Thursday 7 October 2010

eLearning Debate 2010: the debate

The debate was chaired by Rory Cellan Jones, BBC Technology Correspondent @ruskin147, the motion was;

'technology-based informal learning is more style than substance'

For

Dr Allison Rossett, Professor of Educational Technology at San Diego State University;

'informal learning only works when it is supporting formal learning. Real learning only takes place when a learner recieves structure, guidance and practice.'

Nancy Lewis, former Vice-President for Learning at IBM;

'there is no science or theories, no framework and we don't know how to develop skills and attibutes in learners to support technology-based informal learning.'

Mark Doughty, Director of Leadership, Talent and Development at the Deustsche Bank cited Dickens 'electric communication will never replace face to face and encourage someone to be brave'. Mark claimed;

'informal learning is fine for trying things out but when failure is not an option only formal learning will do'.

All interesting ideas, and perhaps a little contrived but on reflection it is always positive to consider the arguments for not doing something when considering how to overcome the barriers. I believe there are some really key points to consider when recruiting learners to courses, whether informal or formal.

Against
Professor William H Dutton, Professor of Internet Studies at Oxford University, check out the stats about internet usage collated in 2009, seems like his research will enhance our marketing materials and offer a very interesting insight into what learners want and need to know.
The following figures are based on those individuals that have access to the internet at work or home;
91% use the internet to answer particular questions
71% use the internet to research specialist subjects
56% use the internet to complete work related projects
47% use the internet to complete school related projects
87% use the internet to make travel plans
75% use the internet to read the daily news
68% use the internet to find health and medical information
In all instances individuals stated that the internet is also the first place they go for all of the above information and the first place they go on the internet is either to a search engine or a website referred to them by someone in their social network. They trust this information as much as they do a television broadcast and more interestingly they trust it more than they do newspapers or radio broadcasts. Those that don't trust the internet don't have access to it.
Jay Cross, chair of the Internet Time Alliance @jaycross;
'new information is emerging so fast that curriculum leads cannot write formal learning quick enough, the only option for most is informal learning.'
David Wilson, Independent Corporate Learning Analyst @dwil23;
'the amount of informal learning that takes place everyday is so huge and so varied we cannot measure it. Informal learning is infact all substance and no style.'
It was a really exciting debate to witness, even if we did all believe that those for the motion in fact were against the motion. However one observation that was made by Alistair Clarke from NIACE was that Government believe informal learning also includes non-accredited formal learning.
For me it is very clear that we all bimble along our lives occassionally attending specific learning events, some of which the content we retain and use in our day to day lives. This makes up such a tiny amount of our learning; it is the informal learning we embark on every day at work, at home and socially that helps us succeed. Formal learning helps provide the basis of our knowledge but informal learning helps us perform.
It is my belief that formal and informal learning both support each other and more importantly fit the requirements of learners but to suggest that non-accredited learning is informal is a folly. If we all accept this view then it wont be long before Government comes along and states it will no longer fund informal learning and if we have accepted their definition we wont be delivering all those courses that benefit so many adults that need to be engaged to discover their need to learn and achieve.

Wednesday 6 October 2010

iPlayer

So it's Wednesday morning, i've been in the office an hour and a half and i'm thinking of what biscuit to nibble on...

Wrong, it's now 9.30 and i've just brewed a lovely cup of coffee having waved goodbye to my wife, dropped our son off at nursery and walked the dogs at 8am not 5.45am! I'm off to the National eLearning debate at Oxford University this afternoon so i will be leaving shortly and am taking it easy this morning. While drinking coffee and replying to emails i've just watched the second episode of 'the classroom experiement' that was on BBC2 last week on the iPlayer .

How can i reply to emails and watch the iPlayer? Actually it was brilliant. I've always loved the iPlayer as you can catch up on content, or media, that you really want to see but didn't know was on until someone talks about it at work the next day. Which i never really understood because i really dislike watching movies on tiny screens like my compute. The reason i like using the iPlayer is simple, it's because the media i watch, i really want to watch. If i would like to watch something on the iPlayer, i never get round to it because the medium to watch the media isn't great.

So today i recalled reading an article about how you can add an iPlayer 'channel' on your Nintendo Wii. It was very straight forward, i turned the Wii on, clicked on the shopping channel, connected to my wifi (the Wii has this built in as standard), browsed the channels and there it was for a cost of zero credits.

All of a sudden i am watching the iPlayer full screen on my TV and the quality of the picture is great. So please spead the word, your kids gamind console isn't just for games, it's for watching TV too. The clever bit here is that the console is accessing the internet with a safe and secure connection, they aren't being attacked by viruses...yet.

Friday 1 October 2010

Reflective Practice and Professional Development

So i've just started back on my PGCE at WSC under UCS and the first module we are working on is all based on reflective practice and how it can inform your professional development. So far we have looked at what is reflective practice, we've even started to look at a few different models of relective practice such as mirrored refelction, stories of reflection and critical incidents. We've even begun discussing the works of leading theorists; Kolb, Brookfield and Gibbs to name but a few, then we were hit with it.

Your homework for the next session is to bring in pictures cut from magazines that could be used to reflectively describe who you are as a tutor right now today. Now one, i don't buy magazines (why would I, I go online if i want to read about something); two, the few magazines lying around the kitchen at work contain images solely of celebrities and thirdly, reflect on what?

So i thought i would pose the question to you guys. Can you think of any critical incidents that occured in your past that on reflection led you to be a tutor? Or is there a critical incident that has formed you as the particular type of tutor that you are today?

Consider a critical incident to potentially be an everyday, possibly even mundane event that at the time went ignored but on reflection had a profound effect on you or your learners.

Let me know your thoughts and i will post back after Tuesday to let you know how i got on!