Title: Pedagogical Challenges of Training Women in Information Technology
1Pedagogical Challenges of Training Women in
Information Technology
- Penny Collings
- School of Computing
- University of Canberra
- Asian Women ICT Trainers Workshop
- Sookmyung Womens University
- Seoul, Nov 2001
2Group exercise
- Pictures to evoke ideas.
- Source Cooney, J. and Burton, K. (1986)
Photolanguage Australia - Human Values.
Leichhardt Catholic Education Office.
3Womens ways of learning - 1
- There is not just one way there are many women
and many ways of learning women use many ways
of learning. - Gender preference in learning styles.
- Traditional education is directed towards and
appeals more to males since it is primarily
abstract and reflective. Females learn better in
hands-on and practical settings, emphasizing the
realm of the affective and doing. Based on the
results of this study, if females are watching
and feeling or doing and thinking, they learn
best. If males are thinking and watching, they
learn best. (Philbin et al, 491) - a female respondent commented, I felt like I
was talked at no transfer of knowledge, really,
just words without meaning spoken. I never saw
much practical application for the words/topics
being discussed. (Philbin et al, 491)
4Womens ways of learning - 2
- Because women frequently use personal
knowledge drawn from life experience to integrate
institutional facts and ideas, women are likely
top be alienated from educational methods which
emphasize rationalism and the transmission of
fragmented information Contexts which are
neither hierarchical and stratified, nor
competitive and judgemental, seem to be the most
supportive to the ways in which women learn.
(Melamed and Devine, based on Belenky et al and
Spender, 1988) - the majority of but not all women prefer
collaborative, intimate learning settings
learning experiences which integrate theory with
experience and cognition processes which utilize
feeling and empathy as well as thought. Womens
thought, generally, tends to strive to be
wholistic, complete, and inclusive in terms of
recognizing both external and internal
complexity. (Pearson, 4)
5Creating learning environments / situations.
- In one class,
- students had been encouraged to ask
questions and reveal parts of the problem which
they did not understand. Such revelations were
perceived as useful and as an important way to
initiate problem solving. - In another class, when she attempted to ask
questions which revealed only a partial
understanding of a problem, the woman perceived
that other students viewed her as less competent
(or at least foolish). (Rosser, 1995) - How can we encourage questionning, sharing of
everyday experiences, collaboration and
participation as a way of understanding and a way
of constructing knowledge?
6Training women in IT whats IT?
- IT is anything from hardware, networks,
communications infrastructure, software programs,
the internet / www, AIBO the entertainment robot,
wearable computers, - IT applications range from process control,
through e-government, enterprise software, club
membership, accounting systems, banking, airline
reservations, small business systems, games, etc. - If we are involved in learning IT, what might
we be talking about? Learning programming?
Learning how to create spreadsheets? How to
create a web site? How to create a tool? How
to manage information? How to design an online
community? How to manage a network? How to set
up an e-business?
7Whats an appropriate object of analysis when
studying IT?
- The computer? Certainly training is needed for
this. What else? - Organisations? Communities?
- Information systems?
- Socio-technical systems?
- Work practices? Business processes? Tasks?
- Articulation work? the work involved in
making things happen planning, coordination,
generating mutual understanding, deciding on the
division of labour, - this type of work is local and situational, and
thus has been invisible in all analyses searching
for permanent, well-defined routines. (Kuutti,
1995)
8Tasks and work as the objects of analysis
- IT is seen as embedded in / supporting a task or
work study the task or the work practice to see
how to make this activity more convenient and
effective. Maybe IT has a role but that emerges
from the study / observation / discussions. - Learning IT must be embedded in this
understanding of why we would learn IT at all!
9Training? Active learning? Developing
educational goals and needs?
- Training is important you need to learn how to
turn on a computer, save files, write HTML,
create system models, etc. You need to know when
you require training. - You also need to become an active learner.
- This is important in the analysis and design
process (of mutual learning between client / user
and designer). - It is also important as a way of recognising and
stating your learning requirements (about IT). - Design of training design the training space,
place and process to support womens learning
styles and needs.
10Whats a good design of a learning space and
process?
- (group to construct this )
11Group exercise
- Refer to the table of educational dialectics
from Belenky and the questionnaire based on this
from Philbin et al. Please answer this
questionnaire do this with a partner discuss
your answers.
12Learning alone or learning together? Communities
of learners?
- Support?
- Repositories of information / resources?
- CSCW / CSCL / online communities.
- Online workspaces for group project work and
collaborative learning. - Examples (following).
13Examples of online workspaces resources and chat
14Examples of online workspaces resources and chat
15Examples of online workspaces conversations
16Examples of online workspaces conversations
17Examples of online workspaces shared workspace
18Examples of online workspaces shared workspace
19References
- Belenky, M.F. et al (1986) Womens Ways of
Knowing The Development of Self, Voice, and
Mind, Basic Books - Cooney, J. and Burton, K. (1986) Photolanguage
Australia - Human Values, Leichhardt Catholic
Education Office - Enns, C.Z. (1993) Integrating separate and
connected knowing the experiential learning
model, Teaching of Psychology, 20,1, 7-13 - Kuutti, K. (1995) Debates in IS and CSCW
research anticipating systems design for
post-Fordist work, in Orlikowski, W. et al (eds)
Information Technology and Changes in
Organizational Work, Proceedings of IFIPWG8.2
working conference on IT and changes in
organizational work. 177-196 - Pearson, C.S. (1992) Women as learners
diversity and educational quality, Journal of
Developmental Education, 16,2, 2-10 - Philbin, M. et al (1995) A survey of gender and
learning styles, Sex Roles, 32,7/8, 485-494 - Rosser, S. (1995) Transforming climate and
curriculum to include women in science,
engineering and mathematics, Bridging the Gender
Gap, conference proceedings, Carnegie Mellon
University, 1995, 63-69 - Wenger, E. (1998) Communities of Practice
Learning, Meaning and Identity, Cambridge
University Press
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