Tag Archive for 'learning styles'

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

Conferences in November

Coming up: School board convention (Tennessee), foreign languages instruction (Texas), technical security (Missouri), distance education (Germany), educational technology (Tennessee), effective computer use in education (Louisiana), IT on campus (New York), digital instruction in middle school (California)

Tennessee School Board Association (TSBA) Annual Convention 2007
November 11-13, 2007
Nashville, Tennessee

The conference’s theme is “Successful Students, Endless Possibilities”. TSBA will showcase the successful student achievement programs that are in place across the state, as well as the latest educational trends and innovations. More information and registration

American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) 2007 - 41st Annual Meeting & Exposition
November 15-18, 2007
San Antonio, Texas

The convention brings together more than 5,000 teachers, administrators, method instructors and students of foreign languages at all levels from across the world. The convention features over 600 educational sessions on such topics as: Assessment, Culture, Curriculum, Learner Variables, Literature, Materials, Methods/Techniques, Policy/Issues, Professional Development, Research, Specific Purposes, Standards and Technology. On-site registration is available. More information and registration

2007 Advanced Technical Security Symposium
November 27-28, 2007
Columbia, Missouri

This Symposium brings a diverse group of professionals from across the Missouri public sector who are involved with and interested in computer security issues. Conference attendees are from Missouri state government, law enforcement, community information networks, public libraries, higher education and K-12 schools. Registration is open. More information and registration

Online Educa Berlin 2007
November 28-30, 2007
Berlin, Germany

Over 2000 delegates from more than 90 countries and every continent attend the conference, making Online Educa Berlin the most comprehensive annual meeting place for e-learning and distance education professionals. Participants of the conference are high-level decision makers from education, business and government sectors, the three areas driving e-learning adoption and innovation. Online registration is ongoing. More information and registration

25th Annual Tennessee Educational Technology Conference (TETC)
November 28-30, 2007
Nashville, Tennessee

TETC 2007 will provide a great program including training sessions, one-hour labs, and two-hour workshops, and concurrent interest sessions with other educational technology professionals from across the state. A trade show will showcase over 100 of the newest technologies, related software, and services. An estimated 1,500 teachers and administrators are expected at this year’s conference. Registration is now open. More information and registration

Louisiana Association of Computer Using Educators (LACUE) - 23rd Annual Conference
November 28-30, 2007
Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Sessions will feature accomplished professionals from the education and technology industries who will share their experience and provide insight about the options teachers have to implement effective technological tools and methods to transform the teaching process. Over 1,500 attendees are anticipated. Pre-registration closes on November 14 but will reopen at the beginning of the Conference. More information and registration

CUNY IT Forum
November 30, 2007
New York, New York

The City University of New York and the Center for Digital Education will host its sixth annual all-day conference offering an overview of the University’s key IT initiatives and an opportunity to explore how technology is changing the nature of instruction, research and administration. Online registration is still open. Attendance is free. More information and registration

California League of Middle Schools (CLMS) - Digital Immigrants, Digital Natives: Bridging the teacher-student tech divide
November 29-December 2, 2007
Monterey, CA

Join hundreds of educators at this event to:
- Gain strategies and resources for using technology to differentiate instruction for English learners, special education students, and students who learn differently.
- Learn how technology can transform the use of data in formative and summative assessments to drive instruction and program decisions. More information and registration

Find more conferences through T.H.E. Journal

Behaviorism vs. Constructivism, as Applied to Online Learning

An effective online learning utilizes both behavioral and cognitive psychology in order to create a learning environment that results in the mastery of basic concepts and facts, an ability to synthesize information, integrate and relate it to life and personal experiences, and to work with and apply new knowledge in new contexts and settings so that deep learning takes place.

Behavioral Psychology:
Premise: The underlying attitudes and beliefs in a person will manifest as behaviors
The online course consists of a series of behaviors. These behaviors consist of a) going to the site; b) contacting instructor and/or student; c) doing online research to make connections; d) applying knowledge to one’s life, then reporting on it (a paper or discussion board entry)

Behavior is determined by outcomes/consequences — the behavior of the student online will be determined on what he/she perceives to be the consequences of actions. One positive “consequence” is the receipt of feedback.

Knowledge is manifested in behavior (correct answers)

Behavioralism/Objectivism: Objectivism has value in an online course because it allows a strategy for creating categories and organizing principles so that the student has a framework the knowledge being acquired. For example, a behaviorist approach can be used in developing multiple-choice or true-false tests, particularly when it is important to be able to identify images, etc. or to be able to organize facts and figures.

Method:
Content presentation — the website should be organized in a way that encourages the student to be able to classify and categorize knowledge, to place it in a framework, and then to make connections, compare and contrast

Question is put to student — Questions deal with identification, classification, timelines, and comparisons of data

Student is told if answer is right

Positive reinforcement for right answers

Cycle is repeated for wrong answers

External truths and knowledge exists for learners to memorize
Teacher control
Students learn to categorize and classify

Cognitive Psychology:
Premise: Learner is positioned as an active processor of information.
Active engagement: The student will be asked to not only read from the book or the website, but also to actively become involved in additional research. The learner is also asked to engage in analytical tasks that have to do with processing, evaluating, assessing, and creatively transforming information.

Emphasis on internal mental states: a) emotional states — the student is asked to respond, react, and report on the material; b) memory — the student is asked to recall information or experiences and to reflect upon them with respect to new information; c) connections — the student is encouraged to make connections, and thus by relating material to other knowledge bases, the student is able to achieve deep learning — learning which will be useful in the student’s life.

Realistic context: Considers perspective and knowledge of student. Various points of view are always considered, and inclusion is a goal.

Constructivism (Active learning, Adult learning):
Methods vary:
Encourage knowledge formation — Reading, researching, discussion with instructor and other students

Process is different for each student — Students are not required to do their reading / research / thinking tasks in any particular order, but are asked to think about the implications of the knowledge and to apply them to a practical situation.

Self-directed exploration– Students have choices in the topics they explore and write about

Discovery learning — Learners are are asked to actively engage in their own explorations — either via the Internet (clicking on links, downloading journal articles), or via their own life / work travels.

Construction of concepts, schema and mental models — The website is structured in a way that gives a visual guide to some of the concepts and paradigms being constructed and explored.

Truth and knowledge is constructed by students based on perspective and experience — Journals and final projects allow students to explore this; research that builds on experience also reinforces it.

Instructor observes, coaches and facilitates — The instructor is coached in the most effective methods and approaches to use when working online — rapid response; quick turnaround; positive guidance; additional suggestions (re: websites, resources, articles); interesting topics that relate to student’s interests and goals; good guiding questions

Students create meaning — they can do this either in their own work, or via collaborative work so that their findings are mediated, and one can become aware of some of the cultural constraints to knowledge / knowledge formation.

Both approaches, cognitive and behavioralism, can be successfully employed in an online course. The most effective programs incorporate both, and also acknowledge the need to accommodate learning styles.

Posted by Susan Smith Nash

The Great E-Book Debate

I am truly amazed by the amount of cynicism directed by some readers toward e-books, as if their existence were a conspiracy to render traditional books obsolete in the spirit of Fahrenheit 451. Much effort has gone into comparing e-publishing to traditional book publishing, conveniently summarized in Wikipedia’s entry on e-books. An Internet search for “Will e-books succeed?” brings up numerous articles and even blogs dedicated to the concept. Avid e-book readers defend their e-practice in commentaries to rants. Whether individuals express preference or aversion toward e-books, there are numerous reasons related to lifestyle preferences, as well as personal views on technologies, learning methods, and pleasure reading. Some people yearn for a familiar kinesthetic page-turning experience, whereas others readily accept that paperbacks no longer require paper.

The problem with the e-book/traditional book debate is that e-books have evolved but common perceptions of them have not. Most people are familiar with e-books only as electronic versions of their logocentric counterparts. For example, consider Powerhomebiz’s “Top Ten Reasons Why EBooks are Better than Printed Books.” This list offers ten convincing reasons why businesses should switch to using e-books. However, one of the most critical and defining components of contemporary e-books is barely implied: “You usually get far more than just the book. Most eBooks are sold with bonuses and related information that usually don’t come with the purchase of a traditional book. You might pay the same or even a bit more for an eBook, but you usually get more, too.” What does it mean to get far more? What are these bonuses? Perhaps the author is referring to hot-links to references and the ability to quickly search the entire e-book for a word or phrase (these features are noted subsequently in the list). Still, the definition of e-book seems limited to the traditional text-based approach.

What if we could depart from thinking about books as a collection of words? What if a book could contain video and audio? What if a book could evaluate the reader’s understanding of it? What if multiple intelligences do exist, and what if we could stimulate more well-rounded learning by modifying the definition of “book”? Before I delve any further into absurdities — after all, everyone knows that words live in books, audio lives in radios, and videos live on TVs — let’s fathom to consider what might happen if these media could be happily married, and let’s use psychologist Howard Gardner’s categories of intelligence as a framework for theorizing how this might impact learning.

Verbal-linguistic intelligence has to do with words, spoken or written. Traditional books cater to this type of learning, thus it carries over to e-books. However, in e-books this kind of learning might be enhanced with audio. For example, what if a reader could click on a word to hear how it is pronounced, or roll over a glossary definition to hear it read aloud?

Related to verbal-linguistic intelligence is musical intelligence, where a person learns aurally through rhythms. What if book text could be instantly turned into a lecture, so the reader could actually listen to the content? What if a reader could click a button to hear a clever rhyme, supplemental to the text, designed to help him or her remember a concept?

Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence deals with muscle memory and learning by doing, rather than by reading or hearing. Imagine if a student could read about architectural concepts, and then follow step-by-step videos to build projects (and have the ability to pause the videos when necessary). Similarly, a dance student might find it more useful to observe and follow an instructional video embedded within a dance theory e-book, than to read about all the physiological and qualitative details of specific exercises.

Spatial intelligence is similar to bodily-kinesthetic intelligence, because it involves learning through visual aspects. People with good visual memory might benefit from embedded videos in e-books just as people more oriented toward bodily-kinesthetic intelligence, since videos potentially offer more sensory stimulation than reading alone. I say “potentially” because learning stimulation is difficult to quantify and is subjective. It is possible to be emotionally or even physically moved by written text, as people more attuned to verbal-linguistic learning might attest.

Considering these four kinds of intelligences — verbal-linguistic, musical, bodily-kinesthetic, and spatial — and assuming that people learn through different means (how many times have we heard people say, “I’m more of a visual/aural/kinesthetic learner”?), it becomes evident that if we assume the purpose of a book is to instruct, it is better to instruct beyond a monopolistic framework of verbal-linguistic or logocentric intelligence.

E-book adversaries might argue against my point by saying that not every book is meant to instruct in a traditional academic sense. Some books are meant for pleasure reading. Well, consider this: book sound effects. Imagine that you’re reading a murder mystery, and the protagonist enters an abandoned house where a violent crime took place. You hear a door squeak and distant footsteps that fade away. You continue to read about how the protagonist explores the room. Suddenly, you hear blood-curling scream comes from the next room. The benefit of this type of reading for pleasure or entertainment is that the reader can still imagine what is taking place; the sound effects work to further stimulate the imagination. An obvious problem would be synchronizing the sound effects with the text. This could be fixed if the text rolled like a movie, and the reader could set the speed. The only traditional books I’m aware of that currently have sound effects are children’s books, like Sounds of the Farm by Gail Donovan where the reader can press buttons to hear how animals sound, but the sound cannot be associated with specific parts of the book except through the possibility of textual command to the reader to push a button.

Thus far, I have argued that diverse reading experiences could be enhanced through the integration of aural and visual stimuli with traditional text-based books. However, I have only touched upon four of Gardner’s original seven intelligences. If, by this point in the article, anyone still doubts that e-books can theoretically offer a more comprehensive learning experience than traditional books, I firmly believe any hint of skepticism will be erased after exploring what e-books could potentially do for the remaining three intelligences.

The notion of self-reflection is a dominant theme in contemporary education theories, and was identified by Gardner as intrapersonal intelligence. Interaction with others is interpersonal intelligence, in which learning occurs through discussions and participation in group activities where a person directly encounters others’ perspectives. E-books have the ability to stimulate self-reflection and group interaction if they could be integrated with online learning platforms, thereby facilitating online discussions and journal-keeping. Furthermore, while students can self-reflect on a traditional book by making lengthy notes in a separate notebook, what if in an e-book it were possible to highlight text, type notes in a pop-up window, and even link notes to text?

Last but not least is logical-mathematical intelligence, which deals with logic and reasoning. Traditionally, instructors have been responsible for assessing students’ understanding of course concepts. But what if a student could take e-quizzes and get immediate feedback on his or her comprehension? This would certainly help students know what they needed to review before class or prior to an exam.

So, what if we stopped thinking of e-books as electronic versions of the same book you could pick up at your neighborhood bookstore? What if instead they were dynamic learning environments that addressed all seven of Gardner’s multiple intelligences, and thereby provided a more engaging and meaningful learning experience to readers?

Xplana Learning has assumed a leadership role in the development of e-books and online learning platforms, and has indeed redefined e-books in order to maximize usability and engagement, rendering learning through XplanaBooks far more comprehensive than traditional books and other e-books on the market. In the above examples, Xplana answers the question “What if e-books could?” as “Yes, our e-books can.”

In the great e-book debate, it’s time to stop worrying about whether e-books are going to replace traditional books. This argument, in my opinion, has no substance, as individual preference for reading medium is largely dependant on lifestyle. Secondly, e-books are venturing into a new realm that oversteps the limitations of traditional text-based books. We should be able to appreciate what e-books can add to the learning experience, and consider how we can continue developing e-books in relationship to contemporary educational theories in order to maximize learning outcomes.

Educational Podcasts

Educational podcasts have arrived. Downloadable, automatically updated audio content fits the lifestyle of learners who are taking courses in traditional face-to-face settings as well as via the Internet or mobile devices.

With iTunesU and the debut of the iPhone, the number of individuals who download lectures and other educational audio to mobile devices has skyrocketed. iTunesU, which started rather modestly in 2006, now hosts educational content for dozens of colleges and universities. At this point, more than 10 million downloads have been tracked (iTunesU, 2007). This fall, when most people go to class, the number is expected to reach an all-time high, for those attending face-to-face classes and also those who are taking online courses.

Just how are people using the audio content they download? What is the best use? Now you can weigh in by voting in a poll: http://elearnqueen.blogspot.com

You’ll see the poll if you scroll down the right-hand column. Here are the possible responses to the question, What are the best uses of educational podcasts?

Just-in-time content before test

Listen while driving

Refresh key points, concepts, schema

Entertain with stories, examples, case studies

Podcasts have demonstrated themselves to be very useful for educational purposes because, as opposed to traditional audio files that are accessed from a password-protected website, podcasts allow you to subscribe to the feed and to receive updates and new content automatically.

Professor lecture notes: For large lecture courses in a traditional face-to-face environment, having the ability to download the lecture notes and listen to them again can be quite helpful. For students taking the course at a distance, lecture notes can be invaluable supplements to the text and other instructional materials. The only possible downside is that the audio quality may not be studio-grade, given that the lectures are being recorded in a lecture hall, and there could be ambient noise and variable sound levels.

Textbook supplements: Having podcasts that cover textbook content appeals to students who are audio learners and who remember items and organize them most effectively when they hear them. According to the split-attention principle, the most effective way to deliver audio content is to somehow reinforce it with a complementary image. In this case, one could include graphics or images that could be viewed while listening to the podcast. For example, if the lecture is about the situation in the Middle East, the audio lecture could be accompanied by maps, photographs, and other useful and relevant visual information.

Course topic / related content: What are the goals of the course? What are students expected to do with the information? Ideally, the students learn critical thinking skills and, most importantly, how to apply the information being presented. So, it can be very useful to prepare audio files / podcasts that incorporate current events, case studies, and up-to-date information that relates to the core course information.

Research paper / term paper-related content: Even if students have taken research and writing courses, it is always helpful to guide the way and demonstrate how to be effective with online research, how to write an annotated bibliography, when to look for additional sources, and which citation styles should be used. Having an audio guide can help alleviate anxiety and provide reassurance to help students overcome writer’s block.

Student podcasts: Students often enjoy recording and posting audio in addition to text. It is a perfect opportunity to rehumanize the e-learning space, and posting audio is a way to develop a sense of community.

There are several ways to listen to the content. The way that you use content depends on your equipment, connectivity, and learning preferences.

Just-in-time downloads: Students can download content before a test or class discussion. It helps reinforce knowledge and leads to effective use of short-term or working memory.

Category or Schema-builders: Some podcasts are organized around key concepts and they are very useful because they guide students and help them develop categories for organizing knowledge.

Elaboration: Audio and podcasts often include stories and narratives organized in a way that help students develop an in-depth understanding of the concepts.

Problem-solving: Podcasts that provide examples of how the information is used to solve problems, and which may include analogies or extended metaphors help students make connections. They can then use the information to solve problems or apply the information to experiential learning.

Podcasts that are accompanied by images (either stills or video) can also be used in training in order to demonstrate procedures or in the identification of a condition, person, place, or thing. Some examples can be found in a new resource, available in August from Charles C. Thomas publishers. Entitled Excellence in College Teaching and Learning, the is one of the few books available that covers both traditional and online teaching and learning.

The full potential of educational podcasts has not even begun to be tapped, and the advent of new technologies as well as enhanced infrastructure and bandwidth minimizing programs will also contribute to the popularity of the form. Video (via vodcasts) through youtube, google.video and other services continues to push the envelope and encourage students to collaborate on projects and share ideas.

Professional Development and Corporate Training: The Webinar Weakness

Podcast - downloadable mp3 file.

Anyone who has taken online courses through a college or university is likely to be very disappointed by the webinars commonly offered in corporate and professional development training. Even though new versions of webinars use software such as elluminate (http://www.elluminate.com/) , which allows synchronous audio, presentation media, and streaming video, the experience often leaves a feeling that something was missing.

So, how can webinars be made more effective?

The answer lies in learning strategies.

All too often the assumption is made that if individuals can come together in a virtual space, they’ll get as much from the experience as being in the same room together. However, just as meetings can be unproductive, and classrooms boring, a virtual meeting can fall flat. Weak webinars are doubly frustrating because they implicitly communicate a negative message about learning and information technologies. Such a message is doubly ironic in a time of iPhones and ubiquitous wifi, incessant video and text-messaging.

Here are a few ways to strengthen a weak webinar:

Capture the learner’s attention at the beginning. Be catchy. Connect with your audience. Engage their emotions, pique their curiosity, appeal to their sense of self and community. By doing so, you’ll be creating conditions of learning (Gagne), and making it more likely that they will actually follow through and watch the entire webinar.

Build a cognitive framework at the beginning. Be sure to list learning objectives and outcomes. By doing so, you’re helping the learner develop schema, which can be thought of as file cabinets in working memory.
A recent article on cognitive architectures and mobile learning describes some of the processes at work
(http://proceedings.informingscience.org/InSITE2007/IISITv4p811-818Nash399.pdf ) in an effective elearning or mobile learning course.

Encourage interaction. The sage on the stage exudes authority. Although it is a good idea to establish credibility with your program (for example, the American Management Association (http://www.amanet.org/ ) touts management luminaries and gurus such as Peter Drucker in its online seminars, offered with a Corpedia.com learning management system), if your learners simply sit and passively watch, their recall is likely to be close to nil. Get them involved. Ask them to type in questions, use voice-over chat, videocast their images from webcams. Encouraging interaction will create conditions of learning.

Make it real: connect to audience experience. The American Marketing Association (http://www.marketingpower.com/ ) offers webcasts in topics that are designed to appeal to its members. With webinars (both live and recorded) in branding, B2B, direct marketing, Internet marketing, market research, marketing return on investment, marketing strategy, and more, the members are likely to find something they can relate to, and which will help them. Without an opportunity to further the connection, and to respond to questions or ideas that ask the individuals to problem-solve for their own particular needs, the audience members are likely to be bored.

Show me the money: reward the learners. Some learners are happy with the emotional “reward” that comes with interaction. It’s sufficient emotional affirmation and it satisfies their need for affiliation. Other learners are happy to be able to take a test or a questionnaire that “rewards” them by showing them how much knowledge they’ve gained. Still other learners are motivated by certificates and other ways to show they have achieved a level of professional expertise. A good example is the exam to become a Professional Certified Marketer. Ostensibly, one can take webinars, which will help an individual prepare to take the exam, which is offered through the American Marketing Association ($100 to register, $435 to take the test / discounts available for members).

Unfortunately, though, most webinars do not establish a clear pathway between their courses and a certificate, college credit-eligible course, or degree.

Repurpose with a purpose. If you’re repurposing old videos from the 60s and 70s, keep in mind that the technology, clothing, and hair styles have changed dramatically. You’ll need to remember that the anachronistic elements are potentially a huge distraction from the actual message. So, if you’re repurposing old video or media assets, be sure to do so with a clear purpose in mind. Repeat the outcomes, the categories of knowledge, the key points, and the desired outcomes. Keep the learner on track. Continue to point to the reason for the presentation or topic.

Respect culture and language. Your webinar may appeal to a very narrow audience, and yet you may need to show it to people from diverse cultures, languages, and geographical regions. Be sure to incorporate the cultural assistance you’ll need. Create a mediated space by including bilingual cues and guides, links to helpful dictionary or encyclopedia entries, and explanatory sidebars. A very useful article that addresses the issues is one on bilingual education located here: http://elearnqueen.blogspot.com/2007_02_10_archive.html A video that deals with motivation and cultural difference can be found here:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3081767539581545454&hl=en

For corporations, professional associations, and organizations with a large inventory of stored “webinar events,” the opportunity to strengthen them and expand their reach and impact should be cause for celebration. The “Webinar Weakness” can be overcome by using effective learning strategies.

Bridging Cultural Difference

Mini-Webinar: Authenticity in Writing
Articles You May Enjoy:Quality in an Online Course (at elearners.com)Analyzing Television and Film in e-Learning. (from http://www.elearningqueen.com)Online Programs that Appeal to All Generations (at elearners.com)

Bilingual Distance Learning That Works: Needed Now

We are ignoring and/or imposing ineffective distance education strategies for our bilingual and non-English speaking populations. Right now, we have an urgent need to provide the kind of education and training that will benefit bilingual and non-English speaking populations in the United States, and we need to do it as quickly and effectively as possible in order to develop human potential, communities, and economies across the spectrum of socio-economic and demographic groups, professions, and vocations.

podcast / downloadable audio file

There are more than 35 million Spanish-speakers in the United States. This is a conservative figure, because there are no ways to accurately record the actual number of Spanish speakers, and by some accounts, that number increases by as many as 1,000 people per day. The USA has the fifth-largest population of Spanish speakers in the world.

Let’s put the USA Spanish-speaking population into perspective by examining the populations of Spanish-speaking nations:

Chile * 16 million
Peru * 28 million
Venezuela * 20 million
Mexico * 107 million
Guatemala * 12 million
Argentina * 36 million
(The World Fact Book, 2007
https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook )

What happens when Spanish-speakers resettle in the United States? One of the first challenges is survival, which usually means depending on family members for support. Strong family ties and a willingness to work together to support family members have been tied to the success of individuals who come to the United States. Commitment to the extended family does not come without a price, however. It is often difficult for individuals to find time to take English lessons. Formal schooling and education may be sacrificed or delayed in order to work outside the home and earn money for the extended family. Many Spanish-speaking new arrivals to the United States are nothing short of phenomenal. Not only do they work to save money for their immediate family, they also tend to send money home to relatives who have stayed behind.

Education comes with a high price tag and great sacrifice. Although nine years of education are free and compulsory in Mexico and other Spanish-speaking countries, students are under tremendous pressure to discontinue their studies in order to earn money.

Mexico and other Spanish-speaking countries have long utilized distance education in order to provide education to remote regions. Technology utilized has ranged from basic book-based correspondence to television and Internet-based programs. Students are often organized in community groups so that they have the opportunity to meet with a local tutor or facilitator. http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-4/mexico.html

Bilingual programs have been developed and are supported in many regions of Mexico and Central America, where indigenous languages are still alive and well. Spanish is considered the gateway language, the language of commerce. When Spanish-speakers arrive in the United States, they often know two languages: Spanish and an indigenous language.

The realities of education should demonstrate to English-speakers that Spanish-speaking newcomers are adept at learning languages, familiar with the concept of distance education, and eager to learn. However, educational initiatives simply will not work if cultural pressures and realities are not taken into consideration.

Distance education for Spanish-speakers must accommodate the following realities:

**Technology – Internet cafes are common throughout the Spanish-speaking world and individuals are comfortable with communicating via e-mail; also downloading images, music, etc. But – time and access are definitely limited. It is best to have instructional content and activities developed for off-line access.

**Language – the best bridge is to offer courses in Spanish and also in English. Each course should have, at the very least, a glossary of Spanish-English terms to encourage the bridge.

**Training and Practical Application - the pressure to support one’s extended family makes vocational and technical training more attractive than liberal arts. That said, it is important to keep in mind that without solid foundations in basic skills (writing, reading comprehension, English as a Second Language, math), vocational training is not likely to be as successful as it could be.

**Reading and Writing – because of the pressure to discontinue studies, many students may need extra support in reading and writing courses. Developmental reading, writing, and math should form the foundation of all courses, even technical or vocational training.

**Situated Learning – Making lessons relevant and immediately useful to individuals is vital. It’s important to include items that are of public service and which help advance the community as a whole. For example, students studying vocational and technical topics may benefit from safety tips that are provided in an accessible manner.

Saving a life with bilingual training: A Possibility

Do you forget your training the moment you step outside the classroom? Chances are, you did not pay much attention to the content even as it was being presented if you were sitting in a classroom and were watching an interminable Powerpoint and listening to the professor read directly from the slides.

Receiving training or information while in the workplace, or on the way to work, makes more sense. Imagine tuning into a radio station or turning on your mp3 player and listening to safety tips as you go to the construction site. http://www.osha.gov/

For example, here’s an OSHA-based text on the four most common construction site safety risks:
Podcast in Anglo-inflected Spanish (it’s Susan reading and discussing the OSHA standards in Spanish) .. click here

http://elearningqueen.tripod.com/edublogs

With more than 35 million Spanish speakers in the U.S., it makes sense to focus time and resources on Spanish and English e-learning, mobile learning, and other distance education modalities and delivery methods.

First published at e-learning queen

Reasons for Grammar Reviews

Math and Mentos: How E-Learning Can Learn from Numb3rs and YouTube

What happens when you couple a YouTube sensation with actual scientific information that helps us better understand the physical world around us? What you have is a fantastic learning opportunity, and a chance to change people’s lives as they develop a thirst for knowledge and a willingness to take a hands-on, participatory approach. Television programs such as Numb3rs (http://www.cbs.com/primetime/numb3rs/) and Bones (http://www.fox.com/bones/) make math and forensic anthropology suddenly amazingly revelatory. They give people a new way to see the world.

It’s not just about watching all the series on television, though. It’s also about how good television (and good instructional design) bring together current events and issues that people really care about, and then they relate them to a story. They build a narrative of explanation and engagement.

Here’s an example. Do you remember the summer of 2006 Diet Coke and Mentos craze? I remember jogging on a sidewalk bordering a par 3 golf course near where I live. It was littered with Mentos wrappers and 2-liter Diet Coke bottles. At first I didn’t know what it was about.

Then I realized it was all about playing the cool mad scientist, creating exciting explosions. What was the cause? Perhaps you remember the YouTube sensation — EepyBird.com (Entertainment for the Curious Mind) had posted “Experiment #137,” a wild experiment using 200 liters of Diet Coke and countless Mentos to create an intricate choreography of effervescing fountains, which was billed as a mini-Bellagio.

The spectacular bursts of foam and liquid were accompanied by wonderfully retro techno, reminding one of “She Blinded Me With Science” (Thomas Dolby) or “We Are the Robots” (Kraftwerk). The video was posted and reposted on YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKoB0MHVBvM ) and was embedded in websites and e-mails throughout the world.

EepyBird.com’s next production was a euphorically successful “domino effect” — Experiment #214.

Hosted by google video, almost 5 million viewers have logged in to see how 251 bottles of Diet Coke and 1,506 boxes of Mentos create explosions of liquid, not fire. It’s refreshing to see this rather than fireworks. http://eepybird.com/exp214.html

And yet, if one watches the videos alone, it’s somehow unsatisfying. What’s missing? It’s the explanation. They never say HOW or WHY the reactions happen.

The answers came one night in an unexpected way. The boxed set of DVDs I had ordered had arrived. I was watching Season Two of Numb3rs when the characters in the series re-enacted the Mentos and Diet Coke experiment for an Applied Math course, and accompanied the explosions with an explanation.

The answer involves surface tension. There is extreme change upon the sudden introduction of a highly irregularly micro-pitted gum Arabic and gelatin disc into a liquid under pressure (due to the carbonation), where the only way for gas to escape is through a narrow neck after the contact of the two creates a rapid phase change. The way the surface tension changes is explained here.

An alternative explanation is provided by AeonFlux (http://www.aeonflux.com/ /) than a person we can relate to. AeonFlux characters tend to be projections of fantasies and alter egos. On the other hand, human beings with human frailties make you feel as though the knowledge they are imparting is achievable as are their skills.

The Story. The mind makes meaning by means of stories. Predictable narratives, events, cognitive signposts, archetypes — all help you remember just how the math worked and why.

Cause-Effect. The science experiment and the math equation do not exist in a vacuum. Instead, they reside within a causal chain, and it is one that allows the viewer (or the online learner) to insert the equation in an analogous situation. For example, in one of the episodes of Numb3rs, Charlie proposes that certain acts of violence set off chains and exhibit flock behavior. There may not be anything too revolutionary in the idea of murders and retribution, but the methodology used to analyze the events and the victims lead to being able to pinpoint the individual responsible for triggering chains and long series of retribution killings.

The causal chain also helps put order into chaos and helps us understand our often inexplicable world. Instructional Design Idea: If you’re wanting to get the message across about a causal chain, one way to do it would be to have a high-impact introduction. It could be a series of giant dominoes toppling toward you. You see them coming. You see the math equation being written on a wall or etched into the air next to you. You jump out of the way, just in time…

Math Keeps Us Safe. Patterns protect us. We see this every time there is a severe weather alert. Doppler radar, wind sheer measures, etc. all form patterns. Although we may not understand the complex mathematical expressions, the differential equations, the probability and statistics, we do understand the basic expression of it. We understand that our ability to survive often hinges on our ability to detect, explain, and model patterns. Patterns often have predictive ability, which helps us immensely.

Math makes us feel secure. High Impact E-Learning Intro: Flash image of a threat — an approaching tornado? Numbers, equations could spin out from the vortex. A storm spotter enters a number in computer, makes a phone call. Flash of light, and the tornado transforms into a rainbow.

Humor. Math can be used to predict behavior, and to map affinities. Think of the claims of match.com (http://www.match.com/ ) and e-harmony.com (http://www.eharmony.com/ )

An Attainable Paradise. Numb3rs takes place in an FBI office, at crime scenes, at a cool, shambling craftsman house, and a nicely manicured college. The college and the Epps home are refuges in a tough world. This is where the love is. It’s where the math takes place.

Partnering with Technology. Texas Instruments has partnered with CBS and has developed a website that ties with Numb3rs introduction, “We all use math every day.” Located at http://www.weallusematheveryday.com/ , the site includes a wonderful repository of activities that tie together with the episodes.

One example is a worksheet to help students learn how to apply math to flock behavior, which corresponds to an episode dealing with a change of gang leadership.

The “We All Use Math Every Day”™ series is just one part of TI’s educational materials offerings: One of the most appealing underlying messages of Numb3rs is that the creativity you have is what makes you special and desirable.

E-learning techniques — both online and through mobile devices - that engage the reader and use techniques from television series and YouTube phenomena to teach math are not just teaching a subject. They’re making math and science exciting. At the same time, these approaches are teaching and modeling how to be successful and to connect life and learning in an increasingly confusing world.

Podcast / downloadable mp3 file.

First published at E-Learning Queen: http://elearnqueen.blogspot.com

E-Learning, Mobile Learning - Instructional Strategies from Television

Podcast / downloadable mp3 file

Borrowing the “in media res” techniques of popular programs, Monk, House, and NCIS, among others, can help make online and untethered mobile learning more effective. In the early days of e-learning, it was common to tape a classroom lecture, digitize it, and then stream it over the web for students to view. Sometimes it was synchronous, and one had the opportunity to use a whiteboard and text message. Needless to say, that approach was quickly discredited as passive. To solve the problem, designers started adding overlays of learning objectives and outcomes, along with review questions at the end.

Television technique: switch to “in medias res.” Literally meaning “in the middle of the thing,” this technique is employed in almost all programs designed for television, as well as a significant percentage of feature-length films. It’s a familiar technique: the viewer is catapulted immediately right into the middle of the action, usually a dramatic pivotal moment upon which the rest of the plot is constructed. For example, in NCIS (Naval Criminal Investigative Services) a spin-off of JAG, the episode opens with a 2 or 3-minute dramatic situation, usually resulting in a murder. The investigation of the murder is what constitutes the rest of the episode.

NCIS

Similarly, in House, M.D., the episodes open with a medical crisis, which takes one by surprise. We see a person going about their daily life when a catastrophic medical emergency besets them. The medical condition is life-threatening, and time is of the essence. Will the team of forensic diagnosticians be able to determine the cause before the patient dies? This adds to the urgency, as well as the emotional involvement of the viewer.

In rhetorical terms, what is activated is emotional involvement, “pathos,” to use Aristotelian terms. The situation engages the emotions, and the viewer is held, rapt, in a state of hyper-involvement and hyper-identification with the victim, and the race against time.

Typically, authority is invoked in the persona of a “difficult” voice. In this case, “difficult,” means that there is distance between the audience / listeners and the voice. Distance is created through formality, power differentials, subject-matter knowledge gaps, intimidation (shaming or threatening harm), refusal to be admitted to an “in” group.

The danger with this approach is that authority is off-putting, which can war against learning. Sometimes the most off-putting authority comes in the characters of “the professor” or the “scolding parent.” The content delivered by the authoritative voice can be more accessible when it comes packaged in a character who begins to approach that of a tragic hero, which is to say that the protagonist hero is flawed, which makes the audience identify with him or her all the more.

To be effective, authority must be mediated with human frailty.

Gregory House, M.D., of House, M.D. is a brilliant diagnostician, but suffers from chronic pain from a nerve-damaged leg and has become addicted to painkillers.

Adrian Monk, of Monk, is a brilliant detective who can hold forth on a number of technical areas, but he never bores the audience. Instead, they feel for him, they cheer him on as he seeks to overcome his obsessive-compulsive disorder, and his grief over the loss of his wife, Trudy.

Monk

Likewise, the team of agents and investigators of NCIS are brilliant, but quirky. In fact, the concept of professorial lectures is lampooned by Special Agent Jethro Gibbs, who typically cuts off the endearing yet long-winded medical examiner, Dr. “Ducky” Mallard, and asks him to keep to what is relevant. The other technical experts in the team fare no better - Abby, brilliant in all manner of forensics - computer and biological - loves the long-winded technical explanation, which is also often cut off abruptly, with the question, “How does this relate?” stated in so many words. Special Agent McGee, an MIT graduate and computer whiz is also cut off. As an audience, we gain knowledge by seeing the theories in action, applied to the case.

In NCIS, technical details, analogues, personal anecdotal asides are permitted, but only to the degree that they contribute to an understanding of the case at hand. What this means, in some terms, is that we are looking at “situated learning” in action.

In the case of House, M. D., the fact is clear that we are observing an open critique of education, and a subversion of the typical classroom lecture, filled with professorial quirks, long-winded digressions, asides, and self-serving ego inflation in front of a captive audience. The action takes place at Princeton Medical Center, a teaching hospital, and many of the episodes incorporate scenes from the lecture hall, where medical students regurgitate concepts they have memorized from their texts, and demonstrate that they have no idea how the concepts apply in real life.

Similarly, in the comedy series, Scrubs, hazing of the “newbies” often centers around the gap between “textbook” knowledge and situated, operational knowledge. The amount of information that is presented in a television drama, crime procedural, or sitcom can be quite surprising. It’s not trivia, but is situated in a real-life or life-like setting, which makes understanding, retention, and application more effective.

In a world where distance learners are likely to be very film and television literate, it is likely that they, too, feel a deep-seated disdain for subject matter authority that is dislocated from its objective correlative, which is to say, the way the subject exists in the world of phenomena.

Scrubs

What this means to all the programs seeking to repurpose old-school lectures delivered by rambling, self-absorbed professors who managed to tape themselves at a chalkboard for 30 or 40 hours is that every dime they invest in digitizing those old assets will be utterly wasted.

The charismatic professor of the past ruled through a cult of personality, and he or she elicited all the emotions that one might expect of the leader of, say, a cult or a gang of grifters.

The charismatic professor of the untethered world of mobile learning reigns supreme by encouraging extreme identification - by imbuing authority with anti-hero or tragic hero elements. If not, the dehumanizing aspects of technology will prevail, and students will simply move on to educational interactions they find more engaging.

To conclude, a few ideas and suggestions can be made, and lessons can be learned from the failures of educational programs to interest the learners. In a pragmatic sense, what this means is the following:

a) Structure audio and video in a way that dramatically captures the imagination and reflects the very heart of the concept being presented in the module or unit. One effective approach is the “in medias res” approach.

b) Find a persona who will be your subject matter expert and make him or her deeply flawed. The flawed authority figure does not need to be morally reprehensible; quite the contrary. He or she should have flaws that are more exaggerated than those of the general public, but only to the degree that the audience finds the character to be very human, engaging, and ultimately disarming.

c) Consider moving subject matter authority around. For example, if one is discussing psychological disorders, instead of focusing on a professor who will discuss facts and figures, write a script that features a person who is suffering from one of the issues under discussion. She can discuss her condition, and the compare and contrast her situation with that of others. This allows the listeners to begin to relate to it, and to connect her situation to their own. It situates the material within a real person’s experience.

Originally published at e-Learning Queen -