Archive for category online tools
Challenges to developing a blended learning course
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, Lit_Review, online tools, research, social media, technology, university on June 17, 2011
This extract is from the article Development and Implementation of a “Blended” Teaching Course Environment in the most recent issue of JOLT:
Roadblocks/challenges to Developing a Blended Course
One of the biggest stumbling blocks to developing a blended course is the student fear factor. Many individuals in my class had never crafted a PowerPoint presentation, much less navigated in an online
discussion. Despite their familiarity with Web 2.0 tools like Facebook, MySpace, and instant messaging, the thought of being graded for online participation was somewhat threatening and intimidating. It was also difficult initially for students to understand the rationale for some assignments (such as Second Life). In future classes, more emphasis on business necessity, future usage, and SL current applications will be incorporated into the course pedagogy. Because there were many different types of assignments in this course (including group work, both on and off line), some students also expressed dissatisfaction with having to rely on team members. Use of the Team Agreement did however help to coalesce groups, and to give members a framework for expected behavior. Instructor feedback on the Team Agreement is essential in providing guidance regarding conflict resolution, assignment schedule, and interpersonal interaction among members.The blended model is a student-centered approach that allows the instructor to behave as a coach, a facilitator, and a cheerleader for his/her students. It is a way to let students lead in an environment in which they’re guided to success. In the words of Singh (2002, p. 476), “To be successful, blended [teaching]… needs to focus on combining the right delivery technologies to match the individual learning
objectives and transfer the appropriate knowledge and skills to the learner at the right time.”by Jacqueline Gilbert and Ricardo Flores-Zambada
Development and Implementation of a “Blended” Teaching Course Environment
Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, Vol. 7, No. 2, June 2011 pp. 244-260
This interests me because I have been considering including an assessment of online PLN participation in my unit next semester.
Given that this study found that “the thought of being graded for online participation was somewhat threatening and intimidating” for students, I’m going to avoid actually grading their participation per se. Rather, I’ve decided that students must show (in an assignment appendix) participation in their online PLN for the unit to achieve a Distinction (Grade ‘6’) or High Distinction (Grade ‘7’). That way, they either do it, or they don’t. They don’t have to feel anxious about quality.
Has anyone else done something similar to this? Making students demonstrate their PLN building? How can I do it – get them to attach a screen shot of three blog comments and five tweets? Would that suffice? Hmm…
Global Poetry Project
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, english, learning community, online tools, personal, social media on May 13, 2011
This tweet came across the screen tonight and I just thought: YES.
Now I’ve joined the Global Poetry Project Ning. I figured tonight was as good a time as any to post a poem in a new place and this one promises ‘a space for members to expand upon their cultural views through the writing and reading of poetry’.
I penned this poem last week. I’ve been reading The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and that’s where the title and some of the inspiration came from.
The project aims to provide “a safe and open atmosphere for all visitors and contributors alike” and has many student contributers. So if sharing your poems and reading the work of others in a supportive environment appeals to you, why not consider joining the project, friending me and adding a poem of your own!
An Introduction to the CLDR Project
Posted by kmcg2375 in books, education, english, online tools, technology, university on May 3, 2011
Children’s Literature Digital Resources.
Australian schools can now access the full texts in this online resource.
Others can access the Auslit resource through university and other library databases.
Learning Styles Don’t Exist
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, online tools, personal, university on April 8, 2011
I came to this interesting video via Tom Whitby on The Educator’s PLN, explaining the theory of learning styles and the relationship (or lack thereof) it has to helping students to learn something new.
I certainly remember doing quizes in class at high school and talking with teachers about my learning style score. I couldn’t remember what I was supposed to be though – I guessed language and visual based – so I went and did some online tests to find out. Here are my results for tests of Visual/Audio/Kinesthetic (VAK) style preferences:
From the University of South Dakota (2009):
you answered A-6 B-5 C-5
based on this info you are probably
a Visual
learner.
From Businessballs.com (learning and development resources) – simple test:
Visual = 9
Auditory = 3
Kinesthetic/Tactile = 1
Interestingly, taking the Gardener’s Multiple Intelligences quiz (again from Businessballs.com) I didn’t score so high on the ‘visual’, which I suspect may be conceived differently than in the VAK model:
| Intelligence type | your totals |
| Linguistic | 35 |
| Logical-Mathematical | 25 |
| Musical | 32 |
| Bodily-Kinesthetic | 24 |
| Spatial-Visual | 29 |
| Interpersonal | 34 |
| Intrapersonal | 31 |
So, I went back to searching for VAK learning style tests.
This one didn’t peg me as a visual learner. It also gave me some fancy numbers about how my scores matched up to the mean profiles for each style:
- Visual = 3 (correlations with mean profiles = -0.07)
Auditory = 6 (correlations with mean profiles = 0.56)
- Kinesthetic = 1 (correlations with mean profiles = -0.54)
Weird.
I suppose I should be less surprised then that I have ended up an English teacher that highly values multimodality 😛
Though, I never have put too much stock in quick, fr3e online quizes…
I’m going to show my class the You Tube clip next week. We’re about to talk about differentiation and I know that learning styles comes up every time!
Motivation and Participation in Asynchronous Online Discussions
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, online tools, research, social media, technology, university on March 24, 2011
I was very interested to read the findings of Xie, Durrington and Yen (2011) published in the recently released issue of the Journal of Online Learning and Teaching. Given my current use of Twitter in my own university unit for preservice teachers, I was glad to read that others were also observing a relationship between participation in online asynchronous discussions and students’ level of motivation. I have reproduced their abstract here:
This study investigated the relationship between students’ motivation and their participation in asynchronous online discussions during a 16-week online course. Fifty-six students participated in
online discussion activities as a normal part of their classes. Their motivation for participating in online discussions was self-reported three times throughout the semester. The findings continue to
indicate that students’ motivation has a significant relationship with their participation in online discussion activities at time two and time three. Students’ perceived value, autonomy, competence,
and relatedness have different levels of impact on their online discussion behavior. This study also found that students’ intrinsic motivation and their perceived value of online discussions remained at a moderate-high level over time, although the perceived value had a significant drop from the midpoint to the end of the semester.Keywords: Asynchronous Online Discussion, Motivation, Distance Learning, Collaborative
Learning, Learning Community
Reading this article has motivated me to collect my own data in the next week of classes, to gather some initial responses from my own students. I look forward to hearing their views!
Hunting for twits
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, online tools, social media, technology, university on March 23, 2011
Of the roughly 85 students in my English Curriculum Studies unit, currently about 62 are following our class twitter account @CLB_018
No mean feat considering it is only week 4.
However, it is week 4 of a 9 week unit, meaning we’re almost half way done (eek! I still have so much to SAY!)
Aaaand, I’m aware that a small handful of those followers may be spamish.
So today I am embarking on a twit hunt – hunting through my list of followers to see who has not tweeted anything (many only joined for class and only follow the class profile). I’m going to DM each of them individually and privately to encourage them to participate.
Am I going overboard in doing this?
On one hand this looks exactly like the kind of time-consuming ‘tech monitoring’ that teachers often tell me they don’t like about teaching online.
On the other hand, I see it as analogous to checking students’ workbooks a few weeks in to term and pointing out their missing work. Is this something that University teachers see as beyond the scope of their ‘job’? I don’t.
But please – please – tell me if you think this is too much, or if this seems like a good strategy to you. Especially if you do something similar – did it work?
The English Teacher – Visual Rep.
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, english, online tools, university on March 6, 2011
In my English Curriculum Studies classes this week students should all be bringing in a bag containing five items that they think symbolise what they want to be as an English teacher. This activity is supposed to help stimulate discussion about discourses and people’s different philosophies of teaching. I’m going to do the activity too – so far I have a couple of ideas, but in the meantime I thought I would post this collage that I recently made as a visual representation of English teachers/teaching:
It was made using polyvore.com a favourite site of mine where you can make digital collages using ‘clippings’ from images on other sites. If you’ve never seen it then go check out some of the sets I’ve collected that I think could relate to the school curriculum – I hope it gets you thinking!
My PLN: working with Bianca
Posted by kmcg2375 in education, online tools, personal, social media on February 21, 2011
Part of the re-vamp I’m undertaking of English Curriculum Studies 1 to ‘make it my own’ is to use the first tutorial as time to:
- get to know each other and form reading groups, and
- start the students building their online PLN, or personal learning network
I have also been picking the brain of my friend and colleague Bianca Hewes as I prepare materials on project based learning, or PBL.
Bianca is a key node in my personal learning network, and her thoughts, arguments and resource links pervade my personal learning environment – we follow each other on Twitter, read each others blogs and are connected as friends on Facebook. For me this illustrates two important elements I have found to be instrumental in building my PLN
- that learning happens everywhere (even in ‘personal’ spaces like Facebook)
- that a good learning environment is ‘personal’ in a very literal sense – friendly, generous and warm
It’s worth recording some of the building blocks of our collaboration thus far. I’ll pick up the thread where I saw Bianca’s tweeting away while she prepared English lessons for Term 1 at the end of the summer holiday and started asking questions, to which she replied:
I had heard about PBL, but hadn’t used it well so far myself. So I asked Bianca for some help because…well, that’s one of the lessons of this story really. She’s in my PLN. I know she’ll send me what she can, when she can. As a learner, I’ve had an opportunity to personally ask her though about what it is I want to know. And because I want to teach PBL, I know I need to learn more about it, and draw on the expertise of others:
SUCCESS! A willing expert!
To maximise Bianca’s willingness to let me pick her brain, I emailed her some more specific questions about what I wanted to learn:
Now Bianca is back at school and has preparing materials for her ‘Innovator’s Workshop’, while I’ve been busy working away on thesis corrections and planning the learning sequence for my English Curriculum Studies Unit CLB018. This has included making a blogging ‘hub’ for the tutorial groups to compliment the QUT Blackboard resources and a twitter account for unit related tweets. She’s created a Prezi with the information she would like to share about PBL with my class (yesss!) and now even if we don’t get a video interview or link of some sort as I had originally envisaged, I feel like I have enough material to move forward and teach this concept to my pre-service teachers.
Bianca’s Prezi includes a Common Craft video about personal learning networks, which links to the website for bie.org , so now I also have two killer links to refer people on to who are new to PBL. Are you? Why not watch the common craft video now, you’ve come this far:
So, THAT is the story of how having a PLN that you love and put energy into building pays back in spades.
If nothing else I hope that giving my students this path and these tools for expanding their personal learning environments will encourage them to look forward to learning again. If they read this post they will see that learning done well doesn’t limit itself to one space, one person, or one network. I won’t be able to teach them everything I think is important about English Curriculum in nine weeks, and that’s why equipping them with the motivation and capability to keep learning beyond week 9 is priority number one.
Thanks Bianca for being in my PLN and for being part of this story 🙂
What I Teach
Posted by kmcg2375 in online tools, university on January 26, 2011
Cheering because my name is now on the website for English Curriculum Studies 1 in the Faculty of Education at QUT:
(click to enlarge)
What advice can you offer my preservice teachers for productive/generative tweeting? Or advice for me, for using it in the classroom?
(Pictures of The Blender to come!)
2010 in review
Posted by kmcg2375 in online tools, reflections, technology on January 19, 2011
I wonder if the popularity of my top five reflects audience interest in curriculum issues, or the hot-ness of topics such as ‘HSC’ and ‘multimodal’ (due to its appearance in the English National Curriculum)?
Either way, thanks for reading in 2010 😀
The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.
Crunchy numbers
A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 12,000 times in 2010. That’s about 29 full 747s.
In 2010, there were 71 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 181 posts. There were 41 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 16mb. That’s about 3 pictures per month.
The busiest day of the year was January 24th with 189 views. The most popular post that day was Choice based on what now?.
Where did they come from?
The top referring sites in 2010 were twitter.com, facebook.com, google.com.au, eduleader.org, and Google Reader.
Some visitors came searching, mostly for kelli mcgraw, julia gillard, multimodal text definition, multimodal, and multimodal texts definition.
Attractions in 2010
These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.
Choice based on what now? January 2010
37 comments
Defining ‘multimodal’ May 2010
13 comments
The Australian Curriculum for English March 2010
10 comments
HSC English: Standard or Advanced? March 2010
11 comments
5 reasons why HSC and ATAR scores make the angels cry December 2009
12 comments













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