Week 3 Resources (Choosing Your Tools)

Site: SCoPE - BCcampus Learning + Teaching
Group: Instructional Skills Workshop Online-Feb2014-OER
Book: Week 3 Resources (Choosing Your Tools)
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Date: Tuesday, 16 July 2024, 6:33 AM

Description

Week 3 Resources (Choosing Your Tools)

Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Tools

Is this really the question?  Perhaps.  But it is not the first question we ask.  Before deciding that one tool or group of tools is better than another we need to ask, "Better for what?"

Synchrous: existing or occurring at the same time.* (Skype, Collaborate, Google Hangouts, etc.)

Asynchronous: not occurring at the same time.* (Moodle discussion forums, blog posts & comments, online bulletin boards, etc.)

* Definitions from The Free Dictionary

While a skilled instructor can generally adapt to whatever tools available, the readings and video listed for this week include examples of activities that seem to work better in on or the other environment.

Johns Hopkins University School of Education,Center for Technology in Education ©2010 suggests that "Asynchronous learning can be effectively used for in-depth discussions that take place over time, role playing, application based case study scenarios one-to-one interactions among students and activities that require more independent thinking time." And, "Synchronous learning can be effectively used for showcasing web or computer applications, explaining difficult concepts, delivering lectures via PowerPoint, structured group brainstorming,hosting guest speakers, new topic introductions, community building, and question and answer." 

Often students have a preference for one environment or the other depending on their individual learning preferences.  Students who are vocal, think on their feet and confident - maybe extrovert, even - may prefer a synchronous learning environment while introverts, or reflective learners will usually prefer asynchronous learning activities.

As you work through this course as this week's activities take note of your own preferences.  Where do you think you are a more effective learner?  Which tools support you in which kinds of learning activities? 

Read and Watch: Duelling Tools

Duelling Tools

Choose two:

Choose two:
 Optional

How does one select the proper tool for the job?

One experienced educator relates the following story:

As I began teaching online I was enthusiastic about the possibilities and saw the whole thing as an exciting exploration. I eagerly began moving the learning activities that I had use in face-to-face courses and workshops to my online environment. (Back in the 1990's I was using a free version of Blackboard.)

Frequently I found myself saying something like, "Darn that Post-it Note activity is a really good one but I don't have Post-it Notes online." (This was long before such applications existed.  No http://taskless.appspot.com/, http://www.stormboard.com, etc.)  Then, I stopped and asked myself, "Okay, why do I do that activity?  What is the point? What am I trying to accomplish?"  In other words, what is the desired learning outcome?

Once I articulated the purpose I was trying to achieve I was able to think about other ways to achieve the same result using a tool in my, albeit small, online arsenal. I was no longer stuck with a physical tool as the defining point of the activity. Rather, focusing on the learning outcome got the creative juices flowing again.

Think about a learning activity that you use in face-to-face sessions. Can you recreate it online? Be sure to articulate the purpose for the activity. Do you need a new tool? Several items in Week 3 Readings are resources listing and describing tools that may be new to you.

Public Apps and Privacy

So, you found the perfect application and now you want to build it into your course - yay!

Oops - in order to use it students have to create an account.  Does the application sit on a Canadian server?  If not, do you need students to give informed consent or might you have to offer an alternative assignment or learning activity to those who object to creating an account on a server that sits outside of Canada?

So many people of all ages and walks of life seem perfectly happy to create Facebook or Twitter accounts or use other social networking and collaborative tools - do we really need to worry about this?

How about public tools that do not require an account?  For instance, they contribute their ideas to a Google Doc that someone with an account has created and made public. Can a student object to or refuse to participate because their work is public?

British Columbia has some of the strictest FOIPOP rules in Canada.  Do you know what they are?  Does your institution have additional policies that restrict or encourage use of third party tools?

Lots to work out over the next few years!