Archive | Novice

Integrating Web 2.0 and Mobile Technologies to Promote Accessbility and Universal Design for Learning in a STEM Course: Lessons Learned

Audience
Novice
Session Description
This presentation will outline the lessons learned and formative evaluation findings from a technology integration effort in a STEM class in a large Pacific university. The STEM class is co-taught by five instructors with expertise in mathematics, science, art, special education, and educational technology. The activity that will be discussed in this presentation is an eight-week moon investigation lesson that has been designed to provide students with the opportunity to engage in realistic and meaningful scientific inquiry. The activity is being piloted and evaluated in Spring 2014. Research-based strategies of effective practice for culturally and linguistically diverse students are being integrated into the course, and technology integration is being modeled explicitly and implicitly through online and in-class examples.

For the moon investigation activity, students are building their own websites, contributing to blogs, and using iPad Minis to collect and digitize data over the course of the activity. The multimedia artifacts they create over the course of the assignment will be used to create a final multimedia report as a representation of their learning. Using a constructivist framework, the activity requires that students perform observations of the moon, think critically about the observations they are making, reflect on what they are learning, and share their learning with others. Building on this, students receive direct instruction on how they can use similar processes and procedures to explore complex scientific concepts with elementary school students.

Presenter(s)
  • Matthew Schmidt, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, USA
  • Lori Fulton, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, USA

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Usability of a Technology Website for Teachers: Productivity Tools Made Easier

Audience
Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, All Audiences
Session Description
Despite increasing demands to use technology, teachers often feel frustrated in knowing how to use technology productivity tools efficiently. At a private high school, teachers are required to use productivity tools available through the school website to do their work. However, through informal feedback, teachers expressed frustration that information was difficult to find and was not current or relevant. Therefore, the purpose of this usability study was to evaluate the content and organization of a newly designed website. Teachers who reported little to no use of the website were asked to participate. Six teachers were observed and audio recorded using a talk-aloud technique while using the website to complete eight tasks commonly asked of teachers. Data collected included field notes, screencastings, and surveys. Analysis included qualitative coding of field notes and audio transcripts and descriptive statistical analysis of the survey data. Findings indicated teachers preferred having information simplified, in one location, with fewer drop down menus. Additionally, there were a variety of preferences in terms of how information was presented, with some preferring video, some text and images, and some downloadable PDF files. These findings have implications for how the website is designed to best meet differing teacher needs.
Presenter(s)
  • Timothy Freitas, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA

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Open Planner: Using Google Calendars for Cloud Based Personal and Collaborative Lesson Planning

Audience
All Audiences
Session Description
Google Apps for Education offers many new technologies that are not only changing the way we teach but also the way we collaborate and plan. Google Calendar in particular can allow for cloud based storage of lesson plans that can be organized and set to be readily available on any given day, year after year. Yet even the small amount of time and practice it may take to learn how to use a new technology can create a large chasm between digital natives, comfortable with exploring a new product, and those not ready to leave the comforts of familiarity and migrate to the digital world. This usability study aimed to evaluate the usability and intuitiveness of a module prototype, designed to teach educators how to use Google Calendar as a cloud-based lesson planner, in order to determine how to make the module more approachable to new learners. Participants were asked to “think aloud” as they performed a series of tasks and explored the module in an effort to gain an understanding of how users might perceive the learning module and any potential areas that might inhibit learning. Data were gathered on participants as they interacted with the module, on any frustrations, confusions, and overall impressions. The results of the study highlighted areas of concern, frustration or confusion which helped further shape the design of the module and provide possible implications or generalizations that may be made when designing future training modules.
Presenter(s)
  • Dana Ishii, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Haleiwa, Hawaii, USA

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Chuukese Storytelling: Telling, Preserving, and Promoting Traditional Narrative through Web Technology

Audience
All Audiences
Session Description
Learning is a paramount aspect of the learning system in Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia. People learned many important survival skills through stories. In the past, it was the only way to document, preserve, and transmit our history, genealogy, and traditional practices. Significant parts of Chuuk’s history, culture, language, and identity are deeply buried in stories. Today, many of these stories are at risk to be lost due to rapid changes in social living conditions. Losing these stories would mean losing an essential part of what it means to be an Indigenous Chuukese. Utilizing web technology as a preventive measure to this problem is perhaps ‘the’ best solution due to its potentials not only to document, preserve, and promote these stories but also its abilities to provide more access to individuals, stimulate interactions between users, and offer multiple formats benefiting different levels of users.
Presenter(s)
LJ Rayphand
LJ_Rayphand_64I spent most of my years growing up on Udot, a small volcanic island in Chuuk State, Federated States of Micronesia. I am currently working on a PhD in Educational Technology at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. My area of interest encompasses the integration of educational technology and media in remote areas of the Pacific Islands, specifically in the Federated States of Micronesia.

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The Massive Growth Spurt in MOOCS: Do They Signal a Promising Trend in Higher Education?

Audience
All Audiences
Session Description
The new phenomenon of MOOCS is promising to revitalize the educational landscape, shake up the key players, and reform higher education. MOOCS are a recent development in distance education and are known as Massive Open Online Course( s). They originated in 2008 with the Open Education Resources Movement ( OER) ( Open Educational Resource, Hewlett Foundation) and are courses offering lectures by world class professors with videos, quizzes, learning material, etc., now being offered by elite institutions like Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, etc., which provide free access and offer certificates of completion, but typically do not offer academic credit, or charge tuition fees. MOOCs signal a trend in the application of “connectivism” which emphasizes learning taking place in a social and cultural context with the infusion of work /life experience
(Downes, 2011).

This interactive presentation will discuss the challenges and opportunities that MOOCs present to “for-profit education.” Is self-paced learning truly successful? What is the success rate for students registered in such courses? Do MOOCs signal a trend in higher education away from degree programs requiring students to pay tuition, to the accessibility of free resources that provide proof of completion and mastery of content as being the requisite outcome necessary in today’s workplace? Will the greater transparency provided by the web, lead to greater accountability of individuals, organizations, and business practices? If the human race is to survive and thrive, accountability needs to infuse every human endeavor–from that of the individual, to nations, and to the world, at large.

References
Richard Pérez-Peña (July 17, 2012). “Top universities test the online appeal of free”. The New York Times. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
Horacio Reyes. “History of a revolution in e-learning”. Revista Educacion Virtual. Retrieved Aug 10, 2012.
Downes, Stephen “‘Connectivism’ and Connective Knowledge”, Huffpost Education, January 5, 2011, accessed July 27, 2011
^ Kop, Rita “The challenges to connectivist learning on open online networks: Learning experiences during a massive open online course”, International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, Volume 12, Number 3, 2011, accessed November 22nd, 2011
“Open Educational Resources”. The William and Flora Hewlitt Foundation. Retrieved 27 March 2013.

Presenter(s)
Rathi Krishnan, Kaplan University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
Rathi KrishnanRathi Krishnan has an MA in Comparative Literature from Bangalore University, India, another MA in English from Cal State University, Long Beach, as well as doctoral coursework in English from University of California, Riverside, before she dropped out, and began to ponder on the meaning of education, education that is self-taught versus formal education. She has taught at several California community colleges, Cal State University, Long Beach, NYU, several online universities, and is currently a full time professor at Kaplan University. Her quest is to provide quality education to her students, as well as to contemplate the bigger picture of what education entails and affords for each one of us in our quest for self-discovery and in fulfillment of our goals, dreams, and ambitions. She lives in the San Francisco, Bay Area and as online teaching allows her to travel widely, considers herself to be a resident of “nowhere” and a denizen of “everywhere,” a state made possible in this internet era.

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Modular Video Production For 3D Digital Design

Audience
Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, All Audiences
Session Description
The “Flipped Classroom” model has grown in popularity over the last few years. At RIT in the 3D Digital Design department we teach a combination of design critical thinking and technical skills. In the past we struggled to find a balance between teaching the tools and also design and aesthetic concepts. We found a great amount of extra time was dedicated toward teaching the tools to the students. Initially many of the video promoted in the Flipped classroom are long, lecture length. In our department we have found that, the creation of modular videotaped technical lectures for offline viewing significantly leverages our and the students time by redirecting the delivery of quantified, finite technical information to self-paced, individual study. This model allows for more classroom time to address issues that require increased student interaction and participation. Additional benefits and techniques will be discussed for optimizing video production as well as combining social media elements to away from classroom discussion.
Presenter(s)
Shaun Foster, Rochester Institute of Technology, New York, USA
Shaun FosterShaun Foster is an Assistant Professor in 3D Digital Graphics / Computer Graphics Design programs at RIT. His interest is where interactive, 3D, educational and interface design combine. From these interests comes a focus for creatively designing with new visual and interactive technologies and connecting multimedia in new ways. An award winning visual artist Foster works in and combines the fields of 3D animation, educational interactive multimedia, visual effects, compositing and business.
David Halbstein, Rochester Institute of Technology, New York, USA
David HalbsteinDavid Halbstein is an Assistant Professor of 3D Digital Graphics at RIT. Originally from New Jersey, David has extensive experience working in the broadcast, film, and commercial industries in the New York Metropolitan area; and has taught in this field in both traditional degree-granting institutions and intensive corporate training centers. With a background in fine arts, David is primarily interested in discovering new directions in creative expression through the marriage of traditional ideas with new technology.

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Measuring Online Course Design Quality with Open Resource Metrics

Audience
Novice
Session Description
As institutions of all types increase their online offerings, the process of creating courses, whether a new course or an online version of one that already exists in a face-to-face format, can be underestimated in terms of the time, resources, and expertise required. Adding time and expense related to acquiring and using quality measurement instruments is often not an option for design teams working with compressed schedules and limited budgets. Fortunately there are a number of existing guidelines made available via Creative Commons (CC) licenses and other open access methods. The purpose of this session is to create an awareness of open source quality metrics that can readily assist course designers and faculty in the online course design and development process.

Objectives will include: a.) an introduction of a short list of open access rubrics, matrices, and checklists currently used in higher education to guide the design and development of online courses, b.) a comparison of the open instruments, c.) discussion with participants on experiences with open access rubrics, and d.) recommendations for moving forward from the presenters.

Session attendees will be asked to share their concerns, experiences, and recommendations as they relate to quality measures in the context of online course design. Participants will also be encouraged to participate in session and conference backchannel communication through the use of Twitter and designated hashtags.

Presenter(s)
Melissa Venable, OnlineColleges.net, South Carolina, USA
Melissa_Venable_64Melissa A. Venable, PhD is an Education Writer for OnlineColleges.net where she authors the Inside Online Learning blog. Her writing stems from a professional background in higher education, which includes experience as an instructional designer, online instructor, career counselor, and academic advisor at a range of public, private, and for-profit institutions. She earned her doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction – Instructional Technology from the University of South Florida. Join Melissa on Twitter (https://twitter.com/Melissa_Venable) and Google+. 
(https://plus.google.com/+MelissaAVenable/posts)
Amy Hilbelink, Laureate, Florida, USA
Amys linked in imageAmy Hilbelink, PhD is the Executive Director of Program Design – Health Sciences, Human Services, and Public Policy & Administration at Laureate Education in the Product Strategy, Innovation, and Development (PSID) Group. Amy was the Assistant Vice Chancellor for Online Academic Operations at Education Management Corporation (EDMC), one of the largest providers of private post-secondary education in North America. She also held leadership roles in the areas of academic strategies and development as well as curriculum development at Kaplan University. She earned her PhD from the University of South Florida, in Tampa Florida. Her degree is in Curriculum and Instruction, with an emphasis in Instructional Technology in healthcare education. Amy’s background includes work within traditional and for-profit institutions of higher education. Research interests include online academic quality initiatives, change management, regional and programmatic accreditation, project development and management.
You can find Amy on Twitter (http://twitter.com/ahilbelink), at ahilbelink@gmail.com
And www.linkedin.com/in/amyhilbelink

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Multiple Methods to maximize Student Engagement in Fully Web-Based Math Courses

Audience
All Audiences
Session Description
Retaining students has always been a major problem in our university because of their family problems, works, weather, illness or other conflicts. These problems pose more challenges for mathematics instructors because of students’ poor attendance, high dropout, and insufficient preparation of high school graduates, and lack of motivation. In order to address such issues, we are currently developing an online model of teaching undergraduate mathematics that is purely learner-centered and it has synchronous and asynchronous communication and assessments systems. Our goal is to investigate how new technologies may significantly enhance dynamic learning environment, engage and motivate students, and help them in improving their learning and retention. These courses are delivered using Blackboard Learn as a course management system, supplemented with math oriented websites such as MyMahLab and webassign. In this presentation, we also look at how Wimba classroom, e-Board, application sharing with virtual graphic calculator, virtual tutorials, online discussion board, remotely proctored exams, recorded lessons and you tubes, MyMathLab, and webassign have improved student outcomes in our fully web-based math courses.
Presenter(s)
Om Ahuja
Om_Ahuja_64Dr. Om Ahuja is currently a tenured full Professor of Mathematics at Kent State University in U.S.A.. Earlier he served as an Associate Professor for about 13 years in six countries including U.S.A.. He Ahuja loves teaching and research in math, math education, and web education. His research interests include several areas in complex analysis, functional analysis, web-based education, and mathematics education. He has co-authored a graduate level textbook “Functional Analysis” by ‘Anshan New Age Science’ (ANS) (United Kingdom), and ‘New Age International (P) Limited, Publisher’. He has published over 110 papers in complex analysis and mathematics education. He has been an international visiting scholar at twenty-two universities in various countries including U.S.A, India, China, Turkey, and Malaysia. He has lectured or presented papers at over 85 national and international conferences and universities in several countries. Dr. Ahuja’s other international recognitions include serving as chief guest twice at two reputed universities in India and chief organizers of two national/international conferences in math and mathematics education.

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Inter-Cultural Online Collaboration

Audience
All Audiences
Session Description
This work focused on computer-mediated tutoring and its interaction with perceived cultural barriers. I was interested in how cultural background, cognitive load, and communicative involvement would interplay with a tutor’s instruction and a listener’s ease of comprehension. The results to this 5-experiment quantitative and qualitative study were quite complex, showing that users’ cognitive load threshold interacted with whether they perceived their conversational partner to be from the same or a different culture.

That is, those in the most difficult condition (challenging descriptions and perceived cross-cultural communication) actually put forth the least amount of effort of any group. Unsurprisingly, the difficulty manipulation in same-culture teacher/learner pairs caused the pairs to work harder. However, this same difficulty manipulation caused contrasting-cultural pairs to put forth less effort than those in the easy-manipulation group.

That is, when conversational participants were not from the same perceived cultural group, they did not try as hard in a difficult task. However, when they were in the same perceived cultural group, they did try harder in the harder task. Importantly, the cultural group manipulation was a deception, and all participants were from the same culture.

The findings of the study reiterate the well-established finding that Bruner’s scaffolding is indeed an important aspect of learning—when teachers and learners reach a load threshold, they will no longer be willing to try. The study also revealed interesting features of three theories of communication, which, at the time were thought to be at odds with each other. The dissertation showed that depending on the parameters of communicative setting, one or the other theory might be correct. The key parameters were cognitive load and perceived in-group/out-group status as manipulated by cultural preconceptions of the interlocutor (conversational partner).

One of these theories addressed in my work was Herbert Clark’s theory of common ground, whereby speakers and listeners try painstakingly to take each other’s perspectives into account. In this research, I demonstrate that such factors can amplify content difficulty, and need to be taken into consideration when determining how to scaffold tasks for learners.

Presenter(s)
  • Roxanne Raine, Hawaii Pacific University, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
Audience
Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, All Audiences

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CANCELLED – Innovative Online Tools & Resources For Faculty, Staff, Administration, and Students

Session Description
The mission-driven League for Innovation in the Community College brings new and innovative tools and multimedia resources to community colleges.

The presentation focuses on online resources provided to support innovation, professional development, collaboration and research through the League’s iStream community site. The overview highlights favorite uses of the resources by current iStream subscribers.

After a quick overview, this session transitions to a high-level walkthrough of the over 40 years worth of current and archived community college focused resources found through iStream, including streaming video, publications, project highlights, and open educational resources (OER).

The presentation is organized around the needs of four key audiences: administrators, faculty, staff, and students, and the benefits to be derived from the partnership in each of the following areas: Support for Innovation, Professional Development Opportunities, Tools for Collaboration, and Shared Resources and Research.

After a “show and tell” of the resources and some of the exemplary applications, the audience is invited to discuss additional uses of the materials and invited to explore the sites more deeply.

Questions and discussion are encouraged throughout, and a complimentary two-week trial will be offered to those who attend this session.

Presenter(s)
  • Cheri Jessup, League for Innovation in the Community College, Chandler, AZ, USA
Audience
Novice

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