Erhversvmentor Thomas Rabølle Knudsen :: Blog
Så er vinterferien snart over os. Her på Fyn er det i uge 8. Nu da temperaturen i det mindste er faldet til omkring frysepunktet, har jeg ligefrem et håb om sne, så vi kan finde slæden frem. Børn, sne og vinterferie er en herlig kombination, se bare her: Snemand Olsen, Jacob og Pernille, vinterferie 2005
Keywords: børn, fritid, sne, snemænd, vinterferie
Problemformuleringen kan være en svær størrelse at få ned på papiret. Men det er utrolig vigtig, at du bruger tid på at udarbejde en konkret og specifik problemformulering, da det er den, der skal guide dit videre arbejde både mht. metode, teori, dataindsamling osv. Klik her for at se et eksempel. Især hvis du arbejder sammen med andre om opgaven, er det helt afgørende, at I bruger den nødvendige tid på at afklare præcist hvad det er for et problem, I ønsker at arbejde med. I skal klarlægge jeres vinkel på emnet og forklare, hvad det er for specifikke elementer, I ønsker at undersøge. Ingen i gruppen må være i tvivl om, hvor I er på vej hen. De nødvendige diskussioner må tages med det samme, sådan at alle bakker op om projektet. Husk på, at vi hver især har vores eget billede af verden i hovedet. Vi har vores helt egen forståelse af, hvordan verden hænger sammen. Når I udarbejder en problemformulering vil den uværgerligt bygge på denne forforståelse. For at gøre det muligt for læseren at følge jeres tankerække og argumenter, må I sørge for direkte at skrive i problemformuleringen, hvilke antagelser I har om verden. Jeres forforståelse skal tydeliggøres.
I denne blog vil jeg skrive om metode og formalia som midler til at brænde igennem i skriftlig formidling af et fagområde. Hvorfor er det nu så vigtigt at bekymre sig om og bruge tid og energi på dette felt? Jo, hvis først metode og formalia er på plads i en skriftlig opgave, er der ikke noget, der distraherer din læser eller trækker ned i den samlede bedømmelse. Du har fanget læserens opmærksomhed og kan aflevere dit budskab.
The students at my business college often complain that they cannot find the information their teachers or the administration have left for them in our Blackboard system. They seem to get lost in the hierarchical structure of Blackboard or perhaps this “mass-dispenser” of information and material is simply too irrelevant and impersonal for them to bother at all. Personalisation, we often read, is one of the demands of young people today who are growing up in the digital age (Prensky 2001). How can we then deal with information and material in a close and personal manner? Is social software, e.g. blogs and syndication, the answer? The Futurelab seems to think so. In their publication Opening Education: Social software and learning (2006), they suggest using a combination of blogs and syndication to allow both teachers and students to publish material and responses in blogs with a notification system announcing the publishing of new items. This will certainly add a timely and personal touch to online communication. And indeed an addition for Blackboard is now being offered containing social learning applications, which, among other things, include blogs, wikis and RSS feeds. An interesting concept considering the very centralized and well-controlled environment of the Blackboard courses. What do we do with all the wonderful new tools and possibilities? How can we fit them into our existing programmes? Well, that is not really the question, we are supposed to ask. Rather, we should consider the implications of the development within digital technology. We should try to understand how the digital age is changing people’s thinking patterns (Prensky 2001) and the concept of knowledge itself (Owen et al. 2006). Futurelab’s publication certainly manages to persuade me that the development within digital technology has not only brought with it a suite of new tools. We are also faced with a new way of perceiving and dealing with knowledge. Today we see technologies that support “the creation of communities and resources in which individuals come together to learn, collaborate and build knowledge” (Owen et al 2006, p. 3). Social software lets people “organise knowledge in ways that are significant to us at different times and in different places”, (Owen et al. 2006, p. 3). Multi-tasking and several, overlapping knowledge streams are the order of the day. Thus we are moving away from traditional teaching with the teacher and the subject in focus. Learning that takes place one step at a time progressing in a very linear manner is simply outdated. What is called for here, the Futrelab argues is “evolution of the National Curriculum to one which takes account of new relationships with knowledge, and we need to develop assessment practices which respond to new approaches to learning and new competencies we expect learners to delveop” (Owen et al., pp. 4-5). So we are facing a rethink of the entire education system. This corresponds very well with the conclusion of Kjaer and Mathiasen who have done research involving the introduction of laptops in the classroom: “...we have to rethink education as a whole – i.e. its objective, its goal, its content, the organization of the educational activities – in relation to the lesson schedule, the physical space, and our understanding of the subjects, - and what the subject for the examination should be” (Kjaer and Mathiasen 2002, p. 142). Futurelab calls for a shift from e-learning to c-learning warranted by the shift from web 1.0 to web 2.0. C-learning then rests on the principles of Community, Communication and Collaboration. I would like to add a fourth c, namely Closeness, as the heading of this blog entry indicates. However, the authors are more vague when it comes to specific ways in which we can cope with the digital age in education. It is now up to individuals, communities and organisations to experiment with social software and develop feasible learning programmes. Literature: Kjaer, Arne og Mathiasen, Helle (2002): IT: A Challenge for the Educational System i Dirckinck-Holmfeld, L & Fibiger, B. (eds.) Learning in Virtual Environments. Copenhagen. Samfundslitteratur. Owen, M. et al. (2006). Opening Education : Social software and learning. Futurelab. http://www.futurelab.org.uk/download/pdfs/research/opening_education/Social_Software_report.pdf Prensky, Marc (2001). Digital Natives, Digtial Immigrants. Available from http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/default.asp
I read a very interesting article today “Web 2.0 – A New Wave of Innovation for Teaching and Learning?” by Bryan Alexander (2006). The article was interesting because it takes a bird’s eye view of Web 2.0 and investigates the differences between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. Thus the author not only identifies the novel aspects of Web 2.0, but also explains the difference and development providing a rather intriguing historic perspective. To me the article has provided the answers to a number of questions that I have been musing about myself for a while. Furthermore, the article offers a very practical angle on the subject by listing and reviewing relevant services that the reader can explore at his or her own leisure. Alexander points out the difference between the static or database-driven web pages of Web 1.0 and the wikis and blogs of Web 2.0 with timeliness and user modification in focus. He concludes that Web 2.0 is about microcontent at the level of blog entries and tags e.g., whereas the foundation of Web 1.0 is web pages. Furthermore, he offers a very good definition of wikis, namely “streams of conversation, revision, amendment, and truncation (Alexander 2006, p. 33). Another keyword is openness which again distinguishes Web 2.0 from the more recipient specific e-mail messages and discussion board posts of Web 1.0. Many blogs are open to all net users, and some systems allow the individual user to set up access restrictions from entry to entry, thus determining the level of openness him-/herself. The ideology or perhaps rather the culture of Web 2.0 can thus be characterised as democratic with very low power distance (Hofstede 1991). This ideology takes on a very physical presence in the “controversial new form of metadata, the folksonomy” (Alexander 2006, p. 34), in which users themselves generate metadata through tagging instead of the traditional hierarchical lists provided by content authorities. Social bookmarking allows people to locate and connect with others who share the same interests thus providing a basis for new learning to take place. According to Alexander these three concepts together: microcontent, openness and folksonomy constitute “a new way of making, sharing, and consuming digital documents – a way that differs from what we have grown accustomed to” (Alexander 2006, p. 34). Alexander thus reveals himself as a digital immigrant. Feeling comfortable with and taking full advantage of web 2.0 is then one of the characteristic features of the digital natives as put forward by Prensky (2001). See my weblog entry below. The article goes on to list five uses for social bookmarking in higher education (Alexander 2006, p. 36): - Outboard memory: a location to store links
- Magnify one’s work by learning from others, locating new collaborators
- Offer new perspectives - here is a parallel to Stahl’s concepts of perspective-making and perspective-taking (Stahl 2006).
- Multi-authored bookmark pages are useful for team projects – tagging surfaces individual perspectives within the collective
- A bookmark site allows the instructor e.g. to track students’ progress
Alexander goes on to explore social writing platforms – wikis – and highlights their potential for supporting collaboration both when it comes to student group learning, faculty department work and staff in higher education.
Searching within the “blogosphere” and RSS feeds are also covered in the article, but will not be dealt with in this entry. Not only new practices have arisen as a result of Web 2.0. Alexander points to the new narrative shapes that have also come into existence, such as storytelling by blog, publishing novels through podcast and alternative reality games. He predicts more will come partly due to the low entry barrier (Alexander 2006, p. 42). Alexander’s article illustrates how well-suited Web 2.0, and its wide offer of social software, is for CSCL – offering the tools necessary for collaboration in terms of identifying and locating interesting and relevant people and material and providing platforms for individual and collaborative reflection and production of content that will record the learning that has taken place. Literature: Alexander, Bryan (2006). Web 2.0: A New Wave of Innovation for Teaching and Learning? EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 41, no. 2 (March/April 2006): 32–44. Online: http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0621.pdf Hofstede, Geert (1991): Cultures and organisatons – software of the mind. London. Harper Collins Stahl, Gerry (2006). Group Cognition – Computer Support for Building Collaborative Knowledge. MIT Press
I have established this blog to explore the integration of ICT in learning. As I see it, there are two main challenges that must be discussed: - How can we integrate ICT in learning in ways that will enhance the level of learning our students reach?
- How can we motivate teachers to integrate ICT in learning in meaningful ways?
What we need to realise is that teachers and students are often divided by a gap that is caused by their different backgrounds and experiences. Marc Prensky (2001) delivers a very accurate description of this gap in his article: Digital Natives, Digtal Immigrants. Prensky characterises people under the age of 25 as digital natives. People who thrive on multi-tasking, performing parallel tasks. Living life online is great. Blogging and instant messaging plus the mobile phone are essential elements. The digital natives like to produce content and their motto is: sharing is power. Opposite the digital natives, we find the digital immigrants (25+), who process information one piece at a time. Linear thinking and working is the order of the day. Real life only takes place off line. Their motto is: knowledge is power. Let's keep good knowledge to ourselves. Often teachers are digital immigrants with a strong accent, whereas students are digital natives. So challenge no. 3 is: How do we create respect and understanding between the two groups of people? Where is the middle ground where digital natives and digital immigrants can work together and create learning of the highest order?
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