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Insired Education: Technology, Teaching and Learning

Insired Education: Technology, Teaching and Learning. Joan Walker, Ph.D. Pace University School of Education February 29, 2012 Hitachi Forum. Context. Psychology Higher education Teacher Preparation New technologies. Transformation. You are here. Innovation is here. Opportunity.

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Insired Education: Technology, Teaching and Learning

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  1. Insired Education: Technology, Teaching and Learning Joan Walker, Ph.D. Pace University School of Education February 29, 2012 Hitachi Forum

  2. Context • Psychology • Higher education • Teacher Preparation • New technologies

  3. Transformation

  4. You are here

  5. Innovation is here

  6. Opportunity Limitation Passivity Isolation Control Compliance Resistance Overwhelment • Engagement • Collaboration • Autonomy • Exploration • Access • Possibility

  7. A design issue • “…the center of gravity is outside the child. It is the teacher, the textbook, anywhere and everywhere you please except in the immediate instincts and activities of the child.” John Dewey, The School and Society (1915)

  8. The Ivory Tower The Real World troublesome void Formal Knowledge Practical Knowledge

  9. Cognitive Apprenticeship (Greeno; Lave & Wenger; Rogoff; Vygotsky) Noticing patterns Critical thinking Memory Transfer Cognition The Social Context

  10. Simulation • Stepping into an interactive space and reacting in real time to authentic situations • Situational awareness • Noticing • Anticipating • Decision-making under stress • Time-limitations

  11. Processing Assimilation vs. Awareness

  12. An example

  13. Simulation & Skill Development in Teacher Education • parent-teacher communication • Classroom management (TSR)

  14. Parent-teacher communication • Goal: Immerse PSTs in a novel situation they will regularly perform in the future • PTC • Design: Sequential cases, increasing difficulty • Gaming, inquiry cycle • 2 methods: • Vicarious • SIMs

  15. Vicarious: Blended Approach Online In class Class discussion Access to how experts addressed the challenge Written reflection Introduction of the next challenge or case • Log on to secure site Phase 1: • Complete efficacy survey • Read case • Generate strategies • Ask questions Phase 2: • Watch and critique 2 simulations Phase 3: • Choose best & justify Expert benchmarks

  16. If you were the teacher what would you do? Red = p < .05, numbers are %

  17. If you were the teacher, what questions would you ask?

  18. What have I learned about my students? • They are confident, despite their lack of experience. • They tend to use some professional communication strategies more than others. • Although they value gathering information, they ask low-level questions.

  19. Critique 2 video models • Rated each teacher along 7 dimensions. • Groupsdid NOT differ in their evaluations. Model 1: • Over-structured • Weak responsiveness Model 2: • Strong responsiveness • Weak structuring • Contrast tugs at and reveals values & beliefs.

  20. Which model is better? • 100% of experts chose video model 2 • 62% of candidates chose model 2 • Now what do I know about my students? • Dispositions toward ‘partnership’

  21. Engagement • “Although it wasn't a complicated task it was extremely beneficial. I hope to do more assignments like this in the future, or even take part in the creation of an assignment like this one.” • “It was fun and easy; I didn't mind watching the realistic videos and answering the questions. • It was challenging because I had to really look for a lot of different things within the videos and it caused me to watch them more than once.”

  22. Vicarious learning • “It isn’t always easy to speak to someone else about their child. It was good to see both teachers and their strengths & weaknesses and to pick up on them and learn from them. “ • “I learned that … you need to represent yourself, not only through your facts, but in the way you dress, speak, and show confidence. • You also need to work together.”

  23. Current variations on a theme • Conducting simulated conferences • Comparing outcomes across conditions • Vicarious • Simulation • Building an online course • Thinkfinity/Verizon

  24. Classroom Management: TSR • Critical to student engagement and learning • Major contributor to teacher burnout • Rates in urban schools at ~50% within 5 years Loss of human capital

  25. A solution? Avatars

  26. Teach LivE

  27. How does TeachLivE work? Pace instructor provides session objectives to TeachLivE(University of Central Florida). Pace instructor sets up processes with candidates: planning lessons interacting with avatars reflecting on the interactions During the individual or group sessions, avatars respond to ‘the teacher’ in ways that develop the session objectives.

  28. To foster reflection Pace faculty use • Protocols to enhance observation and recording for teaching and research • Immediate feedback and sharing • One-on-one “coaching” model • Whole class “studio” model • Video for reflection

  29. TeachLivE enhances teacher preparation by - Helping candidates experience teaching as a complex activity Providing multiple opportunities to practice under no-fault conditions (scrimmage) Eliciting real-time decision-making Awareness/interpretation of “student” behavior Incorporating “student” diversity Efforts to engage “students” in learning

  30. Pilot work • Focus: Dispositions or Authoritarianism • Surveys and scenarios • 10” microteach, “1st day of school” • Expectations • Communication • Excitement about learning • HUGE variability in approaches and reactions to the technology • The simulation makes values and beliefs visible in a way that other instructional strategies have not.

  31. %

  32. The avatar lab supported my learning.

  33. Conclusion: Cross-Cutting Themes • Learner-centered • Multi-sensory / experiential • Bounded risk-taking • Ownership / engagement • Multiple stakeholders • Collaboration (FSCP) • Preparation for futurelearning • Pervasive • Selection • Please mind the gap.

  34. Your thoughts?

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