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Adventures in Learning Design, Technology, & Innovation

Adventures in Learning Design, Technology, & Innovation. AKA Innovative Models & Strategies for Designing Learning Environments Presented by Dr. Julia Parra for the 2014 New Media Consortium Summer Conference in Portland, OR. Hello , Hola, Aloha! .

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Adventures in Learning Design, Technology, & Innovation

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  1. Adventures in LearningDesign, Technology, & Innovation AKA Innovative Models & Strategies for Designing Learning Environments Presented by Dr. Julia Parra for the 2014 New Media Consortium Summer Conference in Portland, OR

  2. Hello, Hola, Aloha!  This is me - Julia aka Julia Wiggins (Second Life) aka @desertjul and more… LOL, I have so many identities, I'm not sure I remember them all. Could this be a problem? InterWeb Identity Crisis? But seriously, let’s talk, “online identity.”

  3. My Spiel • As you all know, we live in an amazing time with access to the world of information at our fingertips. If information and knowledge are power, then at no time ever before in history has the average person had so much power! Or at least the potential for power :) And of course, as you all know, in addition to information, the tools are pretty awesome but I know that sometimes I get caught up in the fact that things are always in flux and ever changing. So I was thinking, this is a great time to pause, survey this exciting landscape and create as well as curate innovative learning models and strategies that are engaging and represent what we currently know and have available related to learning, design, technology, and innovation.

  4. Leveling Up • Examining Self/Educator Identity: The Science & Art of Learning & • Learning Theory Mashup • Standards = Foundation • Tech Trends – > NMC Horizon Report 2014 • Tracking the Tools • Elements of the Creative Classroom Research Model • Accessing Innovation, Thinking Innovatively • MOOCs and the Rise of the Acronym • To MOOC or Not to MOOC? MOOC in Progress…

  5. The Science & Art of LearningAKA The Gogies • Pedagogy – structured, formal K12 learning • Andragogy – structured, formal adult learning (Knowles, 1980) • Heutagogy – The study of self directed learning; includes unstrucured, self-directed & self-determined learning; focus on metacognition, knowledge sharing, creativity, original works, etc. (Hase & Kenyon, 2000; Blaschke, 2012) • Hybrid Pedagogy (Stommel, 2012) - http://www.hybridpedagogy.com/Journal/hybridity-pt-2-what-is-hybrid-pedagogy/

  6. Learning Theory Mashup • Technology-based Pedagogy (Gao, Choy, Wong, & Wu, 2009) • Social Constructivism (Vygotsky, 2005) • Transformative Learning Theory (Mezirow, 2000) • Connected Learning Community (Nussbaum-Beach & Hall, 2012) • Critical Media and (Kellner & Share, 2005) • Connectivism - Learning Theory for the Digital Age – “the thesis that knowledge is distributed across a network of connections, and therefore that learning consists of the ability to construct and traverse those networks. It shares with some other theories a core proposition, that knowledge is not acquired, as though it were a thing. Knowledge is, on this theory, literally the set of connections formed by actions and experience.” (Siemens & Downes, 2011)

  7. Standards = Foundation See References list of websites for image locations

  8. Horizon Report 2014Trends, Challenges, & Developments http://www.tagxedo.com/art/b5b3d71aa4fd4cd3 http://www.nmc.org/publications/2014-horizon-report-higher-ed

  9. Tracking the Tools http://c4lpt.co.uk/top100tools/ Julz Toolz http://bit.ly/julztoolz Any idea what tool is #1 for 5 years in a row? How about #38?

  10. Top 5/100

  11. #38 from the MOOC Pack Curtin University MOOCs: Thinking, Content, Platform, Partnerships http://blogs.curtin.edu.au/odvce/2013/02/curtin-university-moocs-thinking-content-platform-partnerships/

  12. Invisible TechnologyDigital Literacy vs. 21st Century Skills “Yossie Frankel stated it simply: We cannot confuse digital literacy with 21st century competencies. If we do, we rob our students of what we really can offer them, which is the ability to communicate, think critically, collaborate, solve problems, and create dynamic ways of internalizing information and sharing it with others. This is what our place is in learning. Yes, we will need to support them with certain technology skill-building, such as keyboarding skills, app fluency, best practices of sharing and storing, and the certain nuances of utilizing technology tools, but this isn’t a class or a workshop. Students don’t need theoretical workshops, they want hands-on action with a purpose.” (Cohen, 2014) Retrieved from http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/05/the-invisible-ipad-its-not-about-the-device/

  13. Also from Horizon Report 2014 - http://www.nmc.org/publications/2014-horizon-report-higher-ed

  14. Accessing Innovation With resources from New Media Consortium, SLOAN-C, Quality Matters, iNACOL, the Top 100 Tools for Learning and many great researchers at our fingertips with Google Search/Scholar, etc., we actually have great research-based models, standards, and best practices that provide a foundation for creating online and blended courses. So, like a house, when your course has a strong foundation, you can build on that foundation with everything that is awesome about you, your students, and your content. One thing that I think is important, is to figure out some things about your favorite strategies, your students, and your content and try to design models or processes that work for you and that you can share with others. This is what I think awesome teaching and learning is about - moving beyond the best practices towards models for differentiation, addressing different content, reaching different populations, etc.

  15. Thinking Innovatively • Things I believe in and do well – collaboration, providing choice, using the technology, promoting fun --- but that’s not necessarily innovative…what might be innovative is how I put all of these ideas together and consistently apply them… • Something I heard about innovation – an “idea becomes an “innovation” only when it can be replicated reliably on a meaningful scale at practical costs. “ (Peter Senge, 1990)

  16. My Innovative Interests • Phases, Scaffolds, and Technology for Collaboration (Parra, 2013) • HyFlex – Hybrid & Flexible (Abelmalak & Parra, submitted 2014)  • Co-Design for Democratic Classrooms (Abelmalak, in press). • Gamification, Game-Based Learning, The Multiplayer Classroom (Sheldon, 2012) • MOOCs… • What are yours?

  17. MOOCs and the Rise of the Acronym… • MOOC - Massive Open Online Course • xMOOC (professor-centric), cMOOC (connectivity-based) • LOOC – Little Open Online Course • SPOC – Small Private Online Classes – might open to public • LeMOOC – Limited enrollment MOOC, iMOOC (internal) • MOOC MANIA! The HYPE! The Fame! The Failure! • The Fame - (Siemens, 2008, 2013; Breslow, Pritchard, DeBoer, Stump, Ho, & Seaton, 2013) • The Failure – (Anders, 2013; Kolowich, 2013)

  18. To MOOC or Not to MOOC? So why do a MOOC now? … “Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” ~ Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland   Alice image from http://all-free-download.com/free-vector/vector-clip-art/alice_in_wonderland_clip_art_24772.html

  19. MOOC Design in Progress… Look for it on the Canvas Network in Fall 2014  Let’s look at it now at https://ldtimolo.pbworks.com/

  20. Contact Info and Resources • julia.parra@gmail.com • 575-646-4066 • Skype: desertjul • http://juliaparra.com • References - http://goo.gl/QBseNA

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