Rick West

Bloggin’ about many things, but for right now I am talking about Online Learning Research in preparation for a BlogTracks presentation at AECT

Archive for July, 2006

No Family Left Behind

Posted in Uncategorized on July 19, 2006 by Administrator

This is not necessarily distance learning related, but it is a good point … that current NCLB legislation is singling out schools as the only institution responsible for children doing poorly. This was posted by XXX on the EdTECH listserv recently:

This is from Michael Winerip’s NYT’s column of July 12, 2006

“We need a No Family Left Behind Law. This would measure economic
growth of families and punish politicians in charge of states with
poor economic growth for minority families.

FOR example, in Ohio, black families earn only 62 percent of white
household income, one of the biggest disparities nationally. So every
year, under No Family Left Behind, Ohio would be expected to close
that income gap. If it failed to make adequate yearly progress for
black families’ wealth, the governor and legislators would be judged
failing, and after five years, could be removed from office. This way
public schools wouldn’t be the only institutions singled out for
failing poor children.

And if states succeeded in closing the economic gap, test scores would
be expected to rise, giving politicians and teachers a chance to
celebrate together.”

I haven’t verified this with the original source (Winerip’s column), but regardless, it’s a good quote!

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Can "cool” be created?

Posted in BlogTracks on July 19, 2006 by Administrator

On Slashdot today, it was referenced that Wal-mart is trying to create a hip, cool alternative to MySpace targeted at kids wanting to social network online with (you know this is why they are doing it) money in their pockets. In the Slashdot post, there is a funny point made:

Oh, and it calls users “hubsters” — a twist on hipsters that proves just how painfully uncool it is to try to be cool.

Advertising Age - Wal-Mart Tries to Be MySpace. Seriously

So my question is, can you engineer cool? This goes back to my previous post about whether or not we can successfully engineer social learning networks, using principles from popular social networks like MySpace. Can we distill what makes these things “work” and “cool” and then engineer them for educational purposes?

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Online networking in popular social software

Posted in BlogTracks on July 18, 2006 by Administrator

One area of research that I have been interested in the past few years have been computer-supported models of collaborative learning, particularly virtual communities of practice. I am excited to be able to take a course in CoPs this coming semester, although I need to start doing some brain exercises to get ready to read Lave and Wenger’s famous book (1991) all the way through. That’s some tough, but brilliant, material.

It seems to me, however, that there is an interesting divide in the literature about online communities of learning. From some researchers, the message seems to be that online communities of learning do not work very often (Hewitt, 2005; Schwen & Hara, 2003; Van der Meijden & Veenman, 2005). However, online communities can, and do succeed in some situations. For example, sites such as Myspace.com, Friendster.com, Xanga.com, and Flickr.com rival or surpass Google in visitors. Reportedly, 54 million people use myspace.com to interact together, and similar sites are not too far behind.

I think an interesting research idea would be to study why social networking, interaction, and collaboration is so successful, particularly among young adults, with websites such as myspace.com, and yet not so popular in educational settings. The goal would be to better understand the aspects of these social sites that encourage so much participation, and define guidelines for developing educational social communities that employ the same principles, as much as possible.

Robert Alford in The Craft of Inquiry suggests that researchers should write down theoretical questions, and then empirical questions that derive from the theoretical questions. So here’s a stab at what some research questions might be related to this topic:

Theoretical questions:

   1. Can learning communities employ principles from popular social networking sites to improve educational collaboration and interaction?
   2. Do the effectiveness of online learning communities aid in the development of expertise?

Empirical questions

   1. How do relationships form in these online sites?
   2. What draws people to associate and interact together through these online sites?
   3. What are the affordances of these social environments that are lacking in educational communities?

   4. What kinds of support or interaction do learning communities fail to provide to students?

What do you think? Are these questions valuable at all to research? Am I right in that there seems to be an interesting divide between those who think VCoPs work and those who think they don’t? Has anyone studied the application of popular social networks to online learning networks as I propose? I assume somebody has, so if you can drop names and references that would be great. I don’t anticipate studying this in the near future as my graduate research is going in a slightly different direction, but I’d like to study this more someday.

References

Alford, R. R. (1998). The craft of inquiry: Theories, methods, evidence. New York: Oxford University Press.

Hewitt, J. (2005). Toward an Understanding of How Threads Die in Asynchronous Computer Conferences. Journal of the Learning Sciences, 14(4), 567-589.

Lave, J., & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Schwen, T. M., & Hara, N. (2003). Community of Practice: A Metaphor for Online Design? Information Society, 19(3), 257.

van der Meijden, H., & Veenman, S. (2005). Face-to-face versus computer-mediated communication in a primary school setting. Computers in Human Behavior, 21(5), 831-859.

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Online networking in popular social software

Posted in Uncategorized on July 18, 2006 by Administrator

One area of research that I have been interested in the past few years have been computer-supported models of collaborative learning, particularly virtual communities of practice. I am excited to be able to take a course in CoPs this coming semester, although I need to start doing some brain exercises to get ready to read Lave and Wenger’s famous book (1991) all the way through. That’s some tough, but brilliant, material.

It seems to me, however, that there is an interesting divide in the literature about online communities of learning. From some researchers, the message seems to be that online communities of learning do not work very often (Hewitt, 2005; Schwen & Hara, 2003; Van der Meijden & Veenman, 2005). However, online communities can, and do succeed in some situations. For example, sites such as Myspace.com, Friendster.com, Xanga.com, and Flickr.com rival or surpass Google in visitors. Reportedly, 54 million people use myspace.com to interact together, and similar sites are not too far behind.

I think an interesting research idea would be to study why social networking, interaction, and collaboration is so successful, particularly among young adults, with websites such as myspace.com, and yet not so popular in educational settings. The goal would be to better understand the aspects of these social sites that encourage so much participation, and define guidelines for developing educational social communities that employ the same principles, as much as possible.

Robert Alford in The Craft of Inquiry suggests that researchers should write down theoretical questions, and then empirical questions that derive from the theoretical questions. So here’s a stab at what some research questions might be related to this topic:

Theoretical questions:

   1. Can learning communities employ principles from popular social networking sites to improve educational collaboration and interaction?
   2. Do the effectiveness of online learning communities aid in the development of expertise?

Empirical questions

   1. How do relationships form in these online sites?
   2. What draws people to associate and interact together through these online sites?
   3. What are the affordances of these social environments that are lacking in educational communities?

   4. What kinds of support or interaction do learning communities fail to provide to students?

What do you think? Are these questions valuable at all to research? Am I right in that there seems to be an interesting divide between those who think VCoPs work and those who think they don’t? Has anyone studied the application of popular social networks to online learning networks as I propose? I assume somebody has, so if you can drop names and references that would be great. I don’t anticipate studying this in the near future as my graduate research is going in a slightly different direction, but I’d like to study this more someday.

References

Alford, R. R. (1998). The craft of inquiry: Theories, methods, evidence. New York: Oxford University Press.

Hewitt, J. (2005). Toward an Understanding of How Threads Die in Asynchronous Computer Conferences. Journal of the Learning Sciences, 14(4), 567-589.

Lave, J., & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Schwen, T. M., & Hara, N. (2003). Community of Practice: A Metaphor for Online Design? Information Society, 19(3), 257.

van der Meijden, H., & Veenman, S. (2005). Face-to-face versus computer-mediated communication in a primary school setting. Computers in Human Behavior, 21(5), 831-859.

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The Creative Digital Divide

Posted in BlogTracks on July 6, 2006 by Administrator

I don’t know what else to title this post. What I am referring to is not the traditional digital divide that is about access to digital technologies, i.e. some have the tools and some do not. What I am referring to instead is a digital divide related to creative use of the tools, about why some people are creatively using their access to Internet technologies and why others are not.

What started me thinking about this is a new report from the Pew Internet and American Life project, reported by Andy Carvin on June 1st. Carvin quotes the report as stating that 42% of American adults now have broadband access. OK, that’s still not the majority, but it does represent 84 million people, which is a lot. Whites (42%) continue to have broadband access more than African Americans (31%), but English-speaking Latinos are right up there too (41%). Education and income still provide big barriers, with 2/3rds of those families earning more than $75,000 or having a college degree having broadband, but only 1/5th of those families earning less than $30,000 or without a HS diploma having it.

However, Carvin argues that this is missing the point:

It’s not about access. It never was. It’s about what people do with that access.

Andy Carvin’s Waste of Bandwidth: June 2006 Archives

On the one hand, I disagree. Access has to be there. From a distance education point of view, one of our greatest hindrances is still access. We can’t teach those folks that we can’t reach through the Internet. And if learning is about meaningful interactions, which I believe it is, then we need faster Internet connections so we can employ technologies that allow for more meaningful interactions.

So access is still a problem and needs to be addressed.

But on the other hand, Carvin has a point. Eventually we want to get beyond access and push people to do something on the Internet — to create rather than simply consume. The Pew report has some details on this as well. In the study, they asked people if they had created their own web page or blog, or uploaded something they had created themselves, such as a story or video. Here, the numbers are different:

Not surprisingly, young people were much more likely to say yes. While 43% of respondents ages 18-29 said they had done one of these online publishing activities, only 29% of 50- to 64-year olds said yes, while just 18% of those 65 and older said yes. Meanwhile, race appeared to be a small factor, but in a rather counter-intuitive way: while 32 percent of whites said they had done one of these online publishing activities, 39% of African Americans and 42% of English-speaking Latinos had done so as well. So while whites may continue to use broadband in higher numbers, a higher percentage of African American and Latino broadband users are taking advantage of their access as content publishers. Similarly, income and education gaps are relatively minimal in terms of content production: 32% of users without a high school diploma versus 38% of those with a college degree, and 32% of users earning less than $30,000 a year versus 41% of those making $75,000 or more.

Andy Carvin’s Waste of Bandwidth: June 2006 Archives

It is interesting that there is still a huge age divide, but a much smaller difference due to race, education, or income. This seems to indicate that WHEN people have access, the digital divide is less of an issue because all types of folks will use the Internet for creative activities. The Internet does, as Carvin suggests, become a democratizing bridge.

Politically, this makes me want to push for lawmakers to work out plans to give free high-speed access to everyone, so we can more quickly cross these digital divides. Educationally, it makes me think a little more about something David Wiley said once … that it might be more important to study how to help more people learn, than to help those few who have access to learning to learn better.

Personally it makes me wonder how to cross that darned age divide when it comes to web creativity, and specifically how to get my parents and grandparents to create a blog and Flickr account!

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Can DE help educate us for a global economy?

Posted in BlogTracks on July 1, 2006 by Administrator

Converge Online Magazine has an article by James Schultz describing how challenging it will be in the near future for America to keep pace with other nations for jobs, innovations, and economic growth. As is typically done, the finger is pointed at U.S. schools for not preparing students with enough creativity and “skills” to compete.

<aside> Why do we always blame schools first? What about blaming other sociocultural factors? As much as I believe education — and educators–can make a difference, I am enough of a realist to know that there are often bigger issues at play then whether a kindergarten teacher spends too much time doing lecture or rote memorization. It’s usually just easier to blame schools, which is why we do it. But, I’m an educator, and this is an education blog, so I’ll go back to discussing what education might offer to match these challenges </aside>

So, back to school-bashing. Schultz states

Retiring baby boomers are creating a vacuum that is not likely to be filled with the students currently being educated in American schools. Why? Because the American educational system, having hit its stride in the 19th century, is finding it difficult to maintain a sure footing in the 21st. Meanwhile, despite a dire need for their presence, business remains largely absent from most U.S. classrooms.

The Global Race

Yes, but what can we do about this? How can we regain our “sure footing”? Later, Schultz quotes William Hunter, director of the Office of International Students and Scholars at Lehigh University as writing that students need to be globally competent, not just domestically competent.

“U.S. students entering the workforce cannot be effective if they are only domestically competent … The problem sounds easy to solve: just hone up on global competencies and you’ll be able to meet the needs of a globalized job market. Not so fast. There is currently no agreed upon definition of what it means to be globally competent or how to obtain such worldwide savvy.”

The Global Race

I think he’s right. If you take a functionalist view of education, that the purpose of education is to function as a preparation for the economic marketplace, then we have focused for too long on preparing students for the American marketplace. All of the testing that students take to decide what their careers should be, and all the talk about what they’ll do as they grow up revolves around domestic careers and issues. There is rarely talk of the global nature of business, economics, politics, and work besides a required entry-level language course or social studies course. Do students leave our schools understanding the global economy they will be entering? Do they think about anything beyond our sea to shining sea?

The real question, of course, is what do they need to be (note that I said be, not learn) in order to be able to compete in a global economy? Stephanie Powers of the Association of Workforce Boards says in the article that we need to help students become more innovative, creative and flexible in how they work and learn.

“We’re exiting an age of conformity. That’s culturally ingrained in us,” Powers said. “The goals used to be for accuracy, routine, conformity … We have to have a creative workforce. We need to get teachers and administrators talking to the business community to see what’s really going on behind the doors of industry.”

The Global Race


This is one of the challenging issues about current educational accountability requirements. The appropriate desire to have quality education for each child has led to a stifling environment where what matters is memorizing answers for a test rather than exploring, creating, and constructing. At one time in our history it may have been important to memorize a lot of facts, but with Wikipedia at our fingertips, it may be more important now to develop other attributes and skills … such as creativity. And creativity is not memorized or filled in on bubble sheets. It is explored in a studio by trial and error and nurtured by mentoring and encouragement.

So how does this fit in with distance education? I don’t know, except to hope that new technologies may necessitate new pedagogies which may serve as catalysts for new educational systems. The easiest answer is that perhaps DE as an unbounded medium for learning can break down the domestic walls and help us consider learning and working from a global perspective.

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