ICT%20SUPPORT%20FOR%20STUDENTS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ICT%20SUPPORT%20FOR%20STUDENTS

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ICT SUPPORT FOR STUDENTS COLLABORATION IN PROBLEM AND PROJECT BASED LEARNING Nikorn Rongbutsri (nikorn_at_hum.aau.dk) Md. Saifuddin Khalid (khalid_at_hum.aau.dk) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ICT%20SUPPORT%20FOR%20STUDENTS


1
ICT SUPPORT FOR STUDENTS COLLABORATION IN
PROBLEM AND PROJECT BASED LEARNING
  • Nikorn Rongbutsri (nikorn_at_hum.aau.dk)
  • Md. Saifuddin Khalid (khalid_at_hum.aau.dk)
  • Thomas Ryberg (ryberg_at_hum.aau.dk)
  • Dept. Of Communication and Psychology
  • E-Learning Lab center for user driven
    innovation, learning and design

2
Outline of presentation
  • Overall question identifying students use of
    technology to support their problem and project
    based group work
  • Background to the study The Aalborg PBL model
  • Social media are coming to Higher Education
  • Some pressing questions vocal calls for
    educational change due to technological changes
    (web 2.0) and/or students as digital natives /
    Net Generation
  • Some findings (and methodology)
  • Is there a need to support students?

3
The aalborg PBL model
4
The Aalborg PBL model
  • Problem Based Learning
  • Based on real-life problems
  • Project Organised Education
  • Project work supported by lecture courses
  • Group Work
  • groups of four to six students
  • supervised by lecturers/professors
  • Interdisciplinary Studies
  • Integration of theory and practice
  • Focus on Learning to Learn and methodological
    skills
  • University Wide Model - Used in all faculties
    (with variations)

5
Students use of time - lectures, courses and
project work
Project work a major assignment within a given
subject-related framework determined for each
semester (thematic framework). Project related
mandatory courses supporting the project
work Evaluated as oral examinations based on the
project report or through individual written or
oral examinations.
50
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6
Problem Based Learning the Process
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9
The Aalborg PBL-model in short
  • Long-term collaboration 4 months (semester)
  • Students own and define the problem to work with
  • Students decide on methods, theory, empirial
    investigations (together with supervisor)
  • Solution open ended
  • Students write up an app. 100 page project
    report reflecting their work
  • An university-wide pedagogy not short-term or
    single course

10
Pressing questions from the tech-ed sphere
  • Social media are coming to Higher Education

11
Why social media or web 2.0 in education
  • Some of the keywords from the tech-ed
    buzz-o-sphere
  • Realised through use of Blogs, wikis, social
    bookmarking etc.
  • Very much aligned with PBL thinking in many ways!

Web 2.0 Progressive education (since 19XX)
User-driven Learner-centred
Collaboration Collaborative learning
Participation Active students vs passive recipients
2 -way communication Dialogues and interaction
Creating and sharing Knowledge construction vs acquistion
Bottom-up Ahierarchical, flat students as co-producers
12
Web 2.0 in educational context (e-learning 2.0)
general buzz
  • From hierarchical structures based on courses and
    topics towards more student centred networks
  • From students as consumers to students as
    producers
  • From distribution to more horizontal patterns of
    exchange peer-learning
  • From Learning Management Systems (LMS) ? Personal
    Learning Environments (PLEs)
  • Encouraging exchange, sharing of knowledge and
    students production of knowledge and artefacts
  • Encouraging the production of personal portfolios
    personal repositories

13
From LMS to PLEs
  • Separate management and learning
  • Focus on learning activities
  • Individual and collaborative tools
  • From big packages of educational software (LMSs)
    to numerous light-weight, interoperable web 2.0
    service (blogs, wikis, social bookmarking)
  • Dashboard systems where students collect relevant
    resources and tools

(Dalsgaard, 2006) http//www.eurodl.org/materials
/contrib/2006/Christian_Dalsgaard.htm
14
Some pressing questions
  • Is the net generation or digital natives coming
    to higher education?
  • Strong discourses on digital natives and
    students being fluent with digital technologies
  • Crave educational change due to their intensified
    use of and experiences with web 2.0 technologies
  • What should the university provide the VLE vs.
    PLE debate? Structured environment or self-chosen
    tools?
  • Are students better able to collate various tools
    and services to support problem and project based
    learning?
  • Are students digital natives capable of
    identifying technologies for problem and project
    based group work on their own?
  • Notion of digital natives has been criticised
    heavily from a research point of view!

15
Some selected findings
16
Methodology
  • Data collection across different levels of scale
    - multi-method study combining qualitative and
    quantitative studies
  • Questionnaire (cross-campus to 3000 students
    253 completed)
  • Background
  • Mobile life style (where do students work)
  • Project collaboration
  • Familiarity with Web 2.0 tools (state of
    diffusion)
  • Narrative analysis of blog post (133 student
    narratives from 51 M and 82 F)
  • 1.semester students within a programme
    (humanistic informatics) asked to write blogs
    about technology use during 1.sem (analysing
    diffusion of various technologie)
  • Oberservational studies
  • Following a 2.semester group (interview and
    observation) their use of technology

17
Illustration from questionnaire
  • Percentage of students who do not know about a
    certain tool may not mean they use it if they
    know about it though!!!
  • Green Pervasive use or knowledge of (twitter
    knowledge, but little use)
  • Red Tools that might be very useful, but
    little/scattered following

18
Findings from blog posts and observational studies
  • Facebook Dropbox rather pervasive
  • Skype used among many groups
  • Some groups utilised Google services (e.g.
    Calendar, Docs)
  • Live next to formal systems (e.g. Moodle but are
    not intertwined) formal system for course
    activities
  • Cautious about bringing in new tools in their
    problem and project based group work
  • However, some of the more advanced tools for
    academia 2.0 purposes (tech-ed-buzz) and problem
    based project work were not very pervasive
  • Google Docs
  • Social bookmarking (delicious, diigo)
  • Social referencing systems / bibliography
    (zotero, refworks)

19
Summarising
  • Indications that students do bring in social
    media to the university forming digital
    ecologies, which may live next to formal systems
    (happily or not)
  • Some systems pervasive, but systems which could
    support more advanced academic practices are
    largely under the radar of the students
  • Students are to some degree capable of creating
    efficient digital ecologies to support problem
    and project based group work but also ask for
    introductions
  • For more advanced socio-technical academic
    practices to emerge theres a need for
    facilitation combining tech-support with
    meaningful integration of technologies into
    courses / group work
  • We should not ignore they are adopting social
    media, but neither should we ignore they might
    need facilitation to scholarise their social
    practices, as to develop advanced academic
    socio-technical practices
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