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 The disruptive nature of
 emerging technologies:
 lecturers‘ experiences at a
 University of Technology
 in South Africa




Daniela Gachago, Eunice Ivala, Fundani, CPUT
Agnes Chigona, Education, CPUT
Critique on
                         use of
                      technology in
                        education
                                         What are
        Conclusions                      emerging
                                       technologies




 Findings:                                         Can they
  What?                                             disrupt
   How?               Presentation                 teaching
Disruption?                                        practice?




         Research                       Research
          design                          aims

                        Laurillard‘s
                      conversationa
                       l framework
+
    Use of technologies in Higher
    Education….
+
    Impact of technologies in education
    falls short of rhetoric…
       …when ICTs are adopted by majority of teaching staff, it is
        mostly used to support and improve existing practices,
        rather than to radically change them (Kirkup and Kirkwood
        2005)

       ….lecturers and students use a limited range of technologies
        for both learning and in social life…(Margyaran and Littlejohn
        2011, Czerniewicz and Brown 2005)

       …use of technology predominantly to reproduce existing
        practice as opposed to transforming practice …
        (Velestianos 2011)

       …existing practice: to support passive, teacher-centered, and
        didactic instruction … (Herrington et al 2009)
+
+
    Need to redefine elearning

       ―As a result of the pervasiveness of technology, the term ‗e-
        learning‘ has come under scrutiny. Personal ownership of
        technologies coupled with access to social software means that
        all kinds of learning-related activity can potentially be e-
        enabled; e-learning can no longer be viewed as a purely
        institutionally based or narrowly defined set of activities....‖
        (HEFCE paper 2009, 5)
+
    Emerging technologies…

       Emerging technologies may or may not be new technologies

       Emerging technologies are evolving organism that exist in a
        state of ―coming into being‖

       Emerging technologies go through hype cycles

       Emerging technologies are not yet fully understood and not yet
        fully researched

       Emerging technologies are potentially disruptive but their
        potential is mostly unfulfilled (Veletsianos 2010)
+




    Johnson and Adams 201
+
    Shift of locus of control…

       Emerging technologies place the control over teaching and
        learning process firmly in the hands of students and lecturers
        as opposed of the institution….

       Transfer of authority of knowledge and ownership of technology

       Wisdom of the crowd, architecture of participation (Surowiecki
        2004)

       New issues to consider in terms of privacy, security, authority
        and control of information


                                                               Becta 2008
+
+ Disruptive, emergent, soft,
  transformative nature of
  technologies….
+
    Type I vs Type II technologies

       Type I uses of technology replicate existing teaching and
        learning practice,

       while Type II uses of technology allow students and lecturers
        to do things that could not be done before, changing
        relationships between students and lecturers in fundamental
        ways.
                                             (Johnson and Maddux 2005)
+
    Prescriptive vs emergent…

       Prescriptive learning: In predictable domains, knowledge can
        be created and applied to provide control. The learning that is
        traditionally associated with predictable domains is typically
        organised hierarchically within centralised institutions.

       Emergent learning: In complex-adaptive domains, knowledge
        does not provide prospective predictability but, rather,
        retrospective coherence: ―hindsight does not provide foresight‖
        …. The learning that is appropriate is self-organised and
        typically collaborative. It is open and is created and
        distributed largely by the learners themselves.
                                       (Williams, Karousou, Macness 2011)
+
    Hard vs soft technologies

       Hard technologies: constraining, e.g. LMS limit the number of
        choices one can make, relatively easy to use, orchestrated by
        rules and regulations, risk to stifle creativity

       Soft technologies: more freedom to play with, orchestrated by
        individual lecturer

       ―Soft technologies need skill and artistry. It ain‘t just what
        you do, it‘s the way that you do it. A bad technology, used well,
        can work brilliantly, while a good technology, used badly, can
        be useless. Most learning technology research concentrates on
        technology (including methods and pedagogies) not the talent
        and skill with which it is applied that is frequently more
        significant.‖

                                                             (Dron 2011)
+
    Qualities of disruptive technologies

     1.   It should be student-centered, with learning put first, and
          flexible enough to accommodate different styles and
          interests of students. It should provide necessary support,
          but require that the student do the work.

     2.   It should be designed to offer options, motivate students,
          and provide connections to students‘ lives, jobs, and
          communities.

     3.   It should capitalize on the willingness of lecturers and
          students alike to experiment and fail, to improve, and to
          keep at problems until solutions are crafted.

                                                        (Meyer 2010)
+
    Research aims
+
    Research aims

    1.   To establish the extent to which lecturers are using
         technologies in teaching and learning and their rational
         (both institutional technologies and technologies outside the
         institutions‘ control),

    2.   To explore the use of emerging technologies and how
         these technologies impact on the range of learning events
         lecturers and students engage with, and

    3.   To explore lecturers experiences with the disruptive nature
         of emerging technologies
+


Conceptual
framework
+
    Laurillard…


     ―Wehave begun at last to play with digital
     technologies as a way of meeting the
     demands of the digital age, but with an
     approach still born in the transmission
     model….. There is no progress, therefore, in
     how we teach, despite what might be
     possible with the new technology.‖ (Laurillard
     2002, 141)
+                     Builds on:
                          social constructivism (Vygotsky) and
                          conversation theory (Pask)

                      Argues that complex learning involves:
                          a continuing iterative dialogue
                           between teacher and student, which
                           reveals the participants‘ conceptions
Laurillard‘s               and the variations between them…
conversational             There is no escape from the need for
                           dialogue, no room for mere telling, nor
framework (2002)
                           for practice without description, nor for
                           experimentation without reflection, nor
                           for student action without feedback.
                           (Laurillard 2002)
+


Learning conversations
consist of…
A discursive phase
An interactive phase
An adaptive phase
And a reflective phase
+
    Mapping media to learning
    experiences….
Blogs,
            wikis,
            Facebook,
            Mxit, skype,
            Twitter,
            gmail….




Czerniewicz & Brown 2005
+
    Effective practice

       Effective and appropriate pedagogical practice is achieved by
        offering students a wide variety of media forms balanced for
        their pedagogical value rather than chosen for their novelty or
        entertainment factor

                                        (Czerniewicz and Brown 2005)
+
    Research methodology

       Mixed method design

       2010 CPUT ICT survey: access and use of ICTs for teaching
        and learning

       Survey tool: adapted from tool developed by Czerniewicz and
        Brown (2005)

       In depth follow up interviews with five lecturers selected for
        their reputation for engaging with emerging technologies
        (gmail, YouTube, TED talks, Facebook, skype, IM, …)
+          1.


                
                    Which technologies are lecturers using
                    in teaching and learning ?
                      Survey tool

           2.       How? Linking technologies and learning
                    events….
                     Survey
                     Based on Laurillard‘s learning events
                     Comparing learning events by level of
                      emerging technology usage
                     Fisher exact test to test for statistical
Findings              significance (p-level 0.05)

           3.       Can we find qualities of the disruptive
                    nature of emerging technologies ?
                     Interviews, driven by Meyers qualities
                      of disruptive technologies
+       


        
            Use of ICTs in general

            Use of LMS as example of institutional
            technology

           Use of emerging technologies




WHAT?
+
    Use of ICTs for T&L

       Staff: how many
                                   Staff: us e of BB for
      courses use ICTs ?
                                         te ac hing

                       none                            Ys
                                                       e

           7%          very few                        No
             14%
     39%               about
                                  53%       47%
                 14%   half
                       most
           26%
                       all
+
    Staff: Use of Blackboard for....

              Course materials                 Tools

       95% use it for notes        73% announcements

       89% for presentations       73% discussions

       86% subject guide           61% assignments

       38% video files             60% assessments

       30% audio files             50% gradebook

                                    43% groups
Lecturers‘ use of emerging
+
  technologies
 60%

 50%

 40%

 30%

 20%

 10%

 0%
+
    Staff: reasons for usage...

       access to current, relevant, global, immediate information

       adapt to new generation of learners, tools that are already used
        by students

       diversity of learning experiences

       independence from CPUT systems

       mash up/integration
Czerniewicz and Brown‘s learning
+      1.
                 strategies (21) mapped to learning
                 events

       2.        Laurillard‘s learning events
            1.     Dialogue
            2.     Discovery
            3.     Practice and
            4.     Production
HOW?
+
    Learning strategies

           ICT based learning strategies (n=80)
    100%
     90%
     80%
     70%
     60%
     50%
     40%
     30%
     20%                                          All users
     10%
      0%
+
+
    Mapping use of ET and learning
    events…



     Emerging technologies used   Category
     5 or more                    High level user of ET
     1-4                          Low level user of ET
     0                            No use of ET
+


                          100%




                            0%
                           10%
                           20%
                           40%
                           60%
                           70%
                           80%
                           90%




                           30%
                           50%
         Online search
                 Email
         Word essays
        Online articles
           Poster/PPT
          Online notes
             Self tests
                 CBTs
         Data analysis
        Sharing media
         eAssessment
            Databases
   Online collaboration
    Online discussions
       Social networks
 Simulations/Modelling
MultiMedia Producation
                 Blogs
             Podcasts
            CB games
                                             users / high level of ET Users
                                             Comparison learning strategies all




                          All users
                          High level of ET
+
    Learning event: practice


                                          High level use Exact Sig
    Learning strategies       All users       of ET      (2-sided)


                              n     %       n      %
    Word processed essay      67   87%     17     89%     0.493
    Poster/presentation       60   78%     16     84%     0.485
    Analyse /represent data   43   56%     13     68%     0.375
    Create database           31   40%     9      47%      0.39
    Multimedia production     17   22%     7      39%     0.395
    Podcast                   9    12%      5     26%     0.172
+
    Learning event: practice


                                           High level use   Exact Sig
    Learning strategies        All users       of ET        (2-sided)

                                n    %      n        %
    Self testing               30   62%     10      56%      0.726
    Computer based tutorials   30   62%     11      61%      0.303
    Computer based tests for
    marked assessment          29   40%      9      50%        0.8
    Simulations or modelling
    programmes                 16   22%      7      39%       0.09
    Computer based games       18   11%      5      28%      0.017*
+
    Learning event: discovery

                                               High level use   Exact Sig
    Learning strategies            All users       of ET        (2-sided)

                                   n      %      n       %
    Searching for information on
    the Internet                   76   97%     19     100%      0.766
    Finding online articles and
    research reports               64   80%     17      89%      0.468
    Accessing lecture notes and
    ppt online                     54   70%     15      79%      0.688
    Sharing resources (images
    videos, music)                 40   51%     15      79%      0.078
    Online collaboration           30   38%     13      68%      0.028*
+
    Learning event: dialogue


                                                                     High level use of Exact Sig
    Learning strategies                                  All users          ET         (2-sided)

                                                        n      %       n        %
    Email                                               71    91%      19      100%      1.61
    Discussion forum                                    25    32%      12      63%       0.04*
    Social networks                                     19    24%      13      68%      0.000*
    Online journals/Blogs                               15    19%      9       47%       0.07*
    Online chat                                         8     10%      6       32%      0.032*



    * Statistical significant finding (p-value <0.05)
+                       1.   It should be student-centered, with
                             learning put first, and flexible
                             enough to accommodate different
                             styles and interests of students. It
                             should provide necessary support,
                             but require that the student do the
                             work.

                        2.   It should be designed to offer
                             options, motivate students, and
Disruptive nature of         provide connections to students‘
emerging technologies        lives, jobs, and communities.

                        3.   It should capitalize on the
Meyer 2010
                             willingness of lecturers and
                             students alike to experiment and
                             fail, to improve, and to keep at
                             problems until solutions are crafted.
―…more self-directed learning...those who want to
can learn more than is necessary; it‘s not boxed
in, it‘s not confined. We have outcomes but how
they get there, it can be easily navigated...‖




                               ―Every second week the students are
                               allowed to or invited to present their
                               own topic and their own TED talk...and
                               then usually chaos erupts because
                               they choose controversial topics that
                               are very close to their heart but not
                               close to anybody else‘s‖
+                       1.   It should be student-centered, with
                             learning put first, and flexible
                             enough to accommodate different
                             styles and interests of students. It
                             should provide necessary support,
                             but require that the student do the
                             work.

                        2.   It should be designed to offer
                             options, motivate students, and
Disruptive nature of         provide connections to students‘
emerging technologies        lives, jobs, and communities.

                        3.   It should capitalize on the
Meyer 2010
                             willingness of lecturers and
                             students alike to experiment and
                             fail, to improve, and to keep at
                             problems until solutions are crafted.
+
      ―It‘s a way of doing life. It‘s a network. It‘s not doing
      computers. It‘s not doing mobile learning. It‘s just
      learning – it‘s just life.‖


                               ―Also continuing the learning beyond the classroom and
                               beyond the studio...you know if you commit yourself to
                               Architecture ... it doesn‘t, you can never escape it, it
                               never stops.‖


    ―Our students generally don‘t have a wide exposure to
    life. Their life is you know it‘s the townships...its MXit, its
    TV...its Generations, its Rhythm City and that‘s it...they
    don‘t read the newspapers...they don‘t listen to the
    radio...they don‘t read...listen to the news...and so part
    of my TED talks is to expand their horizons....they are
    usual visual creatures and they want to see what‘s going
    on...‖
+                       1.   It should be student-centered, with
                             learning put first, and flexible
                             enough to accommodate different
                             styles and interests of students. It
                             should provide necessary support,
                             but require that the student do the
                             work.

                        2.   It should be designed to offer
                             options, motivate students, and
Disruptive nature of         provide connections to students‘
emerging technologies        lives, jobs, and communities.

                        3.   It should capitalize on the
Meyer 2010
                             willingness of lecturers and
                             students alike to experiment and
                             fail, to improve, and to keep at
                             problems until solutions are crafted.
+
―I mean Twitter...how long had
Twitter been out? What‘s going to
happen at the end of the year?            ―We‘ve never needed support...you
There is going to be another              press the help button or you
programme...so we can‘t say we            Google it!‖
have reached the end of it. We‘ve
never. So there will be a new
technology, it may be...I mean            ―It takes hours of preparation…you can ask
Whatsapp...all of a sudden they           my husband, you know I used to have a life
are all on Whatsapp...they actually       but my job ate it…I spend hours and
asked me the other day please can         weekends at preparing lessons like this. But
I Whatsapp you? I said no, no,            the thing is once I‘ve used it now, that lesson
no...I also got a life. But I will have   I can use next year again…but then each
to use Whatsapp as well. That‘s           year there‘s something new so then, I
what they want to do...‖                  change it…‖
+
    Conclusions
+
    Conclusions
       Confirming previous findings we established that majority of lecturers use a
        very limited range of learning events

       BUT: use of emerging technologies seem to broaden the range of learning
        events lecturers engage with…especially when it comes to dialogical and
        collaborative learning events

       Evidence of disruptive nature of emerging technologies: focus on opening up
        boundaries, transferring control and responsibility towards students, providing
        exciting learning opportunities, enthusiasm!

       Recognize champions who use ICTs creatively and widen application of
        technology in T&L

       Create a space to engage in a discussion around the use of institutional and
        non-institutional technologies to advocate comprehensive of use of ICTs in
        teaching and learning
+
    Thank you!

       Any questions?

       Contact:
           Daniela Gachago at gachagod@cput.ac.za
           Eunice Ivala ivalae@cput.ac.za
           Agnes Chigona chigonaa@cput.ac.za


       More information on blog www.edutechcput.wordpress.com

       We would like to acknowledge the CPUT Riftal fund which funded this project
        and the NRF project on the use of Emerging Technologies in SA Higher
        Education for the knowledge shared and gained in this project
+ References
Czerniewicz, L., and C. Brown. 2005. ―The uses of information and communication (ICT) in teaching and learning in South African higher education
   practices in the Western Cape.‖ Perspectives in Education 23 (4): 1–18.


Dron, J. 2011. ―Soft things, hard things and invisible elephants.‖ Athabasca University Landing. https://landing.athabascau.ca/pg/groups/89415.


HEFCE. (2009). Effective practice in a from Retrieved from digital age. Retrieved from
   http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/elearningpedagogy/effectivepractic edigitalage_textonly.doc


Herrington, J, A Herrington, J Mantei, I Olney, and B Ferry. 2009. Using mobile technologies to develop new ways of teaching and learning. Faculty of
    Education, University of Wollongong. ro.uow.edu.au/newtech


Johnson, L, and S. Adams. 2011. Technology Outlook UK Tertiary Education 2011-2016: An NMC Horizon Report Regional Analysis. Technology. Texas.


Kirkup, G., and A. Kirkwood. 2005. ―Information and communications technologies (ICT) in higher education teaching—a tale of gradualism rather than
    revolution.‖ Learning, Media and Technology 30 (2): 185–199.


Laurillard, D. 2002. Rethinking university teaching: A conversational framework for the effective use of learning technologies. 2nd ed. London: Routledge.


Maddux, CD., and LD. Johnson. 2005. ―Type II Applications of Technology in Education.‖ Computers in the Schools 22 (1&2): 1-5.


Margaryan, A, and A Littlejohn. 2011. ―Are digital natives a myth or reality?: Students‘ use of technologies for learning.‖ Computers & Education 56 (2):
   429-440.


Meyer, K E. 2010. ―The Role of Disruptive Technology in the Future of Higher Education.‖ EDUCAUSE Quartely 33 (1).
   http://www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSE+Quarterly/EDUCAUSEQuarterlyMagazineVolum/TheRoleofDisruptiveTechnologyi/199378.


Veletsianos, G 2011. ―Designing Opportunities for Transformation with Emerging Technologies George Veletsianos.‖ Educational Technology 51 (2): 41-
    46.


Veletsianos, G 2010. Emerging Technologies in Distance Education. Theory and Practice. Edmonton: AU Press.


Williams, R R Karousou, and J. Mackness. 2011. ―Emergent Learning and Learning Ecologies in Web 2.0.‖ International Review of Research in Open and
     Distance Learning 12 (3).
+

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The disruptive nature of emerging technologies v0.3

  • 1. + The disruptive nature of emerging technologies: lecturers‘ experiences at a University of Technology in South Africa Daniela Gachago, Eunice Ivala, Fundani, CPUT Agnes Chigona, Education, CPUT
  • 2. Critique on use of technology in education What are Conclusions emerging technologies Findings: Can they What? disrupt How? Presentation teaching Disruption? practice? Research Research design aims Laurillard‘s conversationa l framework
  • 3. + Use of technologies in Higher Education….
  • 4. + Impact of technologies in education falls short of rhetoric…  …when ICTs are adopted by majority of teaching staff, it is mostly used to support and improve existing practices, rather than to radically change them (Kirkup and Kirkwood 2005)  ….lecturers and students use a limited range of technologies for both learning and in social life…(Margyaran and Littlejohn 2011, Czerniewicz and Brown 2005)  …use of technology predominantly to reproduce existing practice as opposed to transforming practice … (Velestianos 2011)  …existing practice: to support passive, teacher-centered, and didactic instruction … (Herrington et al 2009)
  • 5. +
  • 6. + Need to redefine elearning  ―As a result of the pervasiveness of technology, the term ‗e- learning‘ has come under scrutiny. Personal ownership of technologies coupled with access to social software means that all kinds of learning-related activity can potentially be e- enabled; e-learning can no longer be viewed as a purely institutionally based or narrowly defined set of activities....‖ (HEFCE paper 2009, 5)
  • 7. + Emerging technologies…  Emerging technologies may or may not be new technologies  Emerging technologies are evolving organism that exist in a state of ―coming into being‖  Emerging technologies go through hype cycles  Emerging technologies are not yet fully understood and not yet fully researched  Emerging technologies are potentially disruptive but their potential is mostly unfulfilled (Veletsianos 2010)
  • 8. + Johnson and Adams 201
  • 9. + Shift of locus of control…  Emerging technologies place the control over teaching and learning process firmly in the hands of students and lecturers as opposed of the institution….  Transfer of authority of knowledge and ownership of technology  Wisdom of the crowd, architecture of participation (Surowiecki 2004)  New issues to consider in terms of privacy, security, authority and control of information Becta 2008
  • 10. +
  • 11. + Disruptive, emergent, soft, transformative nature of technologies….
  • 12. + Type I vs Type II technologies  Type I uses of technology replicate existing teaching and learning practice,  while Type II uses of technology allow students and lecturers to do things that could not be done before, changing relationships between students and lecturers in fundamental ways. (Johnson and Maddux 2005)
  • 13. + Prescriptive vs emergent…  Prescriptive learning: In predictable domains, knowledge can be created and applied to provide control. The learning that is traditionally associated with predictable domains is typically organised hierarchically within centralised institutions.  Emergent learning: In complex-adaptive domains, knowledge does not provide prospective predictability but, rather, retrospective coherence: ―hindsight does not provide foresight‖ …. The learning that is appropriate is self-organised and typically collaborative. It is open and is created and distributed largely by the learners themselves. (Williams, Karousou, Macness 2011)
  • 14. + Hard vs soft technologies  Hard technologies: constraining, e.g. LMS limit the number of choices one can make, relatively easy to use, orchestrated by rules and regulations, risk to stifle creativity  Soft technologies: more freedom to play with, orchestrated by individual lecturer  ―Soft technologies need skill and artistry. It ain‘t just what you do, it‘s the way that you do it. A bad technology, used well, can work brilliantly, while a good technology, used badly, can be useless. Most learning technology research concentrates on technology (including methods and pedagogies) not the talent and skill with which it is applied that is frequently more significant.‖ (Dron 2011)
  • 15. + Qualities of disruptive technologies 1. It should be student-centered, with learning put first, and flexible enough to accommodate different styles and interests of students. It should provide necessary support, but require that the student do the work. 2. It should be designed to offer options, motivate students, and provide connections to students‘ lives, jobs, and communities. 3. It should capitalize on the willingness of lecturers and students alike to experiment and fail, to improve, and to keep at problems until solutions are crafted. (Meyer 2010)
  • 16. + Research aims
  • 17. + Research aims 1. To establish the extent to which lecturers are using technologies in teaching and learning and their rational (both institutional technologies and technologies outside the institutions‘ control), 2. To explore the use of emerging technologies and how these technologies impact on the range of learning events lecturers and students engage with, and 3. To explore lecturers experiences with the disruptive nature of emerging technologies
  • 19. + Laurillard…  ―Wehave begun at last to play with digital technologies as a way of meeting the demands of the digital age, but with an approach still born in the transmission model….. There is no progress, therefore, in how we teach, despite what might be possible with the new technology.‖ (Laurillard 2002, 141)
  • 20. +  Builds on:  social constructivism (Vygotsky) and  conversation theory (Pask)  Argues that complex learning involves:  a continuing iterative dialogue between teacher and student, which reveals the participants‘ conceptions Laurillard‘s and the variations between them… conversational There is no escape from the need for dialogue, no room for mere telling, nor framework (2002) for practice without description, nor for experimentation without reflection, nor for student action without feedback. (Laurillard 2002)
  • 21. + Learning conversations consist of… A discursive phase An interactive phase An adaptive phase And a reflective phase
  • 22. + Mapping media to learning experiences….
  • 23. Blogs, wikis, Facebook, Mxit, skype, Twitter, gmail…. Czerniewicz & Brown 2005
  • 24. + Effective practice  Effective and appropriate pedagogical practice is achieved by offering students a wide variety of media forms balanced for their pedagogical value rather than chosen for their novelty or entertainment factor (Czerniewicz and Brown 2005)
  • 25. + Research methodology  Mixed method design  2010 CPUT ICT survey: access and use of ICTs for teaching and learning  Survey tool: adapted from tool developed by Czerniewicz and Brown (2005)  In depth follow up interviews with five lecturers selected for their reputation for engaging with emerging technologies (gmail, YouTube, TED talks, Facebook, skype, IM, …)
  • 26.
  • 27. + 1.  Which technologies are lecturers using in teaching and learning ? Survey tool 2. How? Linking technologies and learning events….  Survey  Based on Laurillard‘s learning events  Comparing learning events by level of emerging technology usage  Fisher exact test to test for statistical Findings significance (p-level 0.05) 3. Can we find qualities of the disruptive nature of emerging technologies ?  Interviews, driven by Meyers qualities of disruptive technologies
  • 28. +   Use of ICTs in general Use of LMS as example of institutional technology  Use of emerging technologies WHAT?
  • 29. + Use of ICTs for T&L Staff: how many Staff: us e of BB for courses use ICTs ? te ac hing none Ys e 7% very few No 14% 39% about 53% 47% 14% half most 26% all
  • 30. + Staff: Use of Blackboard for.... Course materials Tools  95% use it for notes  73% announcements  89% for presentations  73% discussions  86% subject guide  61% assignments  38% video files  60% assessments  30% audio files  50% gradebook  43% groups
  • 31. Lecturers‘ use of emerging + technologies 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%
  • 32. + Staff: reasons for usage...  access to current, relevant, global, immediate information  adapt to new generation of learners, tools that are already used by students  diversity of learning experiences  independence from CPUT systems  mash up/integration
  • 33. Czerniewicz and Brown‘s learning + 1. strategies (21) mapped to learning events 2. Laurillard‘s learning events 1. Dialogue 2. Discovery 3. Practice and 4. Production HOW?
  • 34. + Learning strategies ICT based learning strategies (n=80) 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% All users 10% 0%
  • 35. +
  • 36. + Mapping use of ET and learning events… Emerging technologies used Category 5 or more High level user of ET 1-4 Low level user of ET 0 No use of ET
  • 37. + 100% 0% 10% 20% 40% 60% 70% 80% 90% 30% 50% Online search Email Word essays Online articles Poster/PPT Online notes Self tests CBTs Data analysis Sharing media eAssessment Databases Online collaboration Online discussions Social networks Simulations/Modelling MultiMedia Producation Blogs Podcasts CB games users / high level of ET Users Comparison learning strategies all All users High level of ET
  • 38. + Learning event: practice High level use Exact Sig Learning strategies All users of ET (2-sided) n % n % Word processed essay 67 87% 17 89% 0.493 Poster/presentation 60 78% 16 84% 0.485 Analyse /represent data 43 56% 13 68% 0.375 Create database 31 40% 9 47% 0.39 Multimedia production 17 22% 7 39% 0.395 Podcast 9 12% 5 26% 0.172
  • 39. + Learning event: practice High level use Exact Sig Learning strategies All users of ET (2-sided) n % n % Self testing 30 62% 10 56% 0.726 Computer based tutorials 30 62% 11 61% 0.303 Computer based tests for marked assessment 29 40% 9 50% 0.8 Simulations or modelling programmes 16 22% 7 39% 0.09 Computer based games 18 11% 5 28% 0.017*
  • 40. + Learning event: discovery High level use Exact Sig Learning strategies All users of ET (2-sided) n % n % Searching for information on the Internet 76 97% 19 100% 0.766 Finding online articles and research reports 64 80% 17 89% 0.468 Accessing lecture notes and ppt online 54 70% 15 79% 0.688 Sharing resources (images videos, music) 40 51% 15 79% 0.078 Online collaboration 30 38% 13 68% 0.028*
  • 41. + Learning event: dialogue High level use of Exact Sig Learning strategies All users ET (2-sided) n % n % Email 71 91% 19 100% 1.61 Discussion forum 25 32% 12 63% 0.04* Social networks 19 24% 13 68% 0.000* Online journals/Blogs 15 19% 9 47% 0.07* Online chat 8 10% 6 32% 0.032* * Statistical significant finding (p-value <0.05)
  • 42. + 1. It should be student-centered, with learning put first, and flexible enough to accommodate different styles and interests of students. It should provide necessary support, but require that the student do the work. 2. It should be designed to offer options, motivate students, and Disruptive nature of provide connections to students‘ emerging technologies lives, jobs, and communities. 3. It should capitalize on the Meyer 2010 willingness of lecturers and students alike to experiment and fail, to improve, and to keep at problems until solutions are crafted.
  • 43. ―…more self-directed learning...those who want to can learn more than is necessary; it‘s not boxed in, it‘s not confined. We have outcomes but how they get there, it can be easily navigated...‖ ―Every second week the students are allowed to or invited to present their own topic and their own TED talk...and then usually chaos erupts because they choose controversial topics that are very close to their heart but not close to anybody else‘s‖
  • 44. + 1. It should be student-centered, with learning put first, and flexible enough to accommodate different styles and interests of students. It should provide necessary support, but require that the student do the work. 2. It should be designed to offer options, motivate students, and Disruptive nature of provide connections to students‘ emerging technologies lives, jobs, and communities. 3. It should capitalize on the Meyer 2010 willingness of lecturers and students alike to experiment and fail, to improve, and to keep at problems until solutions are crafted.
  • 45. + ―It‘s a way of doing life. It‘s a network. It‘s not doing computers. It‘s not doing mobile learning. It‘s just learning – it‘s just life.‖ ―Also continuing the learning beyond the classroom and beyond the studio...you know if you commit yourself to Architecture ... it doesn‘t, you can never escape it, it never stops.‖ ―Our students generally don‘t have a wide exposure to life. Their life is you know it‘s the townships...its MXit, its TV...its Generations, its Rhythm City and that‘s it...they don‘t read the newspapers...they don‘t listen to the radio...they don‘t read...listen to the news...and so part of my TED talks is to expand their horizons....they are usual visual creatures and they want to see what‘s going on...‖
  • 46. + 1. It should be student-centered, with learning put first, and flexible enough to accommodate different styles and interests of students. It should provide necessary support, but require that the student do the work. 2. It should be designed to offer options, motivate students, and Disruptive nature of provide connections to students‘ emerging technologies lives, jobs, and communities. 3. It should capitalize on the Meyer 2010 willingness of lecturers and students alike to experiment and fail, to improve, and to keep at problems until solutions are crafted.
  • 47. + ―I mean Twitter...how long had Twitter been out? What‘s going to happen at the end of the year? ―We‘ve never needed support...you There is going to be another press the help button or you programme...so we can‘t say we Google it!‖ have reached the end of it. We‘ve never. So there will be a new technology, it may be...I mean ―It takes hours of preparation…you can ask Whatsapp...all of a sudden they my husband, you know I used to have a life are all on Whatsapp...they actually but my job ate it…I spend hours and asked me the other day please can weekends at preparing lessons like this. But I Whatsapp you? I said no, no, the thing is once I‘ve used it now, that lesson no...I also got a life. But I will have I can use next year again…but then each to use Whatsapp as well. That‘s year there‘s something new so then, I what they want to do...‖ change it…‖
  • 48. + Conclusions
  • 49. + Conclusions  Confirming previous findings we established that majority of lecturers use a very limited range of learning events  BUT: use of emerging technologies seem to broaden the range of learning events lecturers engage with…especially when it comes to dialogical and collaborative learning events  Evidence of disruptive nature of emerging technologies: focus on opening up boundaries, transferring control and responsibility towards students, providing exciting learning opportunities, enthusiasm!  Recognize champions who use ICTs creatively and widen application of technology in T&L  Create a space to engage in a discussion around the use of institutional and non-institutional technologies to advocate comprehensive of use of ICTs in teaching and learning
  • 50. + Thank you!  Any questions?  Contact:  Daniela Gachago at gachagod@cput.ac.za  Eunice Ivala ivalae@cput.ac.za  Agnes Chigona chigonaa@cput.ac.za  More information on blog www.edutechcput.wordpress.com  We would like to acknowledge the CPUT Riftal fund which funded this project and the NRF project on the use of Emerging Technologies in SA Higher Education for the knowledge shared and gained in this project
  • 51. + References Czerniewicz, L., and C. Brown. 2005. ―The uses of information and communication (ICT) in teaching and learning in South African higher education practices in the Western Cape.‖ Perspectives in Education 23 (4): 1–18. Dron, J. 2011. ―Soft things, hard things and invisible elephants.‖ Athabasca University Landing. https://landing.athabascau.ca/pg/groups/89415. HEFCE. (2009). Effective practice in a from Retrieved from digital age. Retrieved from http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/elearningpedagogy/effectivepractic edigitalage_textonly.doc Herrington, J, A Herrington, J Mantei, I Olney, and B Ferry. 2009. Using mobile technologies to develop new ways of teaching and learning. Faculty of Education, University of Wollongong. ro.uow.edu.au/newtech Johnson, L, and S. Adams. 2011. Technology Outlook UK Tertiary Education 2011-2016: An NMC Horizon Report Regional Analysis. Technology. Texas. Kirkup, G., and A. Kirkwood. 2005. ―Information and communications technologies (ICT) in higher education teaching—a tale of gradualism rather than revolution.‖ Learning, Media and Technology 30 (2): 185–199. Laurillard, D. 2002. Rethinking university teaching: A conversational framework for the effective use of learning technologies. 2nd ed. London: Routledge. Maddux, CD., and LD. Johnson. 2005. ―Type II Applications of Technology in Education.‖ Computers in the Schools 22 (1&2): 1-5. Margaryan, A, and A Littlejohn. 2011. ―Are digital natives a myth or reality?: Students‘ use of technologies for learning.‖ Computers & Education 56 (2): 429-440. Meyer, K E. 2010. ―The Role of Disruptive Technology in the Future of Higher Education.‖ EDUCAUSE Quartely 33 (1). http://www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSE+Quarterly/EDUCAUSEQuarterlyMagazineVolum/TheRoleofDisruptiveTechnologyi/199378. Veletsianos, G 2011. ―Designing Opportunities for Transformation with Emerging Technologies George Veletsianos.‖ Educational Technology 51 (2): 41- 46. Veletsianos, G 2010. Emerging Technologies in Distance Education. Theory and Practice. Edmonton: AU Press. Williams, R R Karousou, and J. Mackness. 2011. ―Emergent Learning and Learning Ecologies in Web 2.0.‖ International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning 12 (3).
  • 52. +

Notas do Editor

  1. New emerging technologies…use in HE on the rise…does this affect how lecturers use technology in T&amp;L
  2. Higher Education Funding Council for England
  3. Student centeredness
  4. Community, opening up boundaries
  5. Motivation, enthusiasm, self efficiency….