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David Jennings wrote a new post, Breaking it down into manageable steps, on the site ocTEL 2014 10 years, 7 months ago
Overwhelmed?
During Wednesday’s webinar, someone asked asked about a recommended technique for identifying and forming groups of like-minded participants. The gist of my reply was that we don’t have a ‘silver bullet’ for managing this process online, any more than we do offline. Imagine turning up at the opening reception of a conference with 900 delegates. There isn’t a method for finding just the right people to talk to in the first 90 minutes. You have to go through an initial period of randomness and multiplicity of options, and then, maybe, at the end of three days, you’ve found a handful or two of people with whom you’ve made connections and learning strides. Probably you’ll also have a vague awareness that, if you had the time again, you’d have found a quite different set of people to talk to, sessions to attend, and lessons to learn. That’s life.
Starting a collaborative Open Online Course is a bit like that, but worse. In a conference reception, the laws of physics mean you can only deal with the people and conversations immediately around you; it takes time and effort to break off and start anew with someone else. Online, all the conversations feel close to you, and they can start to drown each other out, Babel-like. Other options are only a click away.
While the bumble bees and butterflies among us enjoy this buzz and the cross-pollination it affords, most of us find it a bit daunting. This is natural. Part of the advice is the same as if in a large conference reception: start with the people and issues in front of you, and work from there. More advice like this is in the guidance in the handbook (we may keep reminding your about this throughout the course).
If you feel a little overwhelmed at this stage of the course, don’t worry. Most of us do. It’s definitely not you that’s at fault, and I’d argue it’s not the course design that’s at fault either. I hope you take away the lesson that Emma Coles did from the webinar, “Seems I don’t have as many issues as I thought I did”. And remember the mantra that emerged from last year’s ocTEL (quoted here by Ted O’Neill, who is one of several people we welcome back, doing the course a second time):
Webinar Week 0: “There is no such thing as being *behind* on #ocTEL.” Informal learning and autonomous PD. #edtech cc #coetail
— Ted O’Neill (@gotanda) May 1, 2014
Similarly, Steven writes from experience, “ocTEL is not my first MOOC, so I kind of know what to expect in terms of overwhelming experiences, getting lost, and finding interesting people to network with.” And Glenn’s take leads me on to the thinking behind the My Big and Little TEL Questions activity
MOOCS offer a great wealth of information, I think it’s important to think offline before diving in too deep, becoming overwhelmed or bogged down, what it is that I want to take from my participation in this course and focus on those topics. As too much information or reading too many topic threads causes me personally to overload. My phrase for this would be “break it down or break-down!”
Making it personal
Not quite break down, I hope. But the idea of using goals to break down and filter the course material chimes with what I was trying to say on Tuesday about using the Big or Little Questions as a guide to the rest of the course. I’ve kept banging on about the value of refining the questions down to specifics — for example in comments to Hellie, Mark and Rose — but I’ve also come to realise that many people are using this opening week of the course as a way of browsing around and trying to decide what matters to them most. That’s fine. It’s probably best not to rush into detail. If you’re new to the area and just want to get a feel for it, Week 1 (coming up on Monday) will also help you do that. Also spend some time reviewing the resources we’ve provided (and which the super-helpful Jim Kerr has collected in a reading list).
Do keep honing your questions though. Last year we called the activity “My Big Question” and the emphasis there is on the My rather than the Big – if you focus on the big TEL questions for the world, you could take forever; focusing on the big questions for you will help keep your grounded and focused.
With that in mind, I liked Grant’s questions and Tim’s. In ocTEL 2013, some kind souls did an analysis of everyone’s questions. If you’re struggling for direction or inspiration, you may find it useful to have a look through these. Once again Jim has helped out with a preliminary analysis from all the questions posed in the forums. On a slightly different tack, have a look at Tim Leonard’s participation plan and consider whether something similar might work for you.
Blogs and other channels
We give you lots of discussion spaces in ocTEL and let you choose which to frequent. Don’t try and keep up with them all (you wouldn’t try and keep up with all the conversations at a conference). While others of volunteer tutors have been chipping in to the forums, I’ve been mostly reading what people have been writing on their blogs (here’s the full set so far). The reasons we most encourage you to post on your own blog are that
it can give you a sense of greater ownership,
it means the course comes to you rather than you coming to the course,
it helps embed what you pick up from the course in the rest of your professional life and development,
it leaves you with a portfolio of evidence that you control (the forums here will persist, possibly for years, but not forever).So well done especially to those, like Julie, Grant, Russell, Meg and Glenn who’ve recently started new blogs to record and reflect their experiences on the course. Well done, too, to those who’ve take the opportunity to revive old blogs that (like mine) have fallen into disuse, and to those who have started their own online social spaces to exchange ideas about the course, including the Scoop.it collection and the LinkedIn group. If you have created anything ocTEL-related that you’d like to draw to others’ attention, please post in the comments below (as well as on Twitter with #iocTEL and so on).
I’ve read the above (Week O: Reflections on Ambitions) twice.
[First time was as part of my rummaging around site ‘catching-up’ in Week 2 (or 1 as you’ve labelled it) having got off to ‘bad start’ – with confusion about enrolment, course start time, etc. – in Week 1 (or O as you’ve numbered it). Second time was after Allison (with two ‘ls) courteously replied to my email to her (responding to hers about my access probs) in which she hotlinked it – picking on my observation about feeling confused.]
I wonder does anyone else have a nagging feeling the ‘linearity’ – ?asynchronicity – of posts and the nature of online communication – ‘typed words left in the past’ – not only make comprehending any present ‘signin’ strange but also somehow does it only ‘fit’ a certain ‘sort’ of person?
I’m struggling to clarify – in my own mind let alone on this screen – what I mean. Pause. Reflecting whilst reading the screen yesterday – see ‘catch up’ above – I noted how it was interesting that (some) participants wanted to be able to geographise participants asap. Even in the (Week 0) webinar an Irish guy pursued this pointedly in the Q&A – clearly pleased when another Irish guy tuned in and they talked to each other direct – presumably as they could now arrange to meet (get past? cyberspace). Arguably the IT had ‘enabled’ this to happen, them to do this, of course, but still, equally, it didn’t satisfy a need for them to communicate per se other than with IT. Pause. I’m thinking the hardly mind blowingly insightful thought that IT doesn’t ‘appeal’ to everyone – that the ‘nature’ of it actually puts some off. That for some it’s only ‘tolerated’ to the extent it makes itself redundant, i.e. enables face-to-face connection (perhaps with new contacts). (NB I’m not suggesting this applied to the Irish guys – I’ve no idea).
Why I’m pursuing this is I’m thinking about my students. I’ve been musing that I’m not going to bother with struggling with the bewildering maze of the ocTEL online screen – too ‘ugh’. I’ll simply tune in to the (archived) Youtube webinars (not having 24/7 computer access signing in during live sessions is problematic anyway). I anticipate ocTEL people immediately ‘saying’ (i.e. reading/thinking) this is fine.. if this is all I want. (It isn’t.) But I wonder how many of my students feel alienated – if racked up us ‘enabled’ – by IT – privately ‘compromising’ pursuing their learning by cyber solitude (for the reasons I am)?
My initial thought is I’ve sometimes thought they seem to have been after I sense they ’emerge’ – i.e. make themselves ‘visible’ (via tutorials, before/after class, in surgeries, in direct emails to me), with ‘voiced’ queries, points that suggest my ‘voice’ online and theirs ‘off’ whilst now ‘heard’ by (me), demonstrates each of us are/were in different ‘worlds’.
This suggests to me that maybe IT ‘enhances’ only one ‘sort’ of learning. Though I dunno what these different learnings are.
I think maybe in many of the places I’ve taught people – including (especially?) the IT/techie providers make a mistake in thinking what THEY’RE (no italics) offering enhances (or should be used to) what I (no italic) offer. But maybe we’re on about different learnings.
At least in the present form I’m thinking a) the ocTEL approach is great for some sorts of learners – but not others – and b) it’s very ‘cumbersome’ in ways that non-IT enhanced isn’t. Or maybe… maybe it’s that ocTEL just makes evident the cumbersomeness that is hidden (or of which I wasn’t aware) in the non-IT enhanced learning?
Laugh. I’ve recently finished teaching an advanced PG course in strategy – to students from a wide variety of national and cultural backgrounds, many of whom learned English/Globish as another language. It included a session on Institutional theory. I remember stressing the importance of understanding basic concepts – organizational field, agents, decoupling, etc. – and subsequently seeing a summary of the theory in another context – a book about the history / purpose of Biz Schools (Khurana: From Higher Aims to Higher Hands). This included a discussion about what is a profession, etc. Got the feeling from many of the posts that Learning Techies in particular see themselves as apart (say from ‘teachers’). Reminded me many Learning Techies I’ve known gripe about teachers not embracing Technology but don’t (want) to see how their attitudes drive their customers, the people many of them genuinely want to help, away. Come into MY (no italic) world (leave yours). Make MY (no italic) world yours. Laugh: what happened to ours?
But is OURS .. theirs? Does the cyber world equate/translate/fit with the mind – learning space – of our students (in relation to the subject being taught). The interesting bit in the discussion about professions/institutional theory related to the (politics of the) boundaries.
Hmm. Does this constitute an appropriate post/response? Is it just ‘inappropriate, unacademic (verbal) dribbling’? Dunno. Gotta go. Computer session time about up.
Russell, I think you’ve touched on some excellent points, and possibly answered some of your own questions in the process. You state:
“the ocTEL approach is great for some sorts of learners – but not others”
and
“Does the cyber world equate/translate/fit with the mind – learning space – of our students[?]”
You are entirely correct. This style of learning is not for everyone. It is very much a ‘learning bazaar’ where one looks around, finds bits that interest, and explores them. It may be that others with similar interests tag along, or one’s exploration may be solo; either way, the learning is very personal, personalized, and individual.
The ocTEL course is modeled in the connectivist MOOC style. Participants build knowledge together through establishing and exploring connections between each other and each others’ experiences. It is very self-regulated, self-motivated, and self-defined. There are many paths, and none are ‘wrong’. The weekly topics, resources, and activities are a recommended starting point for each participant’s own exploration. There is little to no direct instruction, the tutors are facilitators and guides to the participants’ personal learning experiences.
Where does IT and tech-enhanced learning fit with this? You state:
“…it’s very ‘cumbersome’ in ways that non-IT enhanced isn’t.”
There is no single IT solution for all of learning, nor for all instructors. Technology can enhance learning, but it can also detract when not applied properly. Could a course like ocTEL happen without technology? Sure, but the pace would be dramatically slower. Readings and resources could still be examined, meet-ups for discussion could happen, even the highly-touted “Personal Learning Network” could exist, as they existed before technology exploded on the scene. The technology is enabling us to do these things at a much more rapid pace, and with increased and easier access to loads of information.
Connectivist MOOCs aren’t for everyone, just as independent study courses aren’t for everyone. Yes, it can feel like the “Learning Techies” are in charge lately, but that doesn’t mean TEL has taken over. It’s also not black-and-white, all-or-nothing TEL. Courses and learning environments can be blended, too, using technology where it’s appropriate and face-to-face traditional methods where they are most appropriate. In many ways, blended environments can be superior to fully online environments because they play to each platform’s strengths.
It is evident you have strong feelings about TEL. I hope you continue to explore with us on ocTEL, and find a path that is fulfilling.
Hello James. First, thanks for the reply. I hadn’t expected one. From anyone. Your response prompts several thoughts. I wasn’t aware I have ‘strong feelings about TEL’. (Which?) I get the impression you may have got the impression (R D Laing lives on!) that you may think I’m anti-TEL (?). If so I note this isn’t the case. Indeed, I’d say at all of the HEIs I’ve taught at I’d been regarded by (academic/teaching) peers, IT depts. and Learning Developers, etc. as an enthusiast, champion of it (and of Blended Learning generally). Second, I was interested in your ‘admission’ (recognition) that ocTEL isn’t for everyone. I guess I’m not wondering the extent to which ocTEL is (meant – just – for) for LTs… in the sense that if it is is how would a course for non-LTs – intended for teachers wanting to learn about TEL – be different (?). Third, I don’t think LTs are ‘in charge’ at all – quite the reverse actually (to this extent I sympathise with much of the resources, etc. griping that appears in the ocTEL ‘learning space’. Finally, I’m actually quite frustrated I’ve not – for a variety of reasons (not least IT access issues) – been able to ‘engage’ – i.e. explore, follow-up – a lot more than I have on the course (to date?). There’s a lot of ‘stuff’ that I’ve seen that’s interesting – not least the obvious level of satisfaction, engagement by many participants. But without having articulated to myself what my expectations were my experience of the course to date has not been as I anticipated. One early thought I’ve had is that I’m feeling very grumpy, uneasy about the scope of it. Although by nature I wander about in my (self-directed, independent) learning (no PhD, no ‘formal’ academic research) I’m thinking perhaps one thing I’d expected – wanted? – were more closely defined, limited? learning outcomes tied to TEL ‘things’. Thank you again for replying. No need to respond further. I appreciate the course has ‘moved on’, and there are logistic issues to managing, ‘encouraging’ ongoing participant activity.
Hello Russell,
Thank you for a very interesting post. You make some very pertinent and philosophical points about learners’ online experiences, both in ocTEL and generally. I am not sure that I can provide any form of resolution for the issues you raise, however, I am eager to engage with them.
With respect to asynchronicity in forum discussions, sometimes there can be a sense of words left “in the air”, but .. sometimes when the forum members are deeply engaged in discussing a topic that important to them and they find a like- mind far away whose ideas resonate with their own, it can be a very positive experience. I don’t think the forum discussion can approximate a lively face-to-face debate, however, it can brings people and ideas together, which may never have had the opportunity to meet before, and therein lies its benefit, I think.
I do agree with you that IT does not appeal to everyone. Nor can it appeal to everyone. For many, IT is just a necessary tool to accomplish goals that cannot be achieved otherwise and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that perspective. One did not have to love a phone to use it for what you needed. Apart from technophiles, I think most people use technology to the point of redundancy and then move on. A person may research flowers online, not simply to be online, but ultimately to go into his garden and plant flowers. IT was useful only in so far as it took him closer to his goal.
I have met many students for whom online learning is not a viable option for them. Not because they are poor students nor even because they are not tech savvy. No, these are students who complained of feeling a deep sense of isolation in online learning. Again, I am thinking of some young ladies I know who are tech savvy and connected with their tablets, kindle fire, ipod minis, smart phones and on and on. Yet they did poorly taking online classes and preferred to return to face-to-face classes. I found their situation an interesting riddle, these young people who should have been been ideal candidates for online learning, rejected it.
I have imagined many reasons and theories to explain their behaviour, but, *shrug* I am still guessing really..
I would agree that the ocTEL approach will work for some and not for everyone. I say this because people attach certain connotations to the word “course”, they have certain expectations of what a “course” entails and they will find that ocTEL does not really fit any of those. So for them, it may be a very disconcerting experience. For others who are familiar with the concept of a MOOC, they will fall right in.
Learning Techies seeing themselves as apart from teachers: Yes, I agree, that does take place. There are some learning techies who see themselves as techno evangelists to reluctant teachers, ignoring the realities of teachers’ lives and practice. Techies who take this approach, and not all techies do, have generally come to learning technology from the technology side of the equation. They know the technology and what it can do, but hey don’t know about teachers, learners and learning contexts. The usual consequence of this discrepancy is that very little that is positive happens. This story is as old as Skinner’s teaching machine and will continue to happen because many of us can only see the world from our perspective. Lasting change tends to be incremental and usually takes place around the edges of practice where there is least resistance. I think in understanding that, we don’t get too caught up in the ebb and flow.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
best,
Kathy
Hello Kathy-ann (unusual name). First, thanks for your reply. I hadn’t expected one. From anyone. I’m somewhat taken-a-back to have received one actually. Especially if you really meant it about mine being a very interesting post. [It wasn’t particularly thought out – simply typed away ‘off the cuff’. Perhaps in this context that’s the best thing to do? I’m uneasy about this. It somehow doesn’t ‘fit’ with what I take to be the ‘right’ way to… draft a short answer, write (prepare) ‘an essay’, etc. Hence my concern about ‘dribbling’.]
Sigh. But I certainly acknowledge/recognise what you said about sometimes students (staff) needing to/benefitting from ‘talk(ing)’ on – and how reading such ‘talk(i.e. write) -ons’ can trigger a profound sense of ‘connection’ with other learners. The parallel with diaries, and counselling/psychotherapy springs to mind. But is this learning? I guess it can be. Pause.
This is my first MOOC. I’m thinking my ‘mistake’ has been not to realise in advance they are not freebie replacements/alternatives/opportunities to do courses on topics I’m interested in – they’re more about dipping into communities in flux of participants interested in a topic I am interested, who can chose to touch others for (part of) the duration using rubber bands that stretch sometimes very longly. Laugh: Working definition. Connectivist? Hmm. Not educated enough to know.
More laughter. Much as I hate assessment as it is (i.e. offline) – assessment in this context must be a complete nightmare. Although ‘Badges’ may not be being experimented with in this regard the idea of them be used for this purpose triggers fresh concerns. Pause.
Grin. Feel I should put up that some of my best friends (certainly some of my strongest allies, supporters, collaborators) have been Learning Technologists, etc. Going to see if your bio thing whatever tells me anything more about you. I’m interested.
Thanks again for replying.
Hello Arkmba,
Yes, I did find your post interesting. The issues you raised and the reservations you articulate are ones that I hear often in my job and ones that I reflect on often myself. The ‘stream-of-consciousness’ writing style you used was an authentic representation of your thought process; you were being real, I wouldn’t worry about the ‘right’ way.
You wonder about what is learning. I encourage you not to limit your definition of learning to what goes on in schools. Learning happens all the time, in many places.
Assessment in MOOCs is still in infancy so I would give it some time to see what shakes out.
I am glad if I helped you to frame your first MOOC experience in a more positive way, maybe you will be back for ocTEL 2015!
Best wishes,
Kathy
Hello again, Kathy-ann. You’ve replied, so I will. (Noting I expect you to ‘tire’ of corresponding.)
You wrote:
“Yes, I did find your post interesting. The issues you raised and the reservations you articulate are ones that I hear often in my job and ones that I reflect on often myself. The ‘stream-of-consciousness’ writing style you used was an authentic representation of your thought process; you were being real, I wouldn’t worry about the ‘right’ way.”
Glad you found it interesting. Hmm. Seems others share my ‘concerns’ (observations) – noted. My stream of consciousness style as you dub it doesn’t bother me (laugh: I do a lot of it). I do, however, have reservations about it’s ‘appropriateness’ in an academic context. At the risk of being too hung up on ‘finishing’, ‘completeness’ – just ‘musing’ aloud (typing) can lack rigour and structure – both facets of what I look for in analysis, work by my students. I sometimes find – with, say, blogs – that authors ‘like the sound of their own voice’. I’ve quite often found students who think their ‘voice’ in this sense is ‘enough’ (for a high grade, etc.) Point being I’m concerned TEL encourages this attitude. The emphasis on putting stuff ‘up’, ‘out there’ – I wonder if this isn’t driven by frustration/fears on the part of ‘teachers’ pursuing TEL agendas – whether by choice of dictat – of ‘non-engagement’, ‘take-up’, the need to evidence ‘use’…. rather than for any real pedagogic reasons. Certainly I’ve known smart students – Bigg’s ‘Susans’ – (to privately admit) ‘to game the system’ with drivel on say Pebblepad ‘reflective logs’, etc. And as I noted in my post – ‘marking’ this gets to be logistically very time-consuming, even if you’ve done the ‘constructive alignment’ bit.
You said:
“You wonder about what is learning. I encourage you not to limit your definition of learning to what goes on in schools. Learning happens all the time, in many places.”
This comment quite shocked me. I had a ‘stellar High School career’ (I really enjoyed school). But after two abandoned attempts to ‘graduate’ (returning after a serious illness and four years subsisting on an invalid pension) in my late teens, I enrolled upon and dropped out three times from different Higher Education programmes in my early twenties. I didn’t ‘return’ to Uni until I was 40. Went straight onto a ‘top’ MBA ‘without the traditional underpinning of an undergraduate degree’. Was extremely disappointed, angry by my MBA experience. And by my subsequent ‘Initial Teacher Training’ (leading to a PG teaching certificate). And – laugh – later with PG ‘training’/education at Higher Education level. So I feel – and on this it is a strong feeling – that my learning post ‘junior’ High School has virtually all been outwith formal educational institutions. Having said that in my ‘third career’ actualising a vocation to teach I’ve now taught, been employed – at what in the States I believe is called Associate Prof (Senior Lecturer) level – at six (state owned) UK pre-/post- ’92 Universities. I’ve also experience in High School, ‘College’ (i.e. Further Education), TEFL (English as another language), for-profit settings. Grin: But I’d be the last person to say learning only takes place in schools! Laugh: I’ve quit all of them. (But still keep getting reemployed/ returning for more?)
You wrote:
“Assessment in MOOCs is still in infancy so I would give it some time to see what shakes out.”
Yeah. I accept, recognise this. As an aside note it’s been revealing to me just how many outages, downtimes, ‘disconnects’ there have been on the ocTEL course. My standards are admittedly (too?) high. Perhaps
this reflects my ‘corporate’, ‘coming from industry’ background. But still what’s useful for me is that these ‘service failures’ are accepted as ‘ok’, par for the course (pun intended!) by deliverers and participants alike. Guess this is therefore ‘normal’ – will bear this in mind in future: if it doesn’t bother them, will/can drop MY expectations.
You wrote:
I am glad if I helped you to frame your first MOOC experience in a more positive way, maybe you will be back for ocTEL 2015!
Yeah, so am I. Again, thank-you for replying, corresponding. Did look at your off ocTEL webpage. Was pleased to see you’re involved with mature age students. Dunno whether I’ll persevere with ocTEL 2014 yet, let alone ocTEL 2015 (doubt I’d be re-enrolled anyway). As a thank-you check out my mentor’s website at doceo.co.uk. I rate it. And James (a UK Higher Education Academy 2004 National Teacher Fellow). He’s been stateside for conferences a few times. (My visits have all been as a ‘(management) practitioner from industry)’. Haven’t got top Florida though.