Title: Learning design for a flexible learning environment
1Learning design for a flexible learning
environment
- Sarah Knight and Ros Smith
- Pedagogy Strand of the JISC e-Learning Programme
2The challenge.
3e-Learning in context
e-Learning is fundamentally about learning and
not about technology. Strategic development of
e-learning should be based on the needs and
demands of learners and the quality of their
educational experience. Joint SFEFC/SHEFC
e-Learning Group Final Report 2003
4e-Learning Programme
- The JISC Learning and Teaching committee is
funding a new e-Learning Programme to run until
August 2007. - The e-Learning Programme aims to identify how
e-learning might be used to facilitate and
support learning and to advise on how e-learning
can be effectively implemented. - The Programme focuses on four areas e-Learning
and Pedagogy Technical Framework and Tools for
e-Learning Innovation and Distributed
e-learning.
5e-Learning enhanced learning
- A definition of e-learning learning facilitated
and supported through the use of information and
communications technology
- Interactive whiteboards
- Digital cameras
- Mobile and wireless tools
- Voting systems
- Mobile phones
- Email, discussion boards, chat
- VLEs
- Learning design tools, e.g. LAMS
- Assistive software
6Designing activities that promote effective
learning
Learners
Activity Interaction of learner with environment,
leading to planned outcome
Intended outcome
Learning environment
A model of learning activity design
7Consider your learners
Their needs
Their prior experience of learning
Their social andinterpersonal skills
Their confidence and competency in the use of ICT
JISC study into learner experiences of
e-learning starts in May 2005
8Consider the learning environment
- Where will the learning take place?
- What resources do you have access to?
- What technologies do you have available for use?
- What facilities and support services are
available and how do these match with your
learners needs? - Consider the design of physical learning space
9Consider the learning outcomes
- What is the purpose behind the learning
activity? - What internal goals must your learners meet? (For
example, those set by the tutor or the course
requirements.) - What external targets must your learners meet?
(For example, those set by examining boards and
qualification bodies.)
10An example of effective practice
University of Strathclyde Active collaborative
learning
From Innovative Practice with e- Learning JISC,
September 2005
11Building in e-learning
- Effective practice with e-learning should involve
the same decisions we make about effective
practice in learning, that practice should, - Engage learners in the learning process
- Encourage independent learning skills
- Develop skills and knowledge
- Motivate further learning
- Effective learning takes place when opportunities
to learn involve - The right resources
- The right mode or blend of modes of delivery
- The right context
- The right learners
- .With the right level of support
12The e-learning advantage
- The e-learning advantage extends the range and
power of delivery, and is a technique that can
enable more active learning for a wider variety
of learners. - Combining e-learning options with the best of
established practice will give the practitioner
greater capacity to create an exciting and
meaningful learning experience. - Where the e-learning option is used, it extends
the learning potential and is not used for its
own sake.
13Some generic learning activities
- Negotiate learning goals
- Explore new concepts
- Evaluate facts and concepts
- Build and test theories
- Solve problems
- Share and discuss
- Apply concepts and skills
- Visualise and present concepts
- Assessment for learning
14Activity
- Identify an example of practice with e-learning
from your own experience and share this with your
group. - Select one example of practice which your group
will use to evaluate for quality and
effectiveness - The Effective Practice Planner
15A model for effective practice with e-learning
16Key principles
- For practitioners throughout the post-16 sector
HE - Advice on what are pedagogically sound and
accessible ways of embedding e-learning into
everyday practice - Develop a shared understanding as to how, when
and where to apply e-learning to the best
advantage of learners - Case studies illustrating effective practice
across the sectors
17Advice and guidance materials
18Further advice
- Innovative Practice with e-Learning Sept 05
- how innovative practice with e-learning can
extend and enhance rather than replace current
practice - how the use of technologies can benefit learners
and maximise their learning potential - how to plan for effective deployment of these
technologies in future developments within the
institution, in particular for the impact they
may have on learning space design - Guidelines for learning space design Sept 05
- highlight key issues and information to be
considered when planning new learning spaces
incorporating technology - Aimed at senior managers and estates teams
19Further information
- s.knight_at_jisc.ac.uk and ros.smith_at_gpisolutions.co.
uk - www.jisc.ac.uk/elearning_pedagogy.html
- www.jisc.ac.uk/elp_practice.html
- eped-info_at_jiscmail.ac.uk