Archive for November, 2007

Interview with Karen Locke: Interviews with E-Learning Professionals Series

What is your name, and what is your involvement with e-learning?

Karen Locke. I work at EdVisions Off-Campus High School in Minnesota. We are a project-based school associated with EdVisions, which is a nonprofit company helping to promote the use of project-based learning in different states around the country. The “parent school” was Minnesota New Country School, and we are kind of an online “offshoot”. We are a charter school and we also get money from a Gates grant from the Gates Foundation.

How did you get interested in distance education?

The opportunity to spread education based on projects (as opposed to education based on pre-written curriculum) to students at home was very exciting, so I joined the group that was designing the program.. Students in our school work at home and in the community, logging hours on projects in a variety of areas so they can get credits and graduate from high school. We help them design the projects, but they are truly self-initiated (as much as possible, since they also need to fulfill distribution requirements).

What is your favorite new trend in distance education?

I like to help students use video and/or audio presentations to show their learning. I’m also interested in the Ning network (our school has its own site) , Elluminate (our school meets there), and Classroom 2.0 (see http://classroom20.ning.com ) where teachers help introduce each other to different online resources.

What is your favorite technology?

Elluminate has been wonderful – we teach math, hold advisory meetings, see student presentations, and our students have meetings like Movie Madness (discussing current movies)

What kinds of instructional materials do you use in elearning?

Students tend to do internet research, interview experts, and we use Accelerated Math for most of our math. I also use themathworksheet.com site for designing math review sheets for special ed kids

How do you use textbooks in e-learning?

Occasionally individual kids use textbooks on something they’re interested in, but otherwise we don’t use texts.

What is your favorite quote? or, what’s a book that caught your eye recently?

Quote: “This life is a test- it is only a test. If it had been an actual life, you would have received further instructions on where to go and what to do”. (anonymous)

Book- “The Deep Democracy of Open Forums” by Arnold Mindell. This isn’t about online education, but it’s about helping organizations (including schools) to become more aware of what is happening there, raising issues that need to be dealt with and showing how to deal with them.

Interviewed by Susan Smith Nash

IT News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: Microsoft Vista’s (un)popularity, Forterra Systems and CIA’s partnership to develop a secure virtual world, Career Education Corporation’s choice of data loss prevention solution, and One Laptop Per Child Program’s extension

Sales of Microsoft’s year-old Windows Vista operating system have hit 88 million. But a recent survey by King Research showed that 90 percent of IT professionals have concerns about migrating to Vista and about half reported they have considered non-Windows operating systems, such as Linux and Macintosh, to avoid Vista. Meanwhile, a Forrester report showed that that 88 percent of companies with 5,000 to 20,000 users have standardized on the XP operating system and their demand forced Microsoft in September to extend XP’s availability another five months. — AHN

Forterra Systems Inc., a California-based computer-simulation company, announced it received a “strategic investment” from In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s privately run venture affiliate, to develop computer-based virtual-conferencing systems for the nation’s intelligence community. Forterra says its “virtual world” product is an organized version of the increasingly popular Second Life, a freewheeling online “reality game” produced by Linden Lab of San Francisco. Some of the technologies will include in-depth data mining to track potential terrorists, high-speed image analysis, and online behavior-pattern recognition. — OrlandoSentinel.com

Career Education Corporation implemented Vontu, a Data Loss Prevention solution, to protect the private information of its students and make online credit card transactions compliant with security regulations. — CNN

One Laptop Per Child

The “Give One, Get One” program will now run through December 31, instead of ending on November 26, according to the One Laptop Per Child Program, a nonprofit spinoff from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The program was extended because people and local and national groups requested more time to participate. — Associated Press

Conferences in the News — November 26, 2007

Canadian educational blogger extends an invitation to tune in to an online distance education-related presentation on November 30, 2007. Topics include: how to effectively handle research approval issues, improve the validity of online programs, and build and support an online learning community. — Rick’s Café Canadien

Publishers in the News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: Pearson’s e-content honored, the book industry’s green efforts

Pearson has been named to the prestigious “EContent 100″ list by EContent magazine, as one of the companies that “matter most in the digital content industry.” — CNN

The book industry has set itself a target of reducing its carbon emissions by 10% by 2015. The Environmental Action Group (EAG) is also investigating the possibility of an industry-wide quality mark for books to indicate their green credentials. — thebookseller.com

Games in the News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: games to teach languages, gaming with brainwaves

Nintendo DS to release in January 18 games to help young children in Japan learn English. — Mobile Magazine

Tokyo University is developing new technology which will allow a player to control an online or video avatar using brain waves. The technology is currently tested on Second Life. — International Business Times

Schools and Programs in the News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: tracking students’ illegal movie downloads, home schooling, universities’ partnership to aid mature workers work better with technology, Texas high school web management, and Arizona’s university funding policy review

Brian Krebs’s computer security blog for Washington Post provides a detailed overview of the discussion surrounding the Motion Picture Association of America’s proposal to implement the use of software to catch students using their universities’ networks to download pirated movies. — Washington Post blog

Are home-schooled children more aptly prepared for college? This article explores the Utah state requirements for home schooling, options parents have of meeting them, and how being taught at home affects subsequent college admissions and overall experience for the estimated million American children who learn from home. — Daily Herald

A new partnership brings together researchers from the University of Dundee’s School of Computing in the U.K. and the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine in a concerted effort to develop assistive technologies and gain insight into new ways to improve workplace performance in maturing workers by improving the workplace and by increasing the ability of older workers to use technology. — Campus Technology

Round Rock Independent School District in Texas is moving management of its special populations to the Web. Half of the data entry assistants, formerly helping with paperwork, will be reassigned to positions of working directly with students. — T.H.E. Journal

Plans are discussed at Arizona state Capitol to make university funding reflect student performance and graduation rates, possibly replacing the current policy that distributes money based on number of students enrolled. — Arizona Daily Star

Awards in the News — November 26, 2007

The non-profit National Math and Science Initiative will award $25 million to 12 universities in the United States in an effort to boost the number of successful teacher preparation programs. — T.H.E. Journal

Research in the News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: ebook reader technology, report on k-12 online learning programs, an evaluation of continuing and professional education websites, the relationship between webspace choice and socioeconomic background, and the cost and efficiency of public education

Amazon Kindle - image by Wikimedia
People are talking about the new Kindle electronic reader by Amazon. A blogger gives her personal but very informed, research-backed opinion, suggesting that this kind of technology is perhaps old-fashioned and explaining why we need a version with more of a “digital twist.” – TechLearning

According to Keeping Pace, a new report on K-12 online learning researched and written by Evergreen Consulting Associates, most online learning programs are growing by 25 percent each year, with 42 states running significant supplemental, full-time or combined supplemental and full-time online learning programs. However, the report also notes that the majority of education leaders still lack sufficient policy oversight to maintain student opportunities and demonstrate quality to stakeholders. — T.H.E. Journal

A study by educational consultancy Eduventures reveals that continuing and professional education (CPE) websites do not rank well in some key functionality areas, such as content, search capabilities, and multimedia. According to the report, CPE sites are strong on aesthetics and marketing but lack depth. — Campus Technology

A Northwestern University study suggests that students’ choice of webspace (MySpace, Facebook or Xanga) might be related to social factors, such as race, ethnicity and parents’ education. The findings challenge the ideas about the Web’s potential to improve people’s lives by sidestepping physical constraints. — EurekAlert

The cost of public education in Illinois has increased dramatically over the past 12 years, but has student performance improved? Is the ACT or the ISAT a better indicator of student knowledge level? The author of this article has strong opinions on both questions and backs her convictions with data from research institutions in Illinois and DC. — Chicago Daily Herald

New E-Learning Teaching Techniques Book Useful for All

Although Packt Publishing’s book on teaching techniques contains specific technical guidelines for use with the open-source learning platform, Moodle, the book is immensely useful for online instructors, designers, and administrators of other platforms. It also helps individuals integrate flash-based products (including Xplana products such as XplanaBook and XplanaVoice) into Moodle. This book helps make Moodle more accommodating to instructional content.

Packt Publishing’s Moodle Teaching Techniques (2007) by William H. Rice, IV, is a welcome addition to course developer and designers’ libraries. For example, it would work well XplanaCourse users. What sets this book apart from other texts that discuss ways to develop courses and to teach effectively online is the fact that it has a heavy Web 2.0 orientation, which means that it incorporates interactive web applications and encourages sharing and interaction, which in turn accommodates multiple learning styles and also facilitates the development of a robust, active learning community.

Moodle Teaching Techniques - Packt Publishing

Schools, not-for-profits, training institutes, and corporations that are turning to Moodle to host their online learning. They have gone to Moodle because they like the fact that it is open-source and very customizable. Many people are finding that if they use a hosting service like Site Ground (http://www.siteground.com) the hosting service is very helpful in getting the user started with exciting user applications.

If one does not have the time an energy to configure Moodle for their server, one can also use a service such as Moodle Rooms (http://www.moodlerooms.org), which exists to help individuals and organizations put together Moodle sites.

Here are the specific areas addressed in the book. Please bear in mind that what appears below is not a table of contents, and the actual content in the book is arranged in a different way. I’ve simply categorized the content along instructional lines.

The book does an outstanding job of connecting the ways to teach with specific instructions of how to do the activities in Moodle. Screenshots and captures help the reader follow what is happening.

Learning Community Activities:

Moodle Forums

Moodle Chat

Content Mastery Activities:

Quiz set-ups, solutions, and deployment

Proctored, Timed tests from Secure Locations

Content Presentation:

Lessons Settings

Lesson Instructional Materials

Sequence of Activities

Wiki: Interactive content

Supplemental Activities:

Glossaries

While the organization and presentation of the instructions is very clear, concise and easy to use, it is possible that the reader will be left asking “why” to a number of the suggestions and guidelines.

For example, in the section entitled, Need for Sequential Activities, the book states: “We don’t want our students to ‘meander’ or wander through course items. We want to enforce a specific order of resources and activities” (Rice, 2007, 88). My immediate question was, “Why? What’s wrong with meandering?”

Such questions would be well answered if the author provided a rationale, and at least two underpinnings from learning theory – one pro and one con- to help the reader gain a sense why decisions are made, and how learning is enhanced.

This book helps course developers, instructors, and administrators put together very effective Moodle-based courses that include asynchronous as well as synchronous activities.

Reference:

Rice, W. H. (2007). Moodle teaching techniques: Creative ways to use Moodle for constructing online learning solutions. Birmingham and Mumbai: Packt Publishing.

Rate Learning Management Systems