This presentation describes the use of the Keynote App on the iPad as a methodology in a qualitative research study on the curriculum in Obstetrics, drawing on students' experiences and insights.
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Using the Keynote App as a research tool_iPads in Higher Education, 1st International Conference, Cyprus
1. Using the Keynote App
as a research tool
A case study in medical education
Veronica Mitchell
Education Development Unit
Health Sciences Faculty
University of Cape Town, South Africa
@ iPads in Higher Education
Conference in Paphos, Cyprus
March 2014
5. The Curriculum
Research question
How do students
negotiate the gap
between the fixed, intended curriculum
and
the fluid, enacted curriculum
in their early Obstetrics delivery experience
?
11. Barnett (2000:260) explains curricula as:
being lived by rather than being determined …
[with an] elusive quality about them.
Their actual dimensions and elements are tacit.
They take on certain patterns and relationships
but those patterns and relationships
will be hidden from all concerned, except as they are
experienced by the students
15. 5 students in Year 4 in 2010
Methodology
1. reflective commentaries
2. one-to-one interviews
3. iPad’s Keynote images
16. Affordances: Keynote App
Novelty / appealing
Alternative modality
Visual dimension
Tactile component
Intergenerational bridge
3rd party in the conversational space
Sense of play
shifting images / familiar shapes / colour
Circles created vs messiness of drawings
Keynote App
17. Methodology with the iPad
Explanation to students
Explored the Keynote tool
Gave them a template
Alongside semi-structured questions
Explained their experiences by moving the circles
Emailed to researcher
Saved as images
Printed for dissertation
18. Limitations: Keynote App
Different
New / Unfamiliar
Students more used to text
Abstract nature of concepts
- circles representing curricular domains
Template used
Keynote App
By George Tuli (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
19. What about integration?
K
AB
Using visual communication
Kress & van Leeuwen (2006)
Deeper hidden truth
Microscopic view through circles
Jewitt & Oyama (2001)
Analysing the visual component
Students
Year 4 In 2010
Year 6 in 2012
Being Acting
Knowing
25. Individual shifts, integration / transformation
Joan
Sipho
Thabo
Developed relationships,
Understood & responded
to broader issues
Regrets, sense of numbness
with compliance
Values his power,
advice to me & others,
critical of peers in not adapting
Summary
27. Reflecting on the tool Professionalism
&
Health and Human Rights
Enriching experience
- digging deeper into students’ authentic experiences
- motivating critical reflection
Missing: Students comments on the technology
- enabling / constraining
iPad was a highlight for me
28. Conclusion
Deeper insights with alternative approaches
Keynote App was a valuable contribution to research
Exciting new opportunities arising
Illustration by Stacey Stent , thanks to Dick Ng’ambi
30. Licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 South Africa License.
References
Barnett, R. 2009. Knowing and becoming in the higher education curriculum. Studies in higher education. 34.4:429-440.
Barnett. R. & Coate, K. 2005. Engaging the higher curriculum in higher education. SRHE & Open University Press.
London
Kress, G. & van Leeuwen,T. 2006. Reading Images: The grammar of visual design. 2nd Ed. Routledge: London.
Jewitt, C & Oyama, R. 2001. Visual meaning: A social semiotic approach. In van Leeuwen T & Jewitt C. A handbook of
visual analysis . London. SAGE. Publications.