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This is an archive of the 2013 version of ocTEL.

[OCTEL] Daily newsletter

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May 23, 2013
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Week 6 webinar recording now available

May 22, 2013

Thanks to everyone who took part in ocTEL’s weekly webinar this morning.

If you missed all or part of the week 6 webinar, the materials from the session are now available on the Course Materials page, which is updated weekly with materials from each live webinar.

Join us next Wednesday at 17:00 BST for the week 7 webinar on supporting learners with tutor and peer communications. Check the Course Materials page for more information.

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Gilly Salmon webinar in ocTEL introducing Carpe Diem workshop

May 22, 2013 | Jo Conlon #OcTEL 2013

Good resources from the webinar today: http://www.gillysalmon.com/u... For me this resembled a deign-thinking creative… workshop but it was useful to see it applied to the process of learning design rather than product design.  The resources are good too and include examples.   For me, the useful take-aways of the 5 stage Read more »

Does weighing a pig make it smarter? #octel

May 22, 2013 | More than just Content

This week for #octel we need to”list and critique up to three different assessment approaches available on Technology Enhanced Learning courses” The 3 I am going to use are Online tests with automatic feedback Online Essay submission with online marking … Continue reading → Read more »

Assessing Assessment – ocTEL

May 22, 2013 | e-Learning Stuff

This week on ocTEL we’re looking at assessment. As part of my thinking I refelcted on the use of quizzes in Moodle. Designing Moodle quizzes is much more than just been able to use the quiz tool from a technical perspective. There is a real art to crafting questions so Read more »

“We are designing verbs, not nouns.” —Bill Moggridge

May 22, 2013 | Jo Conlon #OcTEL 2013

Reminded of this in the ocTEL webinar today – focus on the learning outcomes not the curriculum con… Submitted by Cristobal Avendaño to the http://www.billmogg... Read more »

Conole 7Cs of Learning Design

May 22, 2013 | Jo Conlon #OcTEL 2013

 Thanks to Sandie Gay in the ocTEL webinar for highlighting this model. http://www.slideshare.net/Gr... Read more »

ocTEL Activity 6.2 WebPA

May 22, 2013 | Jo Conlon #OcTEL 2013

I am ‘Mrs Teamwork’ when it comes to assessment.  I think  it is essential that it is properly supported rather than sink-or-swim.  Although I have done  a lot on this, I still do get the occasional &rs… not fair’ vibe.  WebPA is therefore very appealing to me (Case study 7, p42).  I particularly&nb… the aspect Read more »

ocTEL Activity 6.1

May 22, 2013 | Jo Conlon #OcTEL 2013

Snipped from http://www.jisc.ac... I really like Nicol’s approach as it seems (to me) to be about getting students to be able to make accurate judgments&nbsp… their own work.  His earlier work (2009) uses ‘empower’ and ‘engage’ and I think this is the essence of these 12 principles.  I like number 12 too Read more »

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[OCTEL] Daily newsletter

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May 22, 2013
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Some (late) notes on platforms and technologies

May 21, 2013

With apologies that this is late, which is entirely my fault, here’s Phil Tubman’s take on some of the discussions that took place last week on Platforms and Technologies.

Last week there was a lot to do. Participants were advised to dip into the activities that have most resonance with their practice or thinking.

Activity 5.0 is a chance to think about platforms and technologies in relation to Kolb’s experiential learning cycle. James Kerr did an analysis of Social Media tools, and concluded that SM tools can support activities in any quadrant of the experiential learning cycle. For example YouTube videos can be consumed, reflected on and created, so this fits into all areas. Stephen Brown also made a similar observation, but extended the idea to all technology, and did an analysis on use of clickers in classrooms:

clickers could be used by learners to record their emotions (click every time you feel angry/sad/amused/etc. while listening to/watching/reading/doing XYZ), so they are seemingly compatible with the diverger style, but if the results were collected together and displayed and the class were asked to reflect on them then wouldn’t that support the assimilator style?

commented that this is only available if the clicker providers allow this functionality, as most clicker systems are very closed in terms of the interactions that are possible – you can only answer a question when it is ‘sent’ to you, which limits the experiential learning potential.

The emergent theme is that it is usually not the tool that ‘places’ it in a quadrant, but the learning activity. Sancha talked about this in his reflection of the design process.

I do wonder if Kolb realised what impact online social interactions would have on his cycle, as the ‘thinking’ quadrants (reflect and do) seem to happen more in these social spaces.

Activity 5.1 asks participants to think about what ‘drives’ their takeup of technology, and how platforms and technologies support or detract from this. Alice Shepherd’s blog post took the templates provided from Hill et al, added a few more logistical dimensions, and noted that ad hoc arrangements sometimes drive technology choices:

During the ash cloud a few years ago, I was prompted by circumstance to learn about how to do screencasting because so many of my students were stranded overseas close to exam time and needed to attend a virtual class, asynchronously as they were in multiple time zones.  This emergency meant I started to use this technology and have returned to it many times since!  So, there is serendipity as well.

If you have further stories to share regarding virtual classroom technology or open source pedagogy, the forums are ready and waiting…

 

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The use of Rubrics in Assessment

May 21, 2013 | Sue Folley – ocTEL Blog

One of the ways we have found in improving student assessment choice, increasing transparency in the assessment process and encouraging students to engage with their feedback was to use rubrics in the assessment process. I know rubric
s are contested by some, and are not right for every discipline and in Read more »

Approaches to assessment

May 21, 2013 | Stephen Brown’s ocTEL experience

  Just thinking about the four perspectives on assessment described in Effective Assessment in a Digital Age (www.jisc.ac.uk/digiassess):... associative, constructivist, social constructivist and situative. The course Im teaching is an MA in Photographic History  http://www.dmu.ac.uk/s... and I teach a module … Continue reading → Read more »

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[OCTEL] Daily newsletter

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May 21, 2013
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ocTEL Week 6 Webinar

May 20, 2013

Join our weekly webinar at 10.00 on Wednesday 22 May, via Blackboard Collaborate 11.

You can access the Week 6 webinar via this link.

This week’s webinar

PLEASE NOTE this week’s webinar is at 10:00am rather than the usual 12.30pm.

Start with the end in Mind: Gilly Salmon tells stories about assessment and feedback from the perspective of e-tivities (online activities). She’ll cover the new e-tivities framework (‘invitation’) and the latest news of ‘Carpe Diem’ learning design workshops.

About the presenter

Gilly is Pro Vice-Chancellor, Learning Transformations at Swinburne University of Technology. She is internationally renowned for her significant contributions to online education, including research, innovation, program design, teaching methods and the use of new technologies. Recent publications
include Podcasting for Learning in Universities and Learning in Groups.

We will make the recording of this session available via the Course Materials page.

Webinar help and FAQ’s

For help prior to the webinar and some frequently asked questions please visit our help page.

If you have any questions contact octel-tech@alt.ac.uk.

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Associative perspective on Assessment & Feedback in Mathematics

May 20, 2013 | Sue’s ocTEL

In my past as a Maths teacher/ lecturer my perspective of assessment was largely associative. (see image below) Learners practice skills in order to acquire the knowledge and skills and later the understanding necessary to progress. The learners are assessed on their ability to perform the skills and apply the Read more »

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