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Researching the Practice of Design for Learning: Integrating Cognitive and Social Perspectives

Researching the Practice of Design for Learning: Integrating Cognitive and Social Perspectives. Liz Masterman, OUCS 27 th June 2006. Overview. Project aims and method Rationale for the framework The cognitive perspective: epistemic efficacy The social perspective: Activity Theory

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Researching the Practice of Design for Learning: Integrating Cognitive and Social Perspectives

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  1. Researching the Practice of Design for Learning: Integrating Cognitive and Social Perspectives Liz Masterman, OUCS27th June 2006

  2. Overview • Project aims and method • Rationale for the framework • The cognitive perspective: epistemic efficacy • The social perspective: Activity Theory • Integration: a (tentative) framework for deploying tools

  3. Aims and method • Brief: • Investigate use of “non-LD inspired” tools in designing for learning • Aims: • Provide research-based information on use of tools in designing for learning • Synthesise data  • Applicability of tools used • Recommendations on effective deployment • Considerations for design and development of future tools • Construct toolkit for evaluating tools

  4. Aims and method • Focus • Learning activity authoring • “Generic” tools • Method • Online questionnaire • 70 responses • Quantitative + some qualitative data • Current practice • One-day workshops • Lesson design session + interviews, group discussions, logs of tool usage, lesson plans • 39 participants • Qualitative data • Case studies of practice + impact of novel tools

  5. Rationale for an integrated framework • Wish to leave a durable legacy • Tools constantly evolving • Feedback based on limited experience • Usability a matter of personal preference and nature of task • Belief that theory is integral to effective design and implementation • Bring order to data • Provide cohesive basis for interdisciplinary design process • Opportunity to test transferability of previously tried approach

  6. Rationale for an integrated framework • Cognitive perspective • Focus on the individual • LAA as a planning task: produce representations • Social perspective • D4L inherently a social task • Practitioner part of a community with own norms and roles • Complementary approaches: • Culture as the “overarching context of cognitive development”, not a variable within it(Gauvain 1996)

  7. Cognitive perspective • Determine applicability of tools • Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996)

  8. Cognitive perspective Determine applicability of tools Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996) Ontology-fit: Can you show all the elements of the “world” being represented + relationships?

  9. Cognitive perspective • Determine applicability of tools • Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996) • Ontology-fit: Can you show all the elements of the “world” being represented + relationships? • Task-fit: How useful and appropriate is the representation to the task?

  10. Cognitive perspective • Determine applicability of tools • Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996) • Ontology-fit: Can you show all the elements of the “world” being represented + relationships? • Task-fit: How useful and appropriate is the representation to the task? • Process-fit: Does the representation facilitate internal processes?

  11. Cognitive perspective • Determine applicability of tools • Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996) • Ontology-fit: Can you show all the elements of the “world” being represented + relationships? • Task-fit: How useful and appropriate is the representation to the task? • Process-fit: Does the representation facilitate internal processes? • User-fit: Does the representation suit the person using it?

  12. Cognitive perspective • Determine applicability of tools • Epistemic efficacy (Peterson, 1996) • Ontology-fit: Can you show all the elements of the “world” being represented + relationships? • Task-fit: How useful and appropriate is the representation to the task? • Process-fit: Does the representation facilitate internal processes? • User-fit: Does the representation suit the person using it? • Circumstance fit: Is the representation affected by physical conditions; how usable is the tool?

  13. Cognitive perspective: Summary • No “one size fits all” tool, but a repertoire of more or less acceptable representations and tools • Specific tools can promote or impede LAA in relation to • Cognitive flow • Re-representation of emergent learning design • Examples • Mind-/concept-mapping for a) brainstorming, b) revealing structure of domain to students • Word processed tables for finished plan • Presentation tools elide LAA and LAR

  14. Make recommendations re effective deployment of tools for LAA Activity Theory (Leont’ev 1981; Engeström, 2004) Analyse “contextually embedded practice” (Issroff & Scanlon, 2002) Human activity carried out within a community (even if physically alone) Mediated by: Culturally evolved tools (cultural + technical) Rules (procedures, conventions, norms) Division of labour Social perspective

  15. Cultural/psychological Technical/physical Tools Subject(s) Object Outcome Division of labour Community Social perspective:“Classical” Activity System Rules

  16. Cultural/psychological Technical/physical Tools Time Setting Subject(s) Object Outcome Division of labour Community Social perspective:“Extended” Activity System Rules

  17. Social perspective:Deployment considerations • Subject(s): practitioner(s) • How can tools help develop expertise? • Object and transformation into outcome: learning design • Can tool accommodate multiplicity of paths through the activity? • Communities: • How to foster communities within institution? • Existence of supportive communities outside institution?

  18. Social perspective:Deployment considerations • Tools in relation to… • …Practitioners • Process-fit, user-fit, circumstance-fit? • Level of IT expertise required? • …Object (design of learning activities) • Ontology-fit, task-fit? • …Communities • Efforts being made to elicit practitioners’ requirements for tools? • Creation and support of user community? • Does tool facilitate sharing of learning designs?

  19. Social perspective:Deployment considerations • Rules • Policies, strategies to promote effective practice? • Roles • Orchestrate collaborative LAA? • Support for learners as designers? • Time • Easy storage and retrieval? • Location: access to tools outside workplace • Licences for home use? • Off-line use of Web-based tools? • Run on mobile devices?

  20. Conclusion • Framework for designing and deploying D4L tools • Cognitive theories provide a set of principles for appraising ERs and tools (e-, non e-) • Activity Theory provides a framework for interpreting the social context in which LAA takes place • Provisional — has not been tested! • Focus on “enabling” features — but new tools can also involve trade-offs • Hence important to analyse existing practices in depth

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