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Kristoffer Greaves Reflection on Masters of Professional Education & Training, Semester 1, 2009
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What is “FODE”?FlexibleOnlineDistanceEducation
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Teaching what students/clients want
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it. 1990s – ‘Client-focused’ competency based training (CBT)
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it. 1990s – ‘Client-focused’ competency based training (CBT) with flexible:
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it. 1990s – ‘Client-focused’ competency based training (CBT) with flexible: Delivery Modes
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it. 1990s – ‘Client-focused’ competency based training (CBT) with flexible: Delivery Modes Delivery Venues
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Teaching what students/clients want, in the ways they want it. 1990s – ‘Client-focused’ competency based training (CBT) with flexible: Delivery Modes Delivery Venues Assessment Practices
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All emerging digital forms of: Teaching Learning Support Administration in education
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institution-based, formal education where the learning group is separated, and where interactive telecommunications systems are used to connect learners, resources and instructors... “telecommunications systems” includes electronic media Simonson et al 2009 p. 32
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Technology, interaction & learners’ contexts Historical and political foundations Flexible delivery Online, e-learning and the virtual campus Education futures: technologies, contexts, distances
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‘Technology’ traditional, behaviourist approach, focused on production process to program learning compared to broader contemporary view, tools that mediate interactions
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‘Interaction’ necessary constituent of all learning many interactions (not just f2f): Learning materials (print/online/digital/LMS) Administrative sub-system (enrolments etc) Academic sub-system (lecturers, tutors, etc) Other learners (group work, discussions, etc)
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Learners’ contexts personal worlds: family, friends, home & community professional worlds: professional colleagues, managers, memberships interactional distances: Intimate: home, family, friends Effective: work, shops, college, etc Nominal: world at large
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Religious letters and texts Correspondence - penny post – Britain 1681; Pitman –shorthand lessons 1837 School of the Air – Australia 1951 Open university – UK 1960s Teletutoring – Australia 1970s ‘Distance Education’ – growth in 1980s
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Otto Peters: “industrialised education” Holmberg: “guided didactic conversation” Traditional assumptions - distant student necessarily ‘disadvantaged’? Education as text – is ‘conventional’ education inevitably ‘distant’? Creative approaches to serve learners’ needs
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Industry’s demands – flexible workforce essential to improved productivity TAFE delivery of VET seen as costly & non- responsive to industry change CBT and recognition of prior learning (RPL) – demonstrated competencies Training packages & self-directed learning Australian Flexible Learning Network
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Effects of online learning – changing pedagogy underlying technological developments transition from ‘autonomous learner’ to ‘electronically connected learning community’ Knowledge construction - a dialectic process where one tests & negotiates constructed views on & with others
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Potential attributes of online learning ‘+’ ‘Equal’ medium Collaborative learning Flexibility of time and place Access to mentor NES have time to reflect Reflective communication Overcome isolation
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Potential attributes of online learning ‘-’ Learners need IT equipment Information overload Online learning curve Typing skills important Missed communication cues; ‘flaming’ Dominant personalities Non-participating lurkers
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Appropriate pedagogical models? One-alone – online databases & journals One-to-one – learning contract, email One-to-many – lecturer, symposium, podcast Many-to-many – discussion, group work, debate, synchronous or asynchronous
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Attributes of collaborative learning & social construction of knowledge : Share diverse perspectives of group Clarification of ideas Feedback on ideas Group solutions Sharing resources Practicing language of knowledge group Power of group discussion
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Distance education and technology interrelate and mutate synchronously Theory & research has to keep up Tension between public and private Post-Fordism – technology permits affordable production of non-identical units Diversity of learner needs + mentor skills
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Social presence in a virtual environment Flexibility = overload? Reallocation of workloads Implications for instructional design Implications for training and regulatory policies
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