Category: Diigo

This is an archive of the 2013 version of ocTEL.

Project CoPILOT: Community of Practice for Information Literacy Online Teaching

Comments:

  • A case study of an international online community. Nancy Graham & Jane Secker. [Higher Education Academy] – Elizabeth E Charles

Tags: ,

by: Elizabeth E Charles

Tagged with: ,

The Design Studio

Comments:A listing of pages tagged with ‘digital literacy’ in the Design Studio – everything from definition to case studies. – Elizabeth E Charles Tags: digital_literacy, design, studio, digitalby: Elizabeth E Charles

Tagged with: , , ,

A Great Digital Literacy Skills Continuum for Teachers ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning

Tags: digital_literacy, skills, edtech, digital, literacyby: Elizabeth E Charles

Tagged with: , , , ,

Applying the Seven Principles for Good Practice to the Online Classroom | Faculty Focus

Tags: Online, pedagogy, online_education, teaching, Principles, Online Education, learningtheoryby: Elizabeth E Charles

Tagged with: , , , , , ,

Digital and Media Literacy: A Plan of Action | KnightComm

Highlights and Sticky Notes:The paper focuses on steps to ensure that citizens are equipped with the analytical and communications skills they need to be successful in the 21st century.  It also proposes the integration of digital and media litera…

Tagged with: , ,

More on Designing and Teaching Online Courses with Adult Students in Mind | Faculty Focus

Tags: adult learner, learning strategies, Adult Learning, elearningby: Elizabeth E Charles

Tagged with: , , ,

Heutagogy and Lifelong Learning: A Review of Heutagogical Practice and Self-Determined Learning

Comments:Heutagogy and Lifelong Learning by Lisa Blaschke (University of Oldenburg) – a useful look at heutagogy and its relation to new technologies – jim pettiwardTags: ocTEL, TELby: jim pettiward

Tagged with: ,

Heutagogy and lifelong learning: A review of heutagogical practice and self-determined learning | Blaschke | The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning

Comments:Heutagogy and Lifelong Learning by Lisa Blaschke (University of Oldenburg) – a useful look at heutagogy and its relation to new technologies – jim pettiwardTags: LearningTheoryby: jim pettiward

Tagged with:

teaching styles – Donald Clark Plan B

Comments:

  • Helpful blog, including brief introduction of educational theories by Socrates (and he wasn’t such a nice guy after all) and others. – Roger Harrison

Highlights and Sticky Notes:

What is Plan B? Not Plan A!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Socrates (469-399 BC) – method man

Socrates was one of the few teachers who actually died for his
craft, executed by the Athenian authorities for supposedly corrupting the
young. Most learning professionals will have heard of the ‘Socratic method’ but
few will know that he never wrote a single word describing this method, fewer
still will know that the method is not what it is commonly represented to be.
How many have read the Socratic dialogues? How many know what he
meant by his method and how he practised his approach? Socrates, in fact, wrote
absolutely nothing. It was Plato and Xenophon who record his thoughts and
methods through the lens of their own beliefs. We must remember, therefore,
that Socrates is in fact a mouthpiece for the views of others. In fact the two
pictures painted of Socrates by these two commentators differ hugely. In the
Platonic Dialogues he is witty, playful and a great philosophical theorist, in
Xenophon he is a dull moraliser.

Socratic
method

Th
he was among the first to recognise that, in terms of learning, ideas are best
generated from the learner in terms of understanding and retention. Education
is not a cramming in, but a drawing out.
  • Learning
    as a social activity pursued through dialogue

  • Questions
    lie at the heart of learning to draw out what they already know, rather
    than imposing pre-determined views
  • it is only in the last few decades, through the use of
    technology-based tools that allow search, questioning and now, adaptive learning,
    that Socratic learning can be truly realised on scale.
    In practice, Socrates was a brutal bully, described by one pupil as a ‘predator which numbs its victims with an electric charge before darting in for the kill’.
    He is best known for his problem-solving approach to learning
    He was keen on ‘occupational’ learning and practical
    skills that produced independent, self-directing, autonomous adults.
    He was refreshingly honest about their limitations and
    saw schools as only one means of learning, ‘and
    compared with other agencies, a relatively superficial means
    ’.
    Perhaps his most important contribution
    to education is his constant attempts to break down the traditional dualities
    in education between theory and practice, academic and vocational, public and
    private, individual and group. This mode of thinking, he thought, led education
    astray. The educational establishment, in his view, seemed determined to keep
    themselves, and their institutions, apart from the real world by holding on to
    abstract and often ill-defined definitions about the purpose of education.

    Tags: , , , ,

    by: Roger Harrison

    Tagged with: , , , ,

    Eric Mazur shows interactive teaching – YouTube

    Comments:Harvard Physics Professor Eric Mazur demonstrates “Peer Instruction” and “Just-In-Time” teaching techniques. (8 minute YouTube video) – David JenningsTags: ocTEL, HigherEducation, EricMazur, PotentialResource, videoby: David Jennings

    Tagged with: , , , ,
    Top