Technology-Enabled Teaching March 16, 2005
IN THIS ISSUE
VIEWPOINT
NEWS & PRODUCT UPDATES
CASE STUDY
TECH NOTES
READER RESPONSE
Sponsors
Viewpoint
By Stephen R. Acker
The Ohio State University
Editor’s Note: The University of Minnesota is
implementing ePortfolio in a major way. Other colleges
and universities are in various stages, some starting
with pilot projects. How will this new tool fit into
the lives of students and faculty.
One definition of ePortfolio is a “digital representation
of self on characteristics of interest to a community.”
The community context can be represented as a template
into which the portfolio creator places text, audio,
and video files (digital artifacts) and is encouraged
to include a description, rationale, and discussion
around each entry in the template. Taken together, this
software feature-set makes ePortfolio a powerful tool
for the new 3Rs, representation, reflection, and revision.
This same “feature-set” presents a high-level view of
the process that institutions and individual faculty
often subscribe to as a method for helping students
learn and demonstrate that learning has occurred.
The process mirrors constructivist faculty tenets of
identifying the many different starting points at which
students begin their learning path, creating a tension
through critique that challenges the student’s original
insights, and then presenting the revised assignment
or paper as a “final” outcome.
In turn, individual faculty can create a teaching
ePortfolio to demonstrate how they help students learn
and revise their pedagogy based on the same
representation, reflection, and revision cycle. At the
institutional level, ePortfolio offers an ideal tool
for providing evidence of improved student learning,
which is meaningful to accreditation agencies and
funding sources.
Even though ePortfolio fits comfortably into the
implicit model of education for many faculty and
institutions, by making the representation and
reflection phases of the “3Rs” both public and explicit,
the wide-scale adoption of ePortfolio becomes more
challenging.
Three obstacles to institutional uptake of ePortfolio are:
1. lack of easy ways to protect the intellectual
property rights of students;
2. concerns about increased workload for faculty;
3. the “inverted value” of ePortfolio to students.
News & Product Updates
This week, Unicon, Inc., a provider of enterprise
portal, learning, and integration technology for higher
education, announced the availability of Academus
Portal 1.5 at the Datatel User Group Conference (DUG)
meeting in Washington, D.C. The new version features
aggregated layouts, a new briefcase portlet, extended
browser support, and upgraded compatibility to the
current version of uPortal framework. (Unicon news)
Read more
Distance learning is the fastest-growing sub-sector of
a $2.3 trillion global education market, according to
Hezel Associates, the education consulting firm.
"Institutions are increasingly exporting American
courses to other lands," said Dr. Richard Hezel,
Hezel Associates president. "With the global market
for online higher education estimated to exceed $69
billion by 2015, organizations need to know the market
before considering education export." The full report,
"The Global E-Learning Opportunity for U.S. Higher
Education." is available on Hezel Associates Web site
Read more
Brandon-hall.com, an e-learning consulting firm, is
starting a new online subscription-based service,
“Authoring Tool KnowledgeBase: A Buyer's Guide to the
Best E-Learning Content Development Applications.” The
study covered 89 authoring tools geared toward e-learning,
examining assessment capabilities, standards compliance
(AICC, SCORM, Section 508), rapid development
capabilities, collaboration features, technical
guidelines, extensibility and compatibility with
other products.
Read more
Case Study
By Edward J. Evans
Purdue University
Responding to the need to support the rich classroom
interaction desired by faculty, Purdue University has
site-licensed eInstruction’s CPSrf for Higher Education
system. This case study presents the rationale for
Purdue’s decision and provides insights into issues of
support and installation of classroom response systems
at the institutional level.
Classroom engagement, communication, and assessment
are constant challenges for faculty, especially in
large lecture classes. Many faculty members struggle
with ways to keep students interested and to determine
whether material they present is being understood.
The larger the class, the more pronounced the challenge
of student engagement becomes. Purdue University, a
large state-supported school with a student enrollment
of 38,000, offers a number of large enrollment classes
where promoting class interaction is particularly valued.
Classroom response systems (CRS) offer one mechanism
for bridging the gap between students and faculty in
classes. Traditionally, “classroom response systems”
have been implemented by requesting students to raise
their hands. However, fear of looking uninformed or
expressing an unpopular opinion have always been
limitations to a public show of hands.
To encourage
more complete and honest sharing of opinions, classroom
response systems have been developed that are
permanently wired in classrooms. While wired systems
offer the promise of asking more complex questions,
getting better feedback due to anonymity, and providing
quicker tabulation of answers, the infrastructure and
installation required to support such systems are
costly and time consuming. A new generation of
wireless classroom response systems has emerged as an
affordable and easily installed approach to help
faculty engage their students in entirely new,
creative ways.
Tech Notes
The number of hi-speed Internet access lines, a key
infrastructure element needed for rich media delivery
in eLearning, increased 38 percent from June, 2003
through June 2004, according to the FCC. The report
documents 32.5 million high-speed lines in service as
of June, 2004. (Government Technology)
Reader Response
From the Reader Response Forum
UNIX Talent?
Posted by: michaelp
My impression is that UNIX talent is required. Can anyone speak to the level of support necessary to implement an OPEN SOURCE solution. -- Posted by Ralph Fasano, Rhode Island School of Design
Response: Hi Ralph, it depends on the OS system. Unix talent is definitly not needed to implement Moodle, it runs fine on Windows, even has a Windows installer.While much of the talk on the Moodle forums involves folks who are coding new modules for Moodle which requires extra levels of talent, simply running a standard Moodle install is no more difficult than running a standard WebCT, Blackboard, etc. install.You can even get a fully hosted supported system where all you do is run courses, via Moodle.com, for much less than hosted solutions for the other CMSs. -- Posted by michaelp