledgeOnlineCourse’64TheydescribedthecourseasaMOOG(MassiveOpenOnlineCourse).Thecontent,deliveryandsupportforthecoursewastotallyfree,anyonecouldjoinandanimpressive2400did,althoughtheactualnumberofveryactiveparticipantswassmaller(ca.200).Thecourseprovidesaniceexampleofanextensionoftheopenmovement,movingastepbeyondtheOpenEducationalResourcemovementtoprovidingatotallyfreecourse.Siemens,reflectingonthecoursesaidthefollowing:
Didwechangetheworld?No.Notyet.Butwe(andImeanallcourseparticipants,notjustStephenandI)managedtoexplorewhatispossibleonline.Peopleself‐organizedintheirpreferredspaces.Theyetchedawayatthehallowedplaqueof“whatitmeanstobeanexpert”.Theylearnedintransparentenvironments,andintheprocess,becameteacherstoothers.Thosethatobserved(orlurkedasisthemorecommonterm),hopefullyfoundvalueinthecourseaswell.Perhapslifecircumstances,personalschedule,motivationforparticipating,confidence,familiaritywiththeonlineenvironment,ornumerousotherfactors,impactedtheirabilitytocontribute.Whilewecan’t“measurethem”thewayI’vetriedtodowithblogandmoodleparticipants,theircontinuedsubscriptiontoTheDailyandthecommentsencounteredinF2Fconferencessuggesttheyalsofoundsomevalueinthecourse65.
DavidWiley,AssociateProfessorofInstructionalTechnologyanddirectoroftheCenterforOpenandSustainableLearning(COSL)atUtahStateUniversityisawell‐knownresearcherintheareaofLearningObjectsandOpencontent.Usingwikisandblogs,herunsacourseentitled,“IntroductiontoOpenEducation”66.Thenoveltyofthecourse(launchedin2007)wasthatitwasfreeandofferedtoanyoneintheworld.Theonlyrequirementwastheavailabilityofablog,tobeusedtopublishweeklypostsonthevarioustopicsofthecourse.Thecoursecouldbeattendedindifferentways:
• credit:studentswhoneededcredithadtosignupforanindependentstudyattheiruniversityandfindasupervisortowhomtheinstructorshouldsendagradeattheendoftheterm,
• noncredit:studentscouldattendthecoursewithoutanygradingfromtheinstructor.Iftheycompletedittheycouldgetacertificateattheendofthecoursestatingitssuccessfulconclusion,
• informal:fullynon‐creditattendanceoftheactivities.
63http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/connectivism/?p=182 64 http://e4innovation.com/?p=370 - _ftn1 65http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/connectivism/?p=182 66http://open.byu.edu/ipt692r‐wiley/
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Thecoreobjectivesofthecourseweretoofferafirmgroundinginthecurrentstateofthefieldofopeneducation,includingrelatedtopicslikecopyright,licensing,andsustainability,andtogetparticipantsthinking,writing,anddebatingaboutcurrentpracticesandpossiblealternativesinopeneducation.Usingparticipantobservationasamethodologicalapproachtostudysocialinteractionwithincourse,Finietal.(n.d.)offeranumberofinterestinginsights.Whiletheinitialdidacticstructureofthecoursepromotedindividuallearningmodalitiesforreadingandstructuringreflections,duringcoursedelivery,peerparticipantstookwereencouragedtotakemorecontrolovercurriculardesignandactivities,.Theauthorsnotedthattightconnectionsbetweencontentandusersweregraduallydeveloped,andthatcreativeandcollaborativedimensionswerealsoevident.Respondingtoanetworkofparticipants,theinstructorrestructuredthedevelopmentofthecourseproposingafinalversion,whichwasmodifiedandbroadenedonthebasisofthelearners’observations.Attheendofthecourse,startingfromthelearningmaterialproducedbytheparticipants,theteacherextrapolatedanewpatternofrenewalthatwasgoingtobeusedinthenewversionsofthecourse.Indescribingthecoursedesign,WileyoutlinesawholephilosophyforteachinginOERfashion:
Therearetwowaystodescribethedesignofthiscourse,andbothareequallyvalid.Ontheonehand,thiscourseisamixofdirectskillsinstructioncombinedwithproject‐basedlearningandcollaborativeproblemsolving.Thecourseemploysaprogressionofincreasinglycomplexproblemswithsupportiveinformation,andrequiresstudentstosynthesizehundredsofpagesofliterature,interviewdata,andtheirowndesignintuitiontoproducemeaningfulartifactsbothindividuallyandaspartofhighlyinter‐dependentteams.Theideaofteach‐reteach(characterizedbyGong’sdescriptionoftheThreePersonProblem)isattheheartofthestudents’day‐to‐daylearningexperiences(Wiley,200967):
SimilarendeavourshavebeenundertakenwithintheWikiversityplatformforacourseentitled'Composingfreeandopenonlineeducationalresources'68.Leinonenetal.(2009)notethattheexperimentwasdesignedsothatthecoursecouldmodelteachingandlearning—thatis,combiningelementsfromacquisition,participationandknowledge–buildingmetaphorsoflearning.Fromtheorganizationalperspective,thecoursereliedinmanywaysonconventionscommoninfreeadulteducation,andoutlinebothopportunitiesandchallengesinthefieldandinteachingandlearningwithwikis.
Exploringtheintersectionsamongteaching,learningcommunitiesandresearch,Ferreira(2009)outlinestwo‘PilotLearningProjects’,oneinthesubjectof'EthicsandTechnology',andtheotherintheareaofDesign.BothwererunintheOpenLearnplatform,usingcommunicationtoolsandcommunityinLabSpace–OpenLearn’sinteractiveplatform.Coreaimsofthepilotsweretoexplorea)waysinwhichOpenLearncancontributetocoursedevelopmentattheOUbyprovidingaplatformforexperimentationandtrialofnewideas;andb)todocumentandreflectontheopportunitiesaffordedattheboundarybetweenformal/informallearningattheinterfacebetweentheOUandOpenLearn(Ferreira,2009:20).Ferreiraoffersinterestingperspectivesthatbringtolighttensionsthathavealreadybeendiscussedinthisreport:67 'Course Description: http://open.byu.edu/ipt692r-wiley/syllabus/) 68http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Composing_free_and_open_online_educational_resource
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Despitethewidespreadmarketingandmediadiscoursesaroundtheideathat‘contentisfree;it’samatterofeditorialising’,commentssuchasthesearerepresentativeofapositionmorewidelysharedamongstthosewhoteach:‘Withoutateacher,learningisdifficultand,often,impossible’.‘IttookmesixmonthstofindmywayaroundsomethingIcouldhavelearntinaweek,ifIhadsomesteppingstones’.‘Evenstronglymotivatedgroupsoflearnersquicklycollapsewithoutateacher’.Whilstsomeoftheunderlyingconcernsamongstsomecolleaguesseemtorevolvearoundviewsthatconstrue‘openness’asapotentiallydestabilisingelement,lessreactionaryviewsrevolvearoundconcernswith‘quality’assomethingthatcanbeassessed,measured,andusedasevidenceof‘success’:‘quality’oflearningresources,‘quality’ofthelearningexperienceaffordedbytheinvolvementofateacherand‘quality’oftheindividualsproducedbysuchexperiences.Butaretheseconcernsrootedonlyinpoliticsanditsquestionsofpower?[...]Fromthisperspective,amajorareaofimpactofOERsisthattheiravailabilityisnotonlycreatingnewchallengesbutalsobringingtolightpreviouslyveiledtensionsandquestionsregardingidentityandboundaries,andthisprovidesafascinatingareaforfurtherinvestigation(Ferreira,2009:48‐9).
Repurposingandreflecting:designingresources,designingcollaborativecommunitiesMotivationsforcontributioninOERplatformsorOpenCoursewarerepositoriesfollowsimilarpatternstoopenpublishing.Petridesetal.(2008)offerusefulinsightsregarding‘author’useandreuseinOER.TheyfocusedontheConnexionsplatformandperformedarigorousstatisticalanalysisoflogfilesofactivityoverafive‐yearperiod,alongwithfollowupinterviewswithaselectionofparticipantswithintheplatform.Whilethequalitativedataprovidedinsightsintouseandreusepractices,thequalitativedataaddeddepthtothefindingsbydelvingintothe‘why’andthe‘how’thatgoesbehinduseandreusepractices,collaborativeauthorship,aswellaschallengesanddiscontinuationofuseandreuse.Amongthefactorsinfluencingcontributionandcontinuoususecitedinthefindingswere:
• priorfamiliaritywithpublishingonlinecontent• asenseofimprovementofteachingpractices• andsupportinprofessionaldevelopment,whichhelpedfeedacontinuuminpublishing,
augmentingandre‐usingcontent.
Astheauthorsnote:‘Usersexplainedthatasteachingprofessionalstheyhadaheightenedneedfortimelycontentfortheirstudentsandcolleagues’(Petridesetal.,2008:112).Incentivesforpersistentusersincludedideology,technicalknow‐howandarecognitionthatthistypeofengagementhelpedtheirprofessionaldevelopment;theyalsosawitasusefulforconnectingwithsubject‐specificinstructorsandteachingscholarsacrossgeographicalboundaries.However,intermittentandeventualnon‐users(someofwhomwerealsoeducators)weredisincentivisedbylackoftechnicalskills,relevanceofcontent,andreluctancetotheideaofgroupauthorship(seebelowformoreaboutcollaborativeco‐authorshipandcommunitystructures).
Certainly,educators’priorknowledgeandfamiliaritywithWeb2.0ortechnicalskills,aswellasmotivationstowardsopennessandcrowdsourcededucation,arekeycomponentsforthesustainabilityandsuccessoftheOERmovement(seeforexample,Downes,2007).
Asresearchinthefieldhasindicated,educators’concernsoverrelevanceandqualityhinderuseandreuse.Therelevanceofcontentincorporatesseverallayers,e.g.
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examplesfromdevelopedcountriesmaynotberelevantforstudentsoriginatingfromothercultures,thepedagogyusedmaynotbeappropriate,orthelevelofthecontentmaynotbeappropriate(Albright,2005;Unwin,2005;Selinger2004).Qualitycanmeandifferentthings(includingthelegacyofthehostinstitutionoftheeducator/OERproducerinquestion);however,commonqualityissuesincludeaccuracyoftheinformationandknowledgedistributedinthecontent.Justbecausecontentis'correct'itdoesnot,however,meanthatitisappropriatetouseineverycontext(AttwellandPumilia,2007;Albright2005).Qualityisalsoamatteroftrust:theusershavetotrusttheinformationprovidediftheyaretouseit(D’Antoni2006,Hylén2006).Analysingthreeinterpretivecasestudies(TeachersinBlangadesh,ContentdevelopersinSriLanka,UNESCOOTP’susers),Hattaka(2009)revealshownotonlyfactorsrelatedtocontentissues(suchasquality,relevance)butalsolanguageaffecttheactualreuseofOERs.Furthermoreeducationalrulesandrestrictionsindifferentcountries,access,technicalresources,intellectualproperty,awareness,computerliteracy,teachingcapacity,andteachingculturesplayaroleinlimitingtheadoptionofopencontent.Amongthereportedfindings,forinstance,teachers“seethecontentdevelopmentprocessasself‐development”(Hattaka,2009:7,13)andareoftenreluctanttomerelycopymaterialsprovidedbyothers.Moreover,finding,assessingandmodifyingmaterialsontheInternetisconsideredtimeconsumingandexcessivelycomplex.Educatorswouldfinditeasiertoutilisematerialswithafinergranularity.Anadditionalissuedealswiththelackoftrusttowardsopencontentnotprovidedbyrecognizedinstitutions.ThisimpliesalimittotheideaofWeb2.0communitiesasaccreditedproducersofeducationalopencontent.Issuesofquality,technicalexpertise,notionsofownershipandtimeconsiderations(evenwheninstitutionalsupportinenablingreuseisprovided)areconsistentwithfindingsreportedbyotherresearchers(seealsoWilsonandMcAndrew,2009).
Otherbarriersincludethetensionsaroundcontextualisation.DuringaBlendedLearningDesignworkshopatBrunelUniversity(aspartoftheOU'sLearningDesignInitiative69),wehostedastallonOERtoassistwithraisingawarenessaboutOERsandfindingrelevantresources70.Someeducatorsmentionedthattheywouldbedelightedtosharetheirownresources,butwerealsoscepticalofcontext‐independentresources.Thissuggeststhatifresourcesneedtobe'granular'sotheycanbefoundeasily,theyalsoneedtoofferexplicitlearningdesigns,andaninteractiveinterfacetoenablefeedbackand/ordialogueabout'reuse'inothercontexts.Licensingregimesareanotherissue.Indeed,issuesrelatedtocontextualizationarekeyconcerns.SomenotethathighlydecontextualisedOERsarereusableatlargerscalesandforagreaternumberoflearningsituations;yetthismeansthattheyaremoreexpensivetoproduceanddifficulttolocaliseandpersonalise.Thisisbecausesuchresources(e.g.learningobjects)bynatureoftheirhighlevelofgranularityaredevoidofthecontextthatmaybeneededtomakethemcomprehensible(e.g.CalverleyandShephard,2003).Giventhatincorporationintoinstructionalactivitieshasbeenidentifiedasacentralfeatureofreuse(Reckeretal.,2004),enablingthecontextualisationofOERacrossvariousteachingandlearningsituationsisvitaltosupportthisprocess.Conoleand
69 http://ouldi.open.ac.uk 70 http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/2556
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Weller(2008)arguethatadoptingalearningdesignmethodologymayprovideavehicleforenablingbetterdesignandreuse.AligningwithCantoni,whoadvocatesthatthecommunityofuseandthecontextwithinwhichOERsarecreatedarekey,ConoleandWeller(2008)arguethatOERsinthemselvesaresimplyresources,whichhavepotentialthatisonlyunlockedinuse.
Intermsofmakingamoreexplicitconnectionbetweenthelearningdesignandworkonpedagogicalpatterns,ConoleandJonesdescribeacasestudythatisrepresentedbothasapedagogicalpatternandavisuallearningdesign(ConoleandJones,2010).Morerecently,viatheOlnetinitiative,workhasbeenundertakentoexploretheconnectionbetweenlinkingOER,learningdesignandpedagogicalpatterns(Dimitriadisetal.,2009;Conoleetal.,2010).Thereareanumberofhypothesesbeingtestedwiththisnewwork..Firstly,thattheapplicationofmethodologiesfromworkonLearningDesignandPedagogicalPatternsmayhelpthedesignandreuseofOER.Secondly,thatOERhaveimplicitdesignsandthatifthesearemadeexplicit,theycanbeshared(andhencerepurposed)moreeasily.Thirdly,thatactiverepresentationofthedesignprocessthroughavisualisationtool(likeCompendiumLD)thatdrawsonexistingresources(suchasOpenEducationalResourcerepositories),togetherwithdesignmethods(fromlearningdesignandpedagogicalpatternsresearch),canhelpguideandinformthedesignprocess.Theoutputsofthedesignprocess(anOERandanassociateddesign)canthenbesharedwiththecommunityviaappropriaterepositories(suchasOpenLearn)andsocialnetworkingsites(suchasCloudworks).
AcultureofsharingandbuildingmorecontextaroundOERswasperceivedascriticaltomeetingtheneedsofstudents,accordingtofortyleadersinopeneducationandtechnologywhometinBarcelonaonOctober19‐20,2009,attheOpenEdTechSummitsponsoredbytheOpenUniversityofCatalunyaandtheNewMediaConsortium.CreatingtheuniversityofthefuturewasthetitleofthesummitandthefocalquestionfortheeventwaswhetherOpenEducationalResources(OERs)areexamplesofcreativeuseofWeb2.0inahighereducationcontext.TheCalltoActionsummarises71themajorfindingsofthe2009OpenEdTechSummit;Ofthose,point5isofparticularinterest:
Contentproducersandusersalikemustembracestrategies(reflectiveblogging,metadata,documentationofprocess,visualizationoflearning,etc.)forlinkingcontentgenerationto"pedagogicalwraparounds"thatembedcontextwithineffectivelearningpractices.Suchstrategieswouldensurethatthefocusremainsonlearningobjectivesandprocess,ratherthanonthetechnologyusedtodeliverthelearningmaterials.
Alongsidethedevelopmentofacommunity,aninfrastructureforauthoring,collaborationandrepurposingisdeemednecessaryforenablingthecreationofacriticalmassofcontentthatcanbecontinuouslyimprovedupon.OpenLearn’sLabSpacesectionisspecificallydesigntoencourageeducatorsto'collaboratewithothersandpublishnewversionsoflearningmaterialstosharewiththeworld'.IneachOER,the'Versions'blockincludes
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'Uploadthisunit'and'Makeacopyforrevising'.TheConnexionssiteoffersvariablecontentandstructurecomplicateenmassoperations,butindividualmodulesandcollectionsareaccessible,structured,andsupportedforreuse/remixwiththemostliberalCreativeCommonslicense.Intermsofprovidingasocialandcommunityinterface,thesiteissimilartoOpenLearn’sLabSpace,providingnotonlypackagedcontentbutalsoresourcesandtoolstofacilitatereuse,remixing,andrepublishingOERs.Connexionsenablesmemberstocreateonlinecontentindividualaswellascollaboratively;authoruserscancreateprivateworkareas,andversionsofmodulescreatedcanbeimprovedoraugmentedintheseareasorotherswhenpublished(attheauthor'sdiscretion).Authorscancreateonlinesharedworkgroupsandinviteotherstojoin.AsPetridesetal.note(2008:112),workgroupmemberscitedtheoverarchingstructuresofgroupsasanimportantfactorinmaintainingcollectiveefforts,alongsideclearroleassignationforensuringregularmaintenanceandupdating.Nonetheless,commontensionsandconflictsoftensurfacearoundattributionandownership.McAndrewatal.(2009:50‐4)offerseveralexamplesofcollaborationsandrepurposingwithinLabSpaceandclaimthemostcommonmotivationsforcollaborationarethefollowing:
• Benefitsfromaspaceinwhichtocreateandsupportacommunity• InformalassociationwiththeOpenUniversity• Researchingtoolsforteachingpurposes• Publishingownmaterials• Translationintodifferentlanguages
Withsophisticatedtechnicalcapabilitiesandcommunityarchitecturesinplace,theroleofmentorshipinfacilitatingrepurposing,comesforwardinmanyOERplatforms,asseveralofourintervieweesfromOpenLearn,Wikieducator,ConnexionsandWikiversitynote.Ontheotherhand,endorsingculturesofreflectionandconnectingthenodesinexistingnetworksofteacher‐learnersandstudents‐learnersisalsoseenasawaytocultivateexistingcommunitiesofinterestandpractice.AsSeelyBrownandAdler(2008)note:
‘Weneedtoconstructshared,distributed,reflectivepracticumsinwhichexperiencesarecollected,vetted,clustered,commentedon,andtriedoutinnewcontexts.Onemightcallthis“learningaboutlearning,”abootstrappingoperationinwhicheducators,alongwithstudents,arelearningamongandbetweenthemselves.Thiscanbecomealivingordynamicinfrastructure—itselfareflectivepracticum.’(n.p.).
Wearestartingtoseeexamplesofinitiativeswhichareexploringwaysofachievingthis.WithintheOU,wehavedevelopedCloudworks,whichprovidesaplatformforsharingideasanddesignsaboutteachingandlearning.AnotherexampleofsuchapracticumistheonlineTeachingandLearningCommons72launchedin2008bytheCarnegieFoundationfortheAdvancementofTeaching.TheCommonsisessentiallyanopenversionoftheFoundation’sGalleryofTeachingandLearning73whichhasbeenoperatingforthepastnineyears.TheGalleryprovidesanonlineshowcaseforcasestudiesofsuccessfulteachingandlearning
72http://commons.carnegiefoundation.org/73http://gallery.carnegiefoundation.org/,
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projectsthathavebeensupportedbytheFoundation,alongwithasetofweb‐basedtools(theKEEPToolkit74)forcreatingthesecasestudies.TheCommonsisanopenforumwhereinstructorsatalllevels(andfromaroundtheworld)canposttheirownexamplesandcanparticipateinanongoingconversationabouteffectiveteachingpractices,asameansofsupportingaprocessof“creating/using/re‐mixing(orcreating/sharing/using).Researchintohowthesetypesofplatformscanbeusedtosupportsharinganddiscussionofpracticeisbeginningtoemerge(Alevizouetal,2010;ConoleandCulver,2009;ConoleandCulver,2010).AnumberofotherfieldsofenquiryincludingmotivationsandexperiencesoflearnersinanOERcontexthavegeneratedalotofattentionandaburgeoningbodyofliteratureisemerging.
Appendix9:IssuesraisedbytheintroductionofnewtechnologiesAnumberofkeyinsightsemergefromcomparativestudiesweoutlinedthroughoutthereview.Theseinclude:
• Institutionalarrangements• Theeducator'srole• Theattitudesandrolesofstudents• Tensionsaroundthenatureofopenness• Assessmentpractice
InstitutionalarrangementsTheintroductionofWeb2.0technologiesimpactsonexistingorganisationalstructures.Thereneedstobeabalanceofexperimentationbyindividualsandinstitutionalcoordination.Suchabalanceisnoteasyandofcoursethistensionaccompaniestheintroductionofanynewtechnology.HowevertheproblemisexacerbatedwithWeb2.0technologies,whichinmanyrespectsarefundamentallyatoddswithinstitutionalsystems.Appropriatesupportmechanismsarealsoneeded,andcleararticulationofthekindsofinstitutionalsupportprovidedisparamount.ForexampleifexternalsitessuchasFlckrareusedinacourse,theinstitutionneedstohaveaclearpolicystatementonwhathappensiftheFlckrsitegoesdown.Inclusionofspecialists(suchaseducationaltechnologistsandlearningdesigners)whohaveabroadunderstandingaboutWeb2.0technologiesisalsoimportantandshouldbeboughtintoanydiscussionsabouttheuseofWeb2.0technologiesatanearlystageinthedesignprocess.AsFitzgerald,Steeleetal.(2009)note,relyingonscholarlyenthusiasmisnotenoughtoensureeffectiveuse,otherfactorsneedtobeconsideredaswell.Therearealsodifferentviewsonthevalueofinstitutionalsystemsversesopensourceorexternaltoolsandservices.ManyarguethatexistingVLEsandWalledGardenmodelstobloggingorwikisareactuallytamingstaffandstudents’creativeexperimentation,andthatsuchprotectedspacesarenotfullyexploitingthepedagogicalpotentialofthesegenres(Hemmietal.,2009;SeealsoRoberston,2008;Elgort,2007;ChoyandNg,2007;ReimannandWeinel,2007,Minocha,2009,BECTA,2008).Howeveritisalsotruethattherearesignificantchallengesassociatedwiththetechnicalandfunctional
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integrationoftoolsthathavebeendevelopedandmaintainedexternallyandthisisasignificantbarriertoembracingthemforthosewithinstitutionalsupportresponsibilities.
Theeducators’roleIthasbeenarguedthatinteractioninWeb2.0environmentswillfacilitatetheshiftfromthetraditionalrolesof‘teacher’asexpertand‘learner’asrecipienttowardsbringinglearnerstothecoreofthelearningprocesses.MetrosandBennett(2002)reportontheresultsofaninformalweb‐basedsurveyconductedintheearly2000s.Thestudycovered97highereducationinstitutionsandfocusedonexploringthecreationofdigitalresources/learningobjects,andthekindsofsharingpracticesaroundthese.Thestudyfoundexamplesofeducatorsbeginningtoassigntheirstudentstheroleofco‐producersofdigitalcontent(seealsotheOERcasestudiesbelowandthenotionsofco‐creation).Thisearlyworkpointstowardsatrendforde‐hierarchisingtheroleoftheteacherasthesolecreatorsorpurveyorofknowledgeandstudentsbecomingco‐creatorsincurriculardesignandcontentcreation.Thistrendhasbeenamplifiedwiththeintroductionofsocialmedia(seeCollisandMoonen,2006),whereuser‐generatedcontentiscommonplaceandwherethereisavarietyoftoolsforsharinganddiscussingdigitalartefacts.Usingwikisasexamples,PalloffandPratt(2005)arguefortheneedforcurriculardesignsandpedagogicalinstructionfocusedaroundtheroleoftheteachersasmediatedfacilitators,ratherthanauthoritativeinstructors.Siemen’slistofthenewrolesthatteachersneedtoadoptinnetworkedlearningenvironmentsdescribedinthemainreportareinsightfulinthattheyprovideaframeworkforthinkingabouthowrolesarechangingandwhatmechanismsmightbeneededtohelpshiftpracticeinthisdirection.Successfuluseoftoolssuchaswikisorblogsincoursesisdependentonanumberoffactors.Firstly,learningoutcomesneedtobeclearlymappedtocourseactivitiesandassessments.Secondly,supportisneededtoprovideteacherswiththeskillstheyneedtointegratethesetoolsintotheircourses–skillsaroundeffectivedesignaswellasdelivery.Intermsofdesignteachersneedtogainaclearerunderstandingofwhatthesetechnologiescandoandhowtheycanbeintegratedwiththeotheraspectsofthecourse.Itisalsoaboutenablingthemtothinkabouthowtocreatethenecessarycourseconditionsandclimatetosupporttheestablishmentofanonlinecommunity.Intermsofdeliveryitisabouthelpingthemtoadoptmoreofafacilitativerole,helpingthemtoengageinandsupportstudent‐ledactivities.Thirdly,thestartingpointneedstobebasedaroundtheeducators’prioruseofandfamiliaritywithnewmedia.Similarlyitisimportanttounderstandthenatureofthestudentsinvolvedandtheirpriorexperienceofthesetools.
Boweretal.(2006)andRobertson(2008)describeempiricalresultsaroundagroupofHEteachersusingwikis.Theyobservethattwofactorsareimportanttoensuresuccess.Firstly,anappropriateinductionprogrammeforteachersontheuseofsocialmedia.Secondly,continuousassistanceatboththetechnicalandthepedagogicallevels.Bruns(inFitgzerlald,Steeleetal.,2009),ChoyandNg(2007)andBoweretal.(2006)allarguethatthedesignoflearningtasksaffectsboththestudents'motivationtoparticipateandtheirlearningexperience.Alltheseresearchersnotethatalthoughthereisaninherentassumptionthatwikisaresuitedtotasksthatrequirenegotiatedmeaning,thetaskauthenticitytoocanhaveanimpactonstudentcontributions.Integratingshort‐termorsmall‐scalegroupprojectsor
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problem‐basedtaskscanbeapromisingwaytoexploreandutilisethepedagogicalpotentialofthewikiapplications.Tooptimisetheeffectivenessofthelearningexperience,academicsshouldanticipatethecollaborativerequirementsofthetasksbeingprescribed,andthenmakeeveryefforttoensurethatthetoolsprovidedmeetthoserequirements.Bruns(2008)andFitzgerald,Steeleetal.(2009)reportthatpeerskillsdevelopgradually(throughpreviouscritiques,developmentofstudents’ownportfoliosanddevelopmentincollaborationinasmallteams).Buildingnetworkingskillstoinvolvebothplanningandmaintainingaspace,arekeystrategiestoalleviaterisks.Astagedshiftfromcollaborationinsmallteamstocollaborationinlargerteamsallowsforthegradualdevelopmentofcreativeandteambuildingskills.
Likewise,mediatedinteractionispartofrevisingideasaboutteaching.Fitzgerald,Steeleetal.(2009)reportonthewaysinwhichtutorwikiswereusedtoenableonlineresourcesharingandreflectiononteachingscholarship.Theyfoundthatdiscussionsaboutpedagogieswereembeddedinthesesubjects.Closesupportfromalearningdesigner,whocouldoffercurriculumdesignadviceandmentortutors,wasakeyfactorforsuccess.Inaddition,inthisstudyawikiwasalsousedtoassisttheface‐to‐facejointcurriculumwriting,documentationandreflectionactivities,undertakenbytheteam.
Hemmietal.(2009)describetheuseofwikisandblogginginmoreconventionalface‐to‐facesettings(i.e.inaDivinitycourseataresidentialuniversityinScotland).Herethefocuswasonuseoftheseasmotivationaltoolsfordiscussionandclasscollaboration.Theywereusedtoencourageprogressivepeerinteractionandthereflectivecommentsenabledtutorstore‐assesstheirrolesmoreasfacilitators,ratherthanas‘authoritativesources’.Hemmietal.andothers(Fitzerlard,Steeleetal.,2009;PallofandPratt,2005;Bruns,2008,ChoyandNg,2007,Boweretal.,2006)havereportedthebenefitsoftheuseofthesetoolsintermsofenablingtutorstocontinuallyrevisetheirteaching.Alsothesetutorswereadaptingtheirdiscoursestyleastheybecamemoreaccustomedtoworkingwithinthewikiandblogenvironmentsandastheybegantousetheseascollaborative‘classroom’environments.Alongsidetheseevidentshiftsinactualpractice,theparticipationinevitablyalsoincreasedtheteachers’levelofscholarlyreflection.
Thesespacescanbeusedtopromotesituativelearningapproaches,wheretheparticipants(bothlearnersandteachers)haveasenseofbelongingtoacommunityofpractice,andwheretheroleoftheeducatorisexplicitlyspelledoutasfacilitatorandhelper(e.g.ChoyandNg,2007;Siemens,2009).Whilemanyresearchersnotethatmoreworkisneededtoenablestudentstoestablishasenseofbelongingtotheirdisciplinecommunity,existingevidenceinthefieldofteachereducationsuggeststhatuseofthesetoolstofacilitatecommunitybelongingisoccurring.McLoughlinetal.(2007)reportonthewaysinwhichtheimplementationofWeb2.0(reflexiveandcollaborativebloggingandpodcasting/voicediscussionboard)withintheinstitutionalLMSwasusedtoenableastructured,peer‐to‐peere‐mentoringframeworkforaGraduateDiplomaofSecondaryEducationattheCanberracampusoftheAustralianCatholicUniversity(ACUNational).Empiricaldatacollectedfromblogposts,podcastsandinterviewswithbothstudentsandteachers,demonstratedthatthee‐mentoringapproachwaseffectiveforemotionalandpsychosocialsupport.Italsoprovidedameansofgivingfeedbackandencouragementinthedevelopmentofprofessionallycenteredconversationsamongstudents.Itwasalsovaluable
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foreducatorsintermsofreviewinginnovativepedagogiesandrevisingtheirtheoreticalthinkingandpedagogicalpractices.Theenvironmentactedasaspaceformutuallyevolvingskillsandacollectivecommunityofreflectivepractitioners.Theauthorsofthepaperacknowledgethemultiplicityoffreeandpubliclyaccessibleonlinementoringandnetworkingsitesacrossarangeofprofessionalgroupsineducation,andarguethattheirembedednesswithinstructuredlearningenvironmentshasfosteredcross‐institutionalcollaborationsandthedevelopmentofprofessional‘learningcommunities’beyondtheinstitutionalordegreeboundaries.
TheattitudesandrolesofstudentsThemismatchbetweenstudents’expectationsandactualexperienceintheircoursesiswidelyreportedintheliterature,andinparticular,thetensionbetweendidacticandmorestudent‐centeredapproaches,andthebalanceofexpertguidanceandindividualizedsupport.Students’priorknowledgeandfamiliaritywithWeb2.0toolsinfluencestheirreadinesstoadopttoolseffectivelywithinthecurriculum,evenwhentheuseofthesetoolsisanintegratedpartofthelearningdesign(e.g.Fitzgerald,Steeleetal.,2009;Bruns,2008;CollisandMoonen,2008;Roberston,2008;Elgort,2007;Boweretal.,2006;JISC,2009).
TensionsaroundtheconceptofopennessThepedagogicalambivalencesurroundingthenatureofsharing,self‐representation,identitynegotiationandformalrequirementsofassessmentiswidelyreported.AsHemmietal.(2009:25‐26)noteforexample,withstudentsswitchingbetweenvirtualandrealidentities,issuesofmanipulationandself‐promotiontranspire(seealsoMinocha,2009).Whileself‐reflectionandthe‘informalnatureofselfexpression’inapublicspaceisseenasapositivecomponent,theintegrationoftheblog–indeedapublic,fragmentedand‘slippery’formofwriting–withinformalassessmentstructuresgeneratedbothpositiveandnegativereactionsamongtutorsandstudents.Intheirstudytheynotedthatthesenseofanexpandedaudience(beyondthetutor),wascomplementedbythesenseofanexistingaudience.Thisalsofedintothenegotiationoftheframingofstudentwritingforanintendedaudience.Useofblogsactedasaspaceforthenegotiationofselfintermsoftheirstyleofwritingandstudents’positionsaslearners.Somestudentswereconcernedabouttheexpectationsonassessmentandthestylisticdifferencesaroundwritingas‘students’andwritingas‘bloggers’.Thiswasparticularlyevidentwithstudentsthathadpriorexperienceinblogging.Thewidercontextofcoursedesign,learningintentionsandoutcomesandalsoaspectsofdigitalliteracyandexperienceofstudentsperforming‘digitalpersonas’arefundamentalcomponentsthatrequirefurtherstudyregardingnegotiationandeffectiveness.AsHemmietal.(2009)arguethat:
(T)henegotiationofidentityinthecontextofnewwritingenvironmentsisinterestingbothforthewayinwhichithighlightsissuesaroundthe‘offlineandonlineversionsoftheself’,andalso–particularlywithinthecontextofassessment–thewayinwhichithighlightsthesignificanceoftheexerciseofpowerthroughtheproductionofknowledge.…Confessionenablesindividualstoactivelyparticipateindisciplinaryregimesbyinvestingtheirownidentity,subjectivityanddesireswiththoseascribedtothemthroughcertainknowledgeablediscourse(Edwards1997:9).Assessedblogswithafocusonreflectioncanbelikenedtoaconfessionalspaceforstudentstoexplore,andregulate,theirownsubjectivitythroughlearning.Thiscanbeproductiveaswellasproblematic–somekindsofidentityworkmayenablestudentstolearnmore,orlearndifferently(Hemmietal.,2009:25‐6).
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Theabilitytocollaborativelyco‐creatematerialsdissolvestraditionaldistinctionsaboutcontentgenerationandownership(whocreatesitandhowitisused).Makingsenseofthisintermsofdesigning,deliveringandassessingcoursesrequiresnewnegotiationandnetworkedliteracyskills(seeFitzgerald,Steeleetal.,2009;Beethametal.,2009;Jenkinsetal.,2006).Manyreportontheuseofwikismoreasvehiclesforpromotingcommunicationandsharing,ratherthanasgenuinelycollaborativeandconstructivistplatforms(seeforexampleAnsonetal.,2009).Issuesoftrust,authorship/ownershipattribution,etiquette,confidenceandtransparentcollaborationindealingwithothers’contributionsandlast,butnotleast,groupcohesionandtensionsbetweenanonymityandrewardareamongthemostproductiveandproblematicissuesarounduseofblogs,butmorespecificallywithwikis(seeArafehandSong,2009;RamanauandGeng2009;Fitzgerald,Steeleetal.,2009;Beachetal.,2008;Elgort,2007;Boweretal.,2006).AsHemmietal.note(2009:28),whilesomestudentsrelishedtheless‘disciplined’natureofthewiki,othersfounditstrangelylonely,lessinteractiveandlessofa‘community’spacethantheconventionaldiscussionboard.Questionsofattributionandetiquettewithinparticularlearningcontextswerealsovoiced.Acommonconcernthatwasexpressedamongstudentsrelatestoissuesofownership('tamperingwithothers’contributionswouldoffendco‐participants'somestudentspointedout)andnegotiationofconsensuswithinparticularassignments.
AssessmentpracticesCollisandMoonen(2007)discusssomeoftheissuesaffectinginstructorswhoimplementacontribution‐orientedpedagogyintheircourses.Anumberofissuessurface,inparticulartheworkloadandmanagementburdensthisentails,assessment‐relatedissues,intellectual‐propertyconsiderationsandthedifficultyof,andneedto,shiftmindsets.Intermsofmanagementissues,akeycharacteristicofcontribution‐typeactivitiesisthattheinstructordoesnotknowinadvancewhatthestudentswillcontribute.Thus,iftheinstructionsgiventothelearnersarenotclearandexplicitintermsofwhatisexpected,themanagementburdenfortheinstructorcanbecomeoverwhelming.Assessmentisamajorchallengeincontribution‐orientedandcollaborativepedagogicalapproaches.CollisandMoonen(2008)arguethatstudentsare,understandably,highlysensitivetopotentialambiguitiesingradingandmarking.Toensurethequalityoflearningfromboththeeducators’andlearners'perspectivesandthereforeabetterchanceofembeddingWeb2.0toolssuccessfully,anumberoffactorsneedtobeinplace(CollisandMoonen,2008:100).Firstly,bothinstructorsandstudentsmustvalueaneducationalapproachwherelearnerparticipationandcontributionarebalancedwithacquisition.Secondly,apedagogicalapproachmustbeusedthatreflectscontribution‐orientedactivitieswherestudentscreateatleastsomeoftheirownlearningresources.Thirdly,theapproachmustbescaffoldedinpracticebyinterlinkedsupportresourcesforbothinstructorsandstudents.Uncertaintymustbereducedasmuchaspossibleforthestudentsintermsofwhatisexpectedofthem,andtowhatstandard.Finally,theprocesses,aswellastheproductsproducedbythestudents,mustbeassessedaspartofoverallcourseassessmentpractices.
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