|
Your contributions
Press the Edit button, type blearn for the password and get typing.
Over several weeks I regularly emailed my student group about the night sky. During this period very bright planets Venus and Jupiter seemed to move closer together, passed and separated. This generated plenty of interest, as students realised they could see the changes from night to night. The night these planets passed each other was cloudy, but people were still able to see the event through the clouds. I received several emails from students about the excitement of watching these planets, and there was lots of discussion at tutorials. This brought to life some of the abstract course material on orbits.
(Dave Edwards, OU tutor) In Blended Learning & Online Tutoring
The Yahoo chat group was a valuable experience because it allowed external tutors, who had not met the students in face-to-face classes, to get to know their designated groups and to begin to form some impression of individual students – which student logged on regularly, how they interacted with each other online – for example ‘slanging’ matches between the young men, teasing a female student about her height, discussing what they would do in their spare time and generally ‘chatting’, often using abbreviations used for cell-phone text messages in addition to written forms of the local dialect. Chats with tutors were usually more deferential particularly with an unknown foreign tutor ... often centred round the students’ reactions to the course. (Ardus & Fabi, Istituto Tecnico Agrario Statale, Italy) In Blended Learning & Online Tutoring
From my own recent experience as a student in an online programme, I think it helps to date every entry, everywhere, and if possible to remove 'old' 2006 material (?) (Maureen, OU tutor)
Something that I did for one of my courses was make up a list of frequently asked questions, culled from emails and questions in previous years' courses. I use these in my tutor group forum, by drip-feeding them in, a few questions every few weeks. I send round a group email when I post the questions, reminding everyone that the forum is there for discussion and telling them there are new FAQs there. It's a way of getting them to log in and read the messages every now and then, and helps for keeping in touch - because they have an incentive to visit. (Anne Campbell, OU tutor)
Janet
I've just returned from Hong Kong where I worked at the local OU. We did a lot of work on integrating forums into our courses in maths. My main steps for ensuring that the forums worked well were:
(a) a guaranteed 24-hour turnaround (to compete with the immediacy of the telephone and to establish a relatively fast pace)
(b) intense involvement of the central academic over the first month (students initially like the idea of being able to interact with the 'expert' {as they seem him/her})
(c) extensive use of sub-forums by which messages on a similar topic could be grouped usually by the manager (this facilitates finding appropriate messages especially when the number of messages becomes large)
(d) clear code of conduct prominently advertised and implemented
(e) a separate forum for non-academic exchanges
(f) providing several services that students couldn't get through other means: TMA summaries, even assignment questions (to encourage the initial involvement)
(Mike Robertshaw, OU MST121 tutor R10)
As a technology tutor I have been using conference forums for a long time. It has become very clear to me over the years that students have become increasingly adept at using the 'blend' of electronic communication resources tailored to particular activities. While the forum is the main platform for sharing decisions and for making arrangements, students have made regular and effective use of 'chat' facilities in FirstClass to negotiate and share ideas. They have found the synchronous immediacy of the experience 'satisfying' in terms of 'getting things done quickly' - it allows for more immediate interaction. They have also been enthusiastic on further face-to-face meetings at tutorials when there is a group activity to be completed. Not all students do all things, but many students are involved in a variety of platforms which has allowed them to accommodate and tailor different learning outcomes and content (where group tasks vs individual tasks) into busy lives. The point about the 'blend' is that it is the students who are the 'blenders' while the teacher/tutor has a facilitator/mentoring role to support the diversity. I find that this whole approach is a natural consequence of a 'situated cognition' model for how learners learn and teachers create rich and interactive learning contexts.
Shaun Harley - OU Tutor
|
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.