Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Collaboration in Educational Settings Nathan Campbell Lisa Doan Kirill Kireyev Malte Winkler
2
Why Collaboration? –Teaches valuable “people” skills –Self-empowerment, responsibility, self-expression –“When you teach, you learn” –Synergy of ideas, “symmetry of ignorance” –Cognitive Dissonance Theory – resolving disagreements Why Computer-aided Collaboration? –Helps mediate opinions (everyone is heard) –Easy to organize/visualize information –Distributed Space / Time / People –Fun
3
Interviews & Observations People: –Gerhard Fischer / Hal Eden (Swiki) –Sebastian De La Chica (UI design) –Michael Main (WebCT) –Carl Wieman (Clickers) –Amer Diwan Technologies: –WebCT –EDC –FEEL (DLC ’04) –Swiki –Moodle –Clickers
4
Interviews & Observations Issues –Structured vs. unstructured –Whiteboard vs. message board –In class vs. online discussions Generalizations –“Beaten Path” –“Cycle of Abandonment”
5
Cycle of Abandonment
6
Different Modes of Collaboration
7
Design Questions Balance online vs. face-to-face –How to integrate? Structured (WebCT) vs Unstructured (wiki) –Freedom may be messy General vs. specific Mediation? Support flexibility, evolution –Users will use in different ways
8
Lessons Learned from IR Technological artifacts must be accompanied by understanding and willingness to change underlying social practices Collaboration requires proper environment –Open-ended projects –Shared goals –Non-competitive environment Collaborative skills need to be taught
9
Project Enhancing Collaboration Among Students In Large Lecture Settings
10
Large Lectures: Challenges Students often have questions, but hesitate to ask –Don’t want to interrupt lecture –Shy / self-conscious Lecturer’s attention is limited Difficult to gauge level of student understanding, interest Difficult to remember discourse, reasoning, opinions
11
Large Lectures: Opportunities Peers represent large body of knowledge and opinions –Improve deliberation process TAs available to answer questions –As long as not intrusive to the lecture Clickers work well, but would be nice to: –Add justification –Persist answers (in context) for later review Student want to ask questions –Gain confidence to know they’re not alone
12
Proposed Solution: SLE
13
Notes and Question Markers
14
As the Question Marks Increase the Class Confusion Histogram gives the students, TAs, and the professor a class status
15
Students have the ability to ask questions that get sent out to all students and TAs that they can discuss and look at the answer provided by each other or the TA. They also have the ability of increase the questions need to be answered
16
We also have “clicker” capability, but require justifications for every answer.
17
Random Justifications are displayed. The students are able to discuss the questions with each other by simply clicking the discuss button
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.