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Transforming learning using iPods and Web 2.0 tools

Transforming learning using iPods and Web 2.0 tools. Romina Jamieson-Proctor University of Southern Queensland, Fraser Coast Kevin Larkin Griffith University, Gold Coast. Background.

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Transforming learning using iPods and Web 2.0 tools

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  1. Transforming learning using iPods and Web 2.0 tools Romina Jamieson-Proctor University of Southern Queensland, Fraser Coast Kevin Larkin Griffith University, Gold Coast

  2. Background • The Digital Education Revolution (DER)aims to provide Australian students with a world-class education system that is underpinned by the effective use of ICT. • But...there are challenges as well as opportunities facing 21st Century learners e.g., limited understanding regarding how students use ICT for learning, as well as the relationships among ICT use, self-perceptions, approaches to learning, and student learning outcomes. • Further, students spend more time out of school than at school each day, and the affordances and constraints of learning with mobile digital tools outside of school have not been determined.

  3. Context • 5-year study aims to investigate, students’ use of small mobile digital devices for learning both at school and at home and to compare students’ and teachers’ perspectives about how best to use mobile devices to facilitate student learning. • Major focus is on student HOT and CREATIVITY– currently a major black hole in the literature on the impact of ICT in education. • RQ:How do students use mobile digital devices to facilitate 21st century skills? [21st Century skills include critical thinking and problem solving, communication, collaboration, and creativity and innovation – the 4Cs] Ref.#7

  4. Conceptual Framework • The 4Cs (critical thinking, communication, collaboration, creativity) • Combine a focus on 21st century student outcomes with innovativesupport structures • based on the understanding that “creativity is a process that can be observed only at the intersection where individuals, domains, and fields interact”Ref.#2

  5. Framework for 21st Century Learning

  6. Conceptual Model: A Systems Perspective for Student Creativity

  7. Classroom observation protocol developed from the Systems Perspective for Student Creativity

  8. How are the person, processes and products of creativity to be measured? • Person: Creativity Checklist Ref.#8 • Process: the observation protocol constructed from the conceptual model for creativity • Product: Consensual Assessment of authentic/rich tasks Ref.#1

  9. Methodology • Five year longitudinal study • Systems Perspective on Creativity framework as basis for creation of new measurement tools • Repeated measures, mixed-method design

  10. Methodology • Participants: convenience sample – regional Qld P-12 independent school where iPods + WiFi access were provided to all Year 8 students (N=39) • Data Collection: 2 form teachers completed CC (Oct10 & June11) [T1 & T2]; students observed approximately 8 times while working on Rich Tasks with iPods by member of research team • Data analysis: CC T1-T2 paired sample t-test; observations collated & analysed manually

  11. Sample of Initial Observations

  12. Sample of Initial Observations

  13. Sample of Initial Observations

  14. Emerging Themes • Control – who has it and how does it enhance/constrain creativity? • Transformation – how does the use of iPods transform the individual, domain & field? What are the optimum conditions? • Motivation – how do the iPods motivate students to be creative? • Attitude – how do the iPods impact attitude to creativity? • Learning Processes – do the iPods change the learning processes in a domain and/or field?

  15. Creativity Checklist Results Year 1 • The data from October 2010 (T1) and June 2011 (T2) were compared using a paired samples t-test (N=31). A non-significant difference was found between the two data collection times. This indicates that the students’ personal creativity traits, as a cohort, did not change in a statistically significant way during the first year of iPod access. • June 2012 (T3) data is now available for comparison

  16. Summary Individual: students expressed frustration about use of iPods & tasks; explored creative use at home; teachers didn’t witness students being creative because of tight reigns of control hence no difference T1-T2 with CC Domain: iPods used across curriculum for directed non-transformative tasks that were carefully scripted by teachers allowing little freedom of interpretation for students Context: use of iPods prescribed by teachers with limited knowledge, limiting students’ use for planning, synthesising & evaluating solutions

  17. Conclusion Although the primary intent of this paper was to establish the theoretical underpinning of the study in relation to creativity, initial findings suggest that teacher professional development with respect to both the model for creativity used to underpin this study, as well as ways to transform the curriculum with iPods in order to afford students the opportunity to engage in a creative process and demonstrate their creative traits will be needed, if mobile digital technologies are to have an observable impact on student creativity.

  18. References • Amabile, T. M. (1996). Creativity in context. Boulder, CO: Westview. • Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1999). Implications of a systems perspective for the study of creativity. In R. J. Sternberg (Ed.), Handbook of creativity (pp. 313-335). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. • Jamieson-Proctor, R., Watson, G., Finger, G., Grimbeek, P., & Burnett, P. C. (2007). Measuring the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the classroom. Computers in the Schools, 24(1/2), 167-184. • Jamieson-Proctor, R., Burnett, P. C., Finger, G., & Watson, G. (2006). ICT integration and teachers' confidence in using ICT for teaching and learning in Queensland state schools. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 22(4), 511-530. • Jamieson-Proctor, R., & Finger, G. (2006). The relationship between pre-service and practising teachers' confidence and beliefs about using ICT. Australian Educational Computing Journal (AEC), 21(2), 25-33.

  19. References • Jamieson-Proctor, R., & Finger, G. (2007). Measuring student use of ICT: A summary of findings of ICT use in Queensland Catholic schools. Paper presented at the Australian Association for Research in Education (AARE'07), Research Impacts: Proving orimproving? Fremantle, Australia. • Partnership for 21st Century Skills (2011). Framework for 21st Century Learning. Retrieved April 11, 2012, from http:// http://www.p21.org/ • Proctor, R. M. J., & Burnett, P. C. (2004). The creativity checklist: An instrument to measure cognitive and dispositional characteristics of creativity in elementary students. Creativity Research Journal, 16(4), 421-430. • Weisberg, R. W. (1993). Creativity: Beyond the myth of genius. New York: W. H. Freeman and Co.

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