Learning in the new millennium by Jacob Theilgaard, [email protected] Interacti on in learning - Learning in interacti on
Nov 21, 2014
Learning in the new millennium
by Jacob Theilgaard, [email protected]
Interaction in learning
- Learning in interaction
From DK - VL 24 hours: Your biggest concern? The New Generation
• Read 2300 webpages a year • Click in on 1281 Facebook profiles • Write 500 pages e-mails • Are online 3,5 time a day on
Youtube, Facebook, MSN, Myspace, Flickr ,Twitter etc.
• They don’t keep newspapers – they read news on the web
• They only watch TV 1,5 hours a day, while they do something differently
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Here’s a problem for teachers:
“For the first time we are preparing students for a future we cannot clearly describe.” - David Warlick
HOW ABOUT LEADERS, PROJECT
MANAGERS AND OTHER
PROFESSIONALS?
3 Important elements of the future
• ”World to my desktop”
• Mediated Immersion
• Mobile Wireless Devices
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How the WEB change learning
• The web support the comparison between many sources of information, each incomplete and together contradictory
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• Introducing learning based on searching, sorting and synthesize of information, rather than assimilation of information of one ‘true’ information source
• The media and the user interface supports multitasking
• Advanced way to synthesize new knowledge?
• ”Napsterisme” – combining others design
• Tailor-made teaching products and services, adjusted to the individual need, rather than one size fits all in length, content and pedagogical way
Mediated Immersion
• Competent in many medias and simulation in virtual environments
• Community based learning thru involvement of many local situated experiences, sharing of knowledge cross communities, contexts and inside the mind of the individual
• A balance between experimental learning, guided mentoring and collective reflection
• Emerged thru a non-linear loosely connected and associated net of representations
• Co-creation of learning experiences tailored to the individual need and preferences
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The consequence of Immersion in learning?
• Infinite possibilities to obtain access to information sources and psychological communities across time and distance, mean there will develop a bigger depth and broader horizons in shared experiences
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• Possibilities to create interactions, activities and experiences in a mediated environment, which is impossible in real life. Like teleporting to a virtual environment , where a distant person can se and interact with you and your real-time local environment
What does all the mean……
• For the purpose created facilities will become meaningless
• MWD will connect information in real-time • Virtual environments will create virtual copies• Learners will participate in wide, loosely connected
virtual learning communities• Interoperability – Open content and open sources will
create borderless information sharing• Diverse type of evaluations• Peer-review as a part of how we evaluate
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We will need new ‘literacies’
• Social networking• Privacy maintenance• Identity management• Creating content• Organising content• Reusing and repurposing• Filtering and selecting• Self broadcasting
The new web environments are
game changers. Learners now
need new (digital) literacies
Next Step
• Wireless access everywhere
• Multi purpose facilities
• Enhances realities• Virtual reflection
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The New competencies of facilitators
• Co-design• Co-instruction• Guided
experimental learning
• Evaluations besides test and written texts
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Human activities are mediated by
culturally established
instruments such as tools and language.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978) Mind in Society: The development of
higher psychological processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press
http://www.phillwebb.net
We can use computers to
extend the capabilities of our own minds. They can become the
repositories of our knowledge.
http://www.phillwebb.net
Computers as mind tools [email protected]
Personal Learning Environments
PersonalLearning Environment
Personal Learning Network
PersonalWeb Tools
PLEs are not only personal web tools and
personal learning networks. PLEs are
much wider than this, taking in experiences and reality, as well as learning through TV, music, paper based
materials, radio & more formal contexts.
Learning content is not as important now as
where (or who) to connect to, to find it.
PWTs are any web tools, (usually Web 2.0) chosen by learners to support their lifelong
learning.
LMSLearning management systems
How..
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Virtual inputM.O.O.C
PLEPersonal Learning Enviroment(virtual)
Action Learning Groups
Action Learning Groups
Action Learning Groups
Virtuel learning report
Virtuel learning report
Webinars
B/V-Logs
Source: George Siemens www.connectivism.ca/
Connectivism
We live in a techno-social world
Learning occurs inside and outside of people – we store our knowledge in computers and in other people – George Siemens
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Conceptualized and compiled by
Jacob B. TheilgaardM(A).psych.lic.Principal Consultant