Archive foreLearning

Interesting articulation of what it is to prepare for teaching students versus what it is to prepare for creating learning (by Jack Meacham, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor, University at Buffalo-State University of New York in Tomorrow’s Professor blog

“When I was a new assistant professor, I gave much time, thought, and energy to my courses. I worked late the nights before on classroom presentations and rose early the mornings of my classes. I read and reread and underlined and took notes on the key books and chapters as well as the current articles on the topics that I was teaching. I continued to reorganize and revise my lecture notes (most of my teaching has been with large classes) until just before I walked to the classroom, adding additional material and making certain that I was prepared for any questions the students might raise. Looking back, I can see that I was making a simple error: I was mistaking my own learning for the students’ learning. I thought that if I had learned the material well, my extra preparation would magically increase my students’ learning.”

Also includes a good starting point for use of technology in a course:

“The criterion for bringing technology into my courses should always be: will this enable me to pose questions that better engage my students, spark their curiosity, and push them to think critically and, ultimately, to learn?”

The comments seem to highlight a polorised views of transmission of knowledge versus constructivism…

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c-Learning not e-Learning

Annika Small, CEO of futurelab UK talking at the education.eu seminar “So what’s changed” on the 4th August 2006 suggests that we should be thinking about c-Learning not e-Learning: Connectivity, Community, Creativity, Constructivism and Collaboration. I agree.

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Engaging…

Great presentation by James Farmer at education.au exploring how eLearning environments (from Computer labs to threaded discussions and MCQ quizzes to VLEs such as Blackboard) are tending to encourage teachers to perpetuate a transmissive model of education and how we might foster engagement and empowerment in teachers and learners using a blogging environment instead. He refers to the “Community of Inquiry Model” (Rourke et al 2001) that stresses the importance of social, cognitive and teaching presence in any effective learning encounter.

  community of inquiry model 

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