Sunday, September 1, 2013

Blog Assignment #2

Connectivism in Education

 

Professor Dance-a-lot

    The video on Professor Dance-a-lot reflects the sentiment of “burp-back education”. Professor Dance-a-lot merely showed the students how to do something by lecture, when it would have been much more effective to have them engage themselves. The students didn’t really learn how to dance, because they never had to try. The point of the video is that in the future of the education we want to engage the students, not merely lecture at them. In this way teachers and students will both become more effective learners and leaders.


 Lance’s Video: The Networked Student


    The educational theory and practice known as Connectivism puts emphasis on networking and interactive learning rather than on traditional educational mediums , lecture and readings. The Networked Student video (created by Wendy Drexler) also puts emphasis on the role of technology in the future of the educational field. The Thesis of the video claims that Connectivism is the way of the future for education. Furthermore, the video reassesses the role of the teacher as a guide for the learning process.


    The example student in the video was shown to have taken very well to Connectivism. The student networked with other students studying his subject of interest, subscribed to Podcasts to watch classes around the world, and started blogging to discuss subjectively his area of interests with other students, as well as muse on his subject in his personal blog. It is argued in the video that this is the way of the future for education. The student only went to class three days a week and didn’t even have a book!


    Connectivism will definitely be a major aspect of the educational field in the future. What a wonderful resource the internet and technology are! However, putting too much emphasis on networking can either take away or dramatically add to the academic discipline being studied. The video assumes every student will do what is necessary to be a self-learner and take the time and effort to network. In the school system today, some students refuse to even do short reading assignments. Therefore it is impossible to assume every student will actively participate in Connectivism. However, this should not dissuade anyone from the value of Connectivism. I believe the ideal is to continue our push towards Connectivism without completely throwing off lecture and readings. In this way students will both learn from valuable resources (books, academic articles, journals), and network what they’ve learned online; making Connectivism even more valuable. Students could refer each other to academic sources and books that they’ve read and discuss themes or ideas from these reading assignments.


    The video asked: “In the future, why even have a teacher?”. The video argues that the teachers role is to be a guide for networking. This is a crucial element of our educational system because networking is such a major part of our modern society. I believe the teachers role is to actively participate in the learning process by lecturing and assigning relevant readings, but also to encourage networking and Connectivism. In this way our future students will be competent, educated, networking individuals.

Networking Students
 



 

Erin’s Crane's Video:

    Edutopia, an educational sources website, has a video detailing Vickie Davis’ unique way of using media tools to connect her students to learning.  Vickie is an innovative teacher in Camilla, Georgia that has taken it upon herself to use games, blogs, wikis, and virtual worlds to ignite a want in her students.  Mrs. Davis herself has won an award for best teacher blog in the world.  She has traveled around the country talking about the techniques she is using but her passion remains in the classroom with her students.  As a “teacherpreneur” she has taught her students new software, to learn how to learn, how to use the Wiki, and how to collaborate with other students more effectively.
 

    Mrs. Davis has collaborated with Julie Lindsey, a teacher in Qatar, to form a global collaborative project they named Digi Teen.  Students all over the globe have come together studying digital citizenship by researching and posting their finding through two digital portals!  Along with Digi Teen the two teachers have also founded another project.  Flat Classroom Project is a project that lets students experience trends in information technology by writing reports with other students and creating videos.  She has even with some of her students to the Middle East for a conference for the Flat Classroom Project.  Vickie Davis made a statement at the end of the video that stuck with me.  She said, “I believe this whole idea of turning school upside down and empowering students to share with one another.  If you can empower them you are just going to have a better classroom.”

 

Wesley Etheridge: Teaching in the 21st Century


Kevin Roberts made it clear that teachers in the 21st century will have to stop simply providing content, dates, facts, and formula’s. Teachers are no longer the source of information; instead we are the filter between the students and information they have access to learn on their own. Roberts nailed this point by listing all the things students can use to learn on their own. Resources such as blogs, Google, cell phones, Twitter, Wikipedia, and YouTube are available to the majority of students in America.

 What does it mean to be a filter? Kevin Roberts asks the question, “How do we teach students to handle their resources?”

Being a filter means that we show our students how to use the resources made available to them. Teachers in the 21st century must show students how to validate, synthesize, leverage, communicate, and collaborate information. Roberts poses another important question, with all of this information available should our curriculum be focused on facts and content, or skills? If students can learn facts on their own, it’s clear we should focus on the skills needed.
 
I honestly don’t disagree with anything Kevin Roberts stated. I think he’s correct, and I think it means we need to focus on engaging students rather than entertaining students. Engaging students begins with the teacher. As teachers we need make sure we’re doing anything it takes to keep our students engaged at all times. Rather it be through collaborating with fellow students or utilizing questions that challenge students to solve problems online, the focus needs to be on engaging students. If Roberts is correct the challenge for me will be to take risks. Instead of making assumptions that my students won’t be successful learning facts on their own, I want to try different methods and see what happens.

9 comments:

  1. Black type on brown is very difficult to read. Go to layout to change the type color. This YouTube video - Changing the Look of Blog - will show you how.

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  2. Dr. Strange,

    Yes, now that you mention it I realize this is a problem. Your Youtube video was very helpful and simple. However, I followed the instructions in the Youtube video and changed the text to white, but it remained black in this particular post. What's perplexing is it is not set to be black, as you can see because all my other posts are in white font.

    After this didn't work, I tried editing the font color in the composition page for the post itself, but that did not work either. Any tips on what could be going wrong?

    I will fix this problem as soon as I figure out what is going wrong. Thank you.

    Lance

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dr. Strange,

      In order to remedy this problem, I just changed my background layout so black font would work :). Thanks for letting me know the concern about the font!

      Lance

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  3. First of all, you write in a very mature manner, and I very much appreciate a student who uses their vast vocabulary well! I need to reread my own posts after reading yours, so thank you for the inspiration.

    On to your post, a very concise and well organized post in general. You discuss subjectivity in student learning in your example, where a student decided to teach himself the material or at least reinforce it outside of class. I also agree this will happen more easily with emerging technology. I find it beautiful that the Internet will help our students learn more efficiently and for knowledge to be extremely accessible.

    You later spoke about the idea of multiple resources being present in textbook reading, class lectures, and fellow students. Online aspects of these three resources will add so much to education, as they already have in online texts and video lectures. Being able to watch various universities' lectures, even blogging and posting online your questions to your peers, will aid at least this type of outgoing student. I believe though that these online resources will only make learning more comfortable for the majority.

    In response to your last paragraph's question, I point to a idea you brought up earlier: the teacher can be a "guide in the learning process." I found a similar thought in my own assigned video, where it stated the teacher would "be a filter of information" for a 21st century classroom. I think both of these points are key to harmonizing the technologically based classroom with mentor interaction.

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  4. Brian,

    Thank you so much for your comments! You seem to be a pretty affluent writer yourself!

    Your comment about "harmonizing the technologically based classroom with mentor interaction" was extremely well stated. I'm so glad we agree on this! We live in a modern world where technology is becoming more relevant everyday. In the information age students need to know how to process information. This is why blending technological resources with traditional lecture and readings seems ideal! (At least for a Humanities Subject)

    Thanks once again for your comments!

    Best,

    Lance

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  5. Comment on collaborative part of the assignment.

    Thoughtful. Interesting.

    You do not identify the authors of the various parts of the post. Your group members do. You should too.

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  6. Off topic: I love this layout. It's very constitutional looking!
    On topic: I'm always very impressed with your big vocabulary and spot on grammar, but that makes your blog post very hard to edit because I don't see anything wrong with them. I know you told me you want to be a college professor so I feel your writing will target the correct audience just be aware some students (freshman and high school students) might not be fully understanding what you're trying to convey. I really appreciate the comment you left on my blog. I write like I will be addressing my high school students because I have no desire to teach on the collegiate level yet. Well done!

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  7. Lance,
    Your post are great! I have to agree with Erin it is hard to edit your work. I have to say your vocabulary is very good in your blogs and every aspect of your work flows very well.

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  8. This comment only applies to your portion of the post.

    You mentioned that some students do not do even the minimal amount of work they are assigned and that it would not be safe to assume they'd be motivated to be self-learners. I think the way to remedy this is to show students just how interesting and helpful technology can be. Find ways to get these students interested in the subject material. Once they're interested, they'll be a lot more willing to participate and actively research on their own!

    Very good.

    ReplyDelete