Tag: mooc

This is an archive of the 2013 version of ocTEL.

#ocTEL MOOC (week 0 A11 ) Champions and critics of teaching machines

The task: Watch this 6 minute video on Teaching Machines, presented by B.F. Skinner (exact date is unverified but believed to be in the 1950s). To put it in historical context, you may find it useful to skim this short history of instructional design, …

Tagged with: , , ,

jeromesimon: RT @Kerr63: RT @shellterrell: Will MOOC Technology Break the Education Cartel? http://t.co/eXpwnCyR9a #elearning #edtech #mooc #octel

RT @kerr63: RT @shellterrell: Will MOOC Technology Break the Education Cartel? bit.ly/142M7Wc #elearning #edtech #mooc #octel— Jerome SIMON (@JeromeSimon) April 24, 2013

Tagged with: , , ,

kerr63: RT @shellterrell: Will MOOC Technology Break the Education Cartel? http://t.co/eXpwnCyR9a #elearning #edtech #mooc #octel

RT @shellterrell: Will MOOC Technology Break the Education Cartel? bit.ly/142M7Wc #elearning #edtech #mooc #octel— James Kerr (@Kerr63) April 24, 2013

Tagged with: , , ,

#ocTEL: my first MOOC experience (week 0 Webinar)

This first ocTEL webinar is introduced by Davib Jennings, the project manager. Then Diana Laurillard proposes a synthesis of the “Big questions in TEL” that we have proposed. Unfortunately, I was not able to participate in the webinar this time, but re…

Tagged with: , ,

elizabethecharl: RT @dmlresearchhub Why c and x MOOCs are attracting different number of participants? http://t.co/RpFq9nn5YL … #mooc #octel

RT @dmlresearchhub Why c and x MOOCs are attracting different number of participants? suifaijohnmak.wordpress.com/2013/04/21/why…#mooc#octel

— Elizabeth E Charles (@ElizabethECharl) April 23, 2013

Tagged with: ,

#ocTEL: Outline of an open course (maximising email push with MailPress)

This post originally appeared on the ocTEL blog on 15th April and was written in collaboration with David Jennings. I’ve reposted it here as it outlines some of the broad ideas we are using with this open course, but in particular I wanted to highlight the use of the WordPress plugin MailPress to distribute course […]

Tagged with: , , ,

altoctel: @kshjensen definitely 1 of things #ocTEL aims to support, tho not sure we can deliver all of Obama's vision! are you doing webmaker #mooc?

@kshjensen definitely 1 of things #ocTEL aims to support, tho not sure we can deliver all of Obama’s vision! are you doing webmaker #mooc?— ALT ocTEL course (@ALTocTEL) April 22, 2013

Tagged with: ,

Week 1: TEL Concepts and Approaches #ocTEL

Firstly … yes, I know the ‘error’ in the title! This one is called ‘Week 1 …’, and so was the last one: “Week 1: Induction #ocTEL”. I made a mistake, last week. While last week was technically the first week of the MOOC it was not assigned a numerical identity as it was the […]

Tagged with: , , , , , , , ,

#ocTEL Using Google Spreadsheets for a basic analytic to find your fledgling bloggers

One of the nice things about open courses like ocTEL is whilst having your own blogging space wasn’t a mandatory requirement we were aware that a number of participants had setup one up anyway. Conscious that activities like blogging can be very lonely and also aware that this is often a critical moment in motivating […]

Tagged with: , , , ,

Week 1 #ocTEL – it's all very well but…..

Week 1 (2nd week) of ocTEL is focused on TEL Concepts and Approaches.
Using my usual filtering system, read the introduction and went to the ‘if you only do one thing…’ section.  There are five ‘stories’ about how technology has enhanced learning – the task is to look at two that interest you, decide which is most powerful and relevant to you.
The first one I looked at was
‘How Sugata Mitra designed a physical and social environment around computers so that young children would self-organise and teach themselves new skills through peer interaction and ‘emergent learning’ – watch Mitra’s 2010 keynote’

This is what I wrote on my blog at the time from the ALT conference 2010.
The key note speech after lunch by Sugata Mitra was fantastic.  I have heard him speak before at the RSC Northern conference last year and it is really fascinating to see the videos of his ‘experiments’ with hole in then wall computers in India and other countries.  It is interesting yet disconcerting to see and hear about his work in schools in Gateshead as it is close to home.  It would be brilliant to instill that motivation and interest in all children and particularly in teenagers to strive to learn and for it to be cool to learn……..

I can’t remember why I was disconcerted at the time so decided to watch it again and see how I felt..
I think the reasons I had and have mixed feelings were because although it was different and extraordinary, it felt like an experiment. That the children will learn is to some extent predictable – they like finding out things, they are used to using computers, there was one each in the classroom in Gateshead. Once they’ve got the hang of the idea that this is a different context and they have freedom to do anything then they probably will – especially 10 year olds – they’re at the ideal age to absorb stuff.
But does this motivation and willingness continue with teenagers? Sometimes, depends what they want to know, depends what they need to know, depends on the environment.
But my main thought is – hey, just a minute, we would all like to teach and indeed learn in a free and exploratory environment where you could learn what you want and spend hours learning about what you love, to find out interesting stuff.  With no rules, with ‘cheating’, with no time restraints but it’s not like that. It’s all very well advocating inspirational and disruptive methods but at the end of the day the current education system requires children to learn what is needed to gain the qualifications they need to be successful. So change the system, change the curriculum, take the pressure off teachers so that they can do their best and then let children have freedom to learn.

I meant to do more work on this this evening and spend time looking at the other videos and look at others comments – but no more time. That’s the problem – i could spend hours doing online learning stuff but work and life intervene – fortunately 🙂

Tagged with: , ,
Top