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Learning & Teaching with Technology

Learning & Teaching with Technology. Claire O’Malley School of Psychology. Outline. Why use ICT? A brief history of ICT and learning Some approaches to learning Implications for teaching Applications to learning technologies. Why use ICT?. Elaborates other teaching material

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Learning & Teaching with Technology

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  1. Learning & Teaching with Technology Claire O’Malley School of Psychology

  2. Outline • Why use ICT? • A brief history of ICT and learning • Some approaches to learning • Implications for teaching • Applications to learning technologies

  3. Why use ICT? • Elaborates other teaching material • e.g., lectures; practicals • Personalised learning • Students can learn at their own pace, in their own style • Computational offloading • Computers can take care of routine stuff while students focus on the more important stuff • Cognitive augmentation • Can provide learning experiences not possible by other means • Others….?

  4. Paradigms in Educational Computing ‘60s – Computer Assisted Learning (CAL) ‘70s – Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITS) ‘80s – Interactive Learning Environments (ILEs) ‘90s – Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) ‘00s – Mobile and Ubiquitous Learning

  5. Computer Assisted Learning CAL Computer Assisted Learning CAI Computer Assisted Instruction CBT Computer Based Training CBL Computer Based Learning (Etc.)

  6. Computer Assisted Learning • “Programmed learning” • Learning theory • Behaviourism & reinforcement • Associationism • Learning activities • Drill-and-practice • Present-test-feedback • Instructional theory • Transmission model of instruction

  7. Computer Assisted Learning • Advantages • Instruction adapted to individual needs • Issues • How to give the right feedback at the right time • How to diagnose ‘errors’ • The ‘credit assignment’ problem: how do you know why the learner has made a mistake? • No theory of the learner’s knowledge

  8. Intelligent Tutoring Systems ITS Intelligent Tutoring Systems ICAI Intelligent Computer Assisted Instruction AI Ed Artificial Intelligence in Education (Etc.)

  9. Domain representation (what to teach) Teaching strategy (how to teach) Intelligent Tutoring Systems Student model (what the student knows)

  10. Intelligent Tutoring Systems • Adaptive control of teaching • Learning theory • Representational change • Learning activities • Goal directed problem solving • Skill acquisition (drill-and-practice) • Instructional theory • Transmission model (but adaptive!)

  11. Intelligent Tutoring Systems • Advantages • Explicit theory of learner’s knowledge • Issues • Requires very detailed models of domain & learner • The credit assignment problem remains...

  12. Integrated Learning Systems (ILS) • Originally developed in USA (Patrick Suppes, Stanford, 1970s) • Modern version • E.g., RM’s SuccessMaker (www.rm.com) • a system that includes extensive courseware plus management software usually running on a networked system

  13. ILS Curriculum content Record system Management system ITS Domain representation Student model Teaching strategy Essential elements • Functionality • Update student records • Interpret learner’s responses • Provide performance feedback to learner and teacher

  14. Interactive Learning Environments • Simulations, microworlds, spreadsheets, etc. • Learning theory • Learning is best achieved when learners actively construct their own knowledge • Learning activities • Discovery learning, experiential learning, etc. • Instructional theory • Learner-as-tutor

  15. Interactive Learning Environments • Example • Papert’s LOGO system (1980) REPEAT 4 [FORWARD 90 RIGHT 90]

  16. Papert’s ‘Powerful Ideas’ • Making thinking explicit • Making reasoning and its consequences ‘visible’ • Fostering effective problem solving & planning skills • Learning to learn from errors • ‘debugging’ skills • Developing reflective metacognitive skills

  17. Interactive Learning Environments • Advantages • Tools to think with rather than information transmission • Issues • Instructional transfer • ‘LOGO-as-Latin’

  18. Computer Based Representations • Routine computations can be off-loaded • Can focus learners’ attention on the essentials of the domain • Computer based notational systems may capture procedures or abstract structure in perceptually concrete ways • Representations can be placed under active control • Interactive manipulation may help learners construct their own understanding of a domain • Screen based representation can be more easily shared

  19. Multiple representations

  20. Multiple representations

  21. Benefits of Graphical Representations • Reducing effort needed for search and recognition • Transformation of the problem space • Can support powerful perceptual inferences • Often have emergent features that make implicit information explicit • Experts have more highly structured and principled representations than novices

  22. Multiple Representations • Support different ideas/processes • Can promote deeper understanding • Common invariants allow learners to construct abstractions • Representations at different levels of abstraction • But learners need support in mappings

  23. Computer Supported Collaborative Learning • Groupwork, peer tutoring, computer-mediated communication • Learning theory • Socio-cultural context of learning • Learning activities • Knowledge building communities • Instructional theory • Apprenticeship; ‘legitimate peripheral participation’

  24. Implications for Learning • Learning occurs most effectively in situations resembling those of eventual practice • Learning should involve ‘legitimate peripheral participation’ in communities of practice (Lave & Wenger, 1991) • Learning occurs when the learner is confronted with a ‘problematic’ situation

  25. References • Ainsworth, S.E., (1999) A functional taxonomy of multiple representations. Computers and Education, 33(2/3), 131-152. • Koschmann, T. (1996) CSCL: Theory and Practice of a New Paradigm. Erlbaum. (Chapter1) • Papert, S. (1980) Mindstorms: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas. Basic Books. • Wood, D. & Underwood, J. (1999) Integrated learning systems in the classroom. Computers & Education, 33 (2/3), 91-108.

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