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Blogs and Wikis in the Bb LS Barbara Knauff, Senior Instructional Technologist, Dartmouth College July 10, 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "Blogs and Wikis in the Bb LS Barbara Knauff, Senior Instructional Technologist, Dartmouth College July 10, 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Blogs and Wikis in the Bb LS Barbara Knauff, Senior Instructional Technologist, Dartmouth College July 10, 2007

2 2 Session Overview Bb at Dartmouth Why blogs and wikis? Learning Objects implementation Use cases Tips Q & A, discussion

3 3 Dartmouth 4,100 undergrads 1,600 graduate/professional students 475 faculty 400-500 courses/term

4 4 Dartmouth Residential student body No distance ed programs Study abroad > 50% Face-to-face instruction at core of institutional identity Liberal arts Bb used as a supplement

5 5 Bb at Dartmouth 1999: adopted CourseInfo 2002: integration with Banner 2007: more than 2/3 of courses have active Bb site Cross-platform support crucial (40% Mac users)

6 6 Bb growth

7 7 Early uses of Bb Tool adoption weighted towards administrative functions Instructor disseminates content Students consume content One-way street: faculty to student

8 8 So what’s the problem? “… students do not always complete the readings, so sometimes come to class with no ideas and questions about new knowledge.”

9 9 So what’s the problem? “The issue with which I really struggle is that […] students seem to not want to think or take responsibility for their own learning.”

10 10 So what’s the problem? “Another problem that new technologies may address is the range of student competence […]”

11 11 So what’s the problem? “… students […] often seem unwilling to apply what they know to their classmates’ presentations.”

12 12 So what’s the problem? “… students […] want to be fed the ‘answers’ to the test questions.”

13 13 Deeper Learning Principles Social Active Contextual Engaging Student-owned Carmean, Colleen and Jeremy Haefner. "Mind over Matter: Transforming Course Management Systems into Effective Learning Environments." Educause Review, Nov/Dec. 2002, pp. 27-34.

14 14 Tools for deeper learning Discussion Boards Wikis Blogs or online journals

15 15 Shared attributes Asynchronous Collaborative Multi-media possible Text-centered

16 16 Discussion Boards Implemented in Bb Limitations: –Linear structure –Can be cumbersome to read –Focus on text –Cannot easily embed media in page –No commenting –Access: all or nothing

17 17 Blogs Simple web publishing Chronological presentation Shared or individual Support comments

18 18 Wikis “A web application that allows users to add content, as on an Internet forum, but also allows anyone to edit the content.” (Source: wikipedia)wikipedia A website (non-linear, hyperlinked) Collectively authored Supports comments

19 19 Blogs and Wikis in Bb Based on Building Block technology Enterprise clients only Learning Objects: http://www.learningobjects.com http://www.learningobjects.com Substantial cost Cross-platform support Excellent customer support Rapid development cycle

20 20 Basic clients? Link to free services from within Bb No seamless authentication integration No integrated assessment Recommended services: –PB Wiki: http://pbwiki.com/http://pbwiki.com/ –Blogger: http://www.blogger.comhttp://www.blogger.com

21 21 Teams LX “Teams Site” = wiki Nomenclature and icon switch =

22 22 Teams LX Create a wiki in any content area

23 23 Teams LX Assign name and description

24 24 Teams LX Grant editing privileges based on groups

25 25 Teams LX Grant editing privileges to individuals

26 26 Teams LX Set availability

27 27 Teams LX Set dates for editing

28 28 Teams LX Set dates for viewing/commenting

29 29 Teams LX Ability to create gradebook entry

30 30 Teams LX Ability to set text direction

31 31 Teams LX Cross-platform WYSIGYG toolbar –IE –Firefox –Unsupported browsers - can edit HTML

32 32 Teams LX Toolbar supports: –Word-like changes in display –Links –Images –File uploads –Special characters –HTML editing mode –pseudo-CSS

33 33 Teams LX Editing history for each page

34 34 Teams LX Version changes highlighted

35 35 Teams LX Ability to revert to prior versions Other tools: –Page list –Search tool –Export tool

36 36 Teams LX Assess Wikis (Control Panel)

37 37 Wiki examples Scientific Basis of Medicine Program (SBM.Program-AY0607):SBM.Program-AY0607 –Student presentation of medical case studies –Use of pathology images crucial –“Seeded” demo wiki

38 38 Wiki examples

39 39 Wiki examples

40 40 Wiki examples Whitman and Dickinson (ENGL.066.01-SU06):ENGL.066.01-SU06 –Class-built literary glossary –Class-built annotated bibliography –Tendency to append, not overwrite

41 41 Wiki examples Composition and Research (WRIT.002.04- FA06)WRIT.002.04- FA06 –Collection of sources –Class-built historical synopsis –Orphaned pages

42 42 Wiki examples Expository Writing (WRIT.005.13.14- FA06)WRIT.005.13.14- FA06 –Group web project instead of paper –Multi-media included –Course administration: signup sheets

43 43 Wiki examples Expository Writing (WRIT.005.01-FA06)WRIT.005.01-FA06 –Student-generated questions –Wiki functions like an erasable whiteboard

44 44 Wiki examples Biology & Politics of Starvation (BIOL.009.01-SSOC.009.01-WI06)BIOL.009.01-SSOC.009.01-WI06 –Final projects –Charts and images –Some poor design choices (colors, width)

45 45 Wiki examples Collaborative article (ORG.computing.curricular.CMS-article)ORG.computing.curricular.CMS-article –Used wiki as shared writing space

46 46 Other wiki assignments Reading club Signup and self-scheduling pages Textbook errata Lecture errata “Expert” wikis (research and documentation) Student-authored study guides

47 47 Wiki positives Student engagement and ownership Multi-media Sharing work in class / outside of class Wikis enhance other work

48 48 Wiki positives “Group writing doesn’t produce good papers - but the next individual paper will be improved” Engages deeper learning principles: –Social, active, contextual, engaging, student- owned

49 49 Wiki problems, 1 Confusion between general course wiki and wikis deployed in content areas Confusion between “edit page” and “new page” Concept of linked web of pages difficult Browser problems (Safari) Locked-up documents Assessment difficult Poorly designed sites, image sizing problems

50 50 Wiki problems, 2 Long URLs Access configuration difficult for faculty Hesitancy to embrace new notion of authorship Flashy instead of substantive

51 51 Wiki suggestions, 1 Brief & clear technical instructions Disable course wiki Clearly define expectations of wiki assignments Create demo wiki for students Consider “seeding” wikis/pre-establishing structure Don’t expect beauty Be aware of time commitment required

52 52 Wiki suggestions, 2 Be aware of file size quota Iterative process: –Create –Review and comment, feedback –Refine –Final Assessment –Consider separating process/product in assessment Require commenting

53 53 Journals LX Analogous to Teams LX “Journal Site” = blogs Nomenclature and icon switch =

54 54 Journals LX Single-page Multi-author Users can only edit their own posts Versioning Commenting No assessment tool Option: students can view only own posts Option: RSS feed

55 55 Sample blog assignments Individual reading or progress journals Group project progress reports Personal showcase in language classes Student blogs Peer review Link collection

56 56 Blog example Contemporary Issues Feminism (WGST.016.01-SP07)WGST.016.01-SP07 –Theoretical glossaries/responses

57 57 Blog example The Cinematic City (FILM.047.01-SP07)FILM.047.01-SP07 –Response papers

58 58 Blog example Latinos in Media/Arts (LATS.041.01-FA05)LATS.041.01-FA05 –Student link collections

59 59 Blog positives Easy for students to use Good replacement for some single-page wikis Alternative to discussion board

60 60 Blog problems Less used at Dartmouth than wikis Student engagement seems lower Few technical/conceptual problems –Browser problems Problems similar to discussion board: –Student motivation –Integration with course

61 61 Expo LX Formerly called “Backpack” Not deployed at Dartmouth Blogs, wikis associated with user Module-based (not course) Rudimentary permissioning E-portfolios Personal student spaces

62 62 Conclusion Contact: barbara.knauff@dartmouth.edubarbara.knauff@dartmouth.edu Slides: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~bknauff/BbWor ld2007/ http://www.dartmouth.edu/~bknauff/BbWor ld2007/ Questions!


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