challenges in abundance: higher education & learning to learn

51
Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn Peter Albion Digital Learning Research Network Faculty of Education, USQ

Upload: peter-albion

Post on 27-Jan-2015

105 views

Category:

Education


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Keynote presentation for International Conference on Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 2011, Melaka, Malaysia, 21-23 November 2011

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Challenges in abundance:Higher education & learning to learnPeter AlbionDigital Learning Research NetworkFaculty of Education, USQ

Page 2: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Traditional education brought us this far but the way forward is unclear.

Photo: Thomas Hawk CC (by)(nc)(sa)

Page 3: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

“What teachers do with learning in the next ten years will determine the future of the world”

(Stephen Heppell, 2011) - YouTube

Page 4: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Education developed to transfer information to the young.

Photo: Thiophene_Guy CC (by)(nc)(sa)

Page 6: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

We must prepare graduates to work with abundant information.

Photo: Svante Adermark CC (by) (nc)

Page 7: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Information is not frozen. It flows.

Milford Sound Road, New Zealand, Dec 2007

Page 8: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Traditional education transmitted information from teacher to learner.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 9: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Information changed slowly.

Moiry Glacier, Switzerland, Jul 2006

Page 10: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Access was often restricted.

Photo: rosefirerising CC (by) (nc) (nd)

Page 11: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Learners were prepared for life.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 12: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Four technological waves have changed information ecology.

Photo: Kanaka's Paradise Life CC (by) (nc)

Page 14: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

The World Wide Web made a single document available globally.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 15: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Web 2.0 enabled easy publication on the Web.

Go2Web20

Page 16: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Mobile Internet allows access and publication from anywhere.

Callum, 2010

Page 17: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Understanding of knowledge has evolved as information has expanded.

Photo: patriziasoliani CC (by) (nc)

Page 18: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Objectivist knowledge exists independently – it can be owned and transmitted.

Photo: Thomas Hawk CC (by) (nc)

Page 19: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Constructivist knowledge exists in the learner – it is built from personal experience.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 20: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Connectivist knowledge exists in the network – learning is making connections.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 21: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Education should reflect the real world.

Milford Sound Road, New Zealand, Dec 2007

Page 22: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

The world is swimming in information.

Annecy, France, Jul 2006

Page 23: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Total information is growing exponentially. Some is quickly made obsolete.

Knight, P. T. (1997). The Half-Life of Knowledge and Structural Reform of the Education Sector for the Global Knowledge-Based Economy. Retrieved April 17, 2009, from http://www.knight-moore.com/pubs/halflife.html

Page 24: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Information is not diminished by sharing.

Page 25: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Attention flows toward information.… if you have any particular piece of information on the Net, you can share it easily with anyone else who might want it. It is not in any way scarce, and therefore it is not an information economy towards which we are moving … There is something else that moves through the Net, flowing in the opposite direction from information, namely attention.

Goldhaber, M. H. (1997). The Attention Economy and the Net. First Monday, 2(4). Retrieved from http://firstmonday.org/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/519/440

Page 26: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Is the information economy really an attention economy?

Photo: Steve McFarland CC (by) (nc)

Page 27: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

The World is Flat (Friedman, 2006)

Image: Eva the weaver CC (by) (nc) (sa)

Flatteners

Internet connectivity

Search & information

access

Mobile communicati

ons

+++++++

Page 28: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Three digital revolutions ➙ new kind of learner

Lee Rainie, Pew Internet Project, 2011

Page 29: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

New learners are:

• More self directed• Better equipped for new information

sources• More reliant on feedback & response• More inclined to collaboration• More open to cross-disciplinary work• More oriented to people as producers

Lee Rainie, Pew Internet Project, 2011

Page 30: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Abundance ➙ a relationship economy

Worldview Consumer economy Relationship economy

Underlying assumption Scarcity Abundance

Goal Ownership Membership

You prize Proprietary secrets Openness, transparency

To build Barriers Links and relationships

To get Involuntary lock-in Voluntary loyalty

Sell to Target markets Natural audiences

Sell via Consumer marketing Social dynamics

Awareness through Branding, advertising Personal advocacy

Trust? Buy it Earn it

People are Untrustworthy More trustworthy than we think

Jerry Michalski, The REXpedition, 2011

Page 31: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Lectures were never like this.

Photo: Ngo Quang Minh CC (by)(nc)

Page 32: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Our tradition has been pedagogies of scarcity.

• Learning is acquiring information

• Information is scarce and hard to find

• Trust authority for good information

• Authorised information is beyond discussion

• Obey the authority, and

• Follow alongMartin Weller, A Pedagogy of Abundance, 2010

Page 33: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Learner experience of information in the world is one of abundance.

• User-generated content• Power of the

crowd• Data access• Architecture of

participation• Network effects• Openness

Martin Weller, A Pedagogy of Abundance, 2010

Page 34: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Pedagogies of abundance should recognize that:

• Content is free• Content is abundant• Content is varied• Sharing is easy• Learning is social• Connections are

‘light’• Organisation is cheap• Systems are

generative• Users generate

contentMartin Weller, A Pedagogy of Abundance, 2010

Page 35: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Education should prepare lifelong learners.

Photo: jcfrog CC (by)

Page 36: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Most learning occurs outside classes.

Jane Hart, Learning in the social workplace, 2011

Page 37: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Learning is social by nature.

Frederic Domon, Socialearning, 2011

Page 38: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Personal learning networks support lifelong learning.

David Warlick, Learning & leading with technology, 2009

Page 39: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

The sage can work at the side.

Clark Quinn, Learnlets, 2011

Page 40: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Some established pedagogies recognize abundance.

• Resource-based learning (RBL)

• Problem-based learning (PBL)

• Challenge-based learning (CBL)

• Constructivism• Communities of

practice• Connectivism

Martin Weller, A Pedagogy of Abundance, 2010

Page 41: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Technology pedagogy and curriculum – EDP4130

• Required undergraduate course• Final year teacher preparation• Major assessment is class project– Develop curriculum resource available to all– Requires collaboration, access to sources,

publication

• Challenging but valuable for students– Authentic, collaborative task– Characteristics of PBL

Page 42: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Emerging environments for learning – EDU8111

• Graduate elective course• Concept is for students to construct course– Select and explore relevant topic– Publish in class wiki, open to all– Remains as foundation for next cohort

• First task uses social bookmarking to gather resources

• Uses freely available content• Students generate content by adding value

Page 43: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Contemporary issues conference – EDU8719

• Postgraduate course, required for some students

• Designed as an academic conference• Students– Submit and peer review paper proposals– Prepare and review full papers– Record a short presentation– Engage in discussion of papers

• Some student-generated content is publishable• Develops skills for professional interaction

Page 44: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Abundance presents new challenges for learning and teaching.

Photo: Graeme Newcomb CC (by)

Page 45: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Easy access to information makes misuse possible.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 46: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Connected working requires collaboration skills.

Microsoft ClipArt

Page 47: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Collaborative learning makes disconnected assessment problematic.

Microsoft Clipart

Page 48: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Education developed to transfer information to the young.

Photo: Thiophene_Guy CC (by)(nc)(sa)

Page 50: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

We need to prepare graduates to work with abundant information.

Photo: Svante Adermark CC (by) (nc)

Page 51: Challenges in abundance: Higher education & learning to learn

Challenges in abundance:Higher education & learning to learnPeter AlbionDigital Learning Research NetworkFaculty of Education, [email protected]