Charting a Collaborative Course Online: Learning in the Community (with Carolyn Kristjansson)
1. Charting
a Collaborative Course Online:
Learning in the Community
CAROLYN KRISTÁNSSON & NATHAN HALL
TRINITY WESTERN UNIVERSITY
TESL CANADA CONFERENCE, REGINA, SK
MAY 9-10, 2014
2. Perspectives on Teacher Education
Traditional
➤ Teacher learning as individual
cognitive endeavor
➤ Teacher-learner responsible for
acquiring & applying what is taught
(Burns & Richards, 2009)
Sociocultural
➤ Learning as situated social practice
(Lave & Wenger, 1991)
➤ Second Language Teacher
Education (SLTE) – conceptualizing
SLTE as emerging community of
practice
➤ Learning is mediated through
participation (Freeman, 2009; Singh
& Richards, 2009)
3. Question:
➤ What might this look like in a SLTE course mediated by
online technologies and informed by online
collaborative learning theory?
4. Online Collaborative Learning (OCL)
➤ OCL Theory:
“OLC refers to educational applications that emphasize
collaborative discourse and knowledge building mediated by
the Internet: learners work together online to identify and
advance issues of understanding, and to apply their new
understanding and analytical terms and tools to solving
[addressing] problems, constructing plans or developing
[multi-perspectival] explanations for phenomena. OCL
emphasizes processes that lead to both conceptual
understanding and knowledge products.” (Harasim 2012, p.
88)
5. OCL & Community
➤ The community-centred lens allows us to include the critical social
component of learning in our online learning designs. Here we find
Vygotsky’s (2000) popular notions of “social cognition” relevant…
Lipman’s (1991) “community of inquiry,” and Etienne Wenger’s (2002)
ideas of “community of practice”…. Wilson (1997) has described the
characteristics of participants in online communities as having a
shared sense of belonging, trust, expectation of learning, and
commitment to participate in and contribute to the community
(Anderson, 2008, p. 51).
6. OCL & Interactivity
➤ Interaction – or its derivative term interactivity – serves a
variety of functions in the educational transaction…
interactivity is fundamental to creating the learning
communities espoused by Lipman (1991), Wenger (2002),
and other influential educational theorists who focus on the
critical role of community in learning. …Finally, the value of
another person’s perspective, usually gained through
interaction, is a key learning component in constructivist
learning theories (Shank, 1993), and in inducing mindfulness
in learners (Visser, 2000). (Anderson, 2008, p. 55)
7. OCL & Knowledge in Community
➤ OCL Theory:
➤ Learning activity
➤ Informed by discipline norms & discourse process that
emphasizes conceptual learning and knowledge building.
➤ Ss have a relationship to the knowledge community mediated
by teacher/mentor who represents the community
➤ Learning & Knowledge Building
➤ viewed as meaningful to society and not driven only by
personal interest or to fulfill class assignment
8. OCL & Process
➤ Distinction: Cooperative vs Collaborative
➤ OCL: Collaborative Process & Product
9. OCL Technology
➤ Distinction:
➤ Technology as online learning tool(s)
➤ Technology as online learning environment
➤ OL environment: shared space for discourse &
interaction = heart of OCL
➤ TWU MATESOL CMS - wiki
10. TWU OL MATESOL Program
➤ Program Structure:
➤ Virtuous Cycle of Knowledge Creation
(Tichy & Cardwell, 2002)
➤ Modular Approach
➤ Didactic (“Offering” x 1)
➤ Collaborative (“TPOV” x 3)
“This is a collaborative paper in which the group presents a clear,
workable, negotiable position on what has been learned and
researched. It includes a dimension that only the students can
bring to the process and a central point or thesis and a set of
reasons or arguments for that position. The TPOV is reviewed by
all students…"
11. TWU OL MATESOL - Orientation
Product
Process
Praxis
Transmission
Transaction
Transformation
Cummins, 2007, p.45
13. Curriculum Course
➤ Lead Instructor
➤ Determines module focus, readings, “offering” content, and TPOV project (in dialogue
w/ collaborating instructor to extent possible)
➤ Provides feedback on draft TPOV
➤ Provides feedback & grade on module reflective reports and course paper
➤ Collaborating Instructor (a.k.a. “collaboratti”)
➤ Provides Ss with feedback on summaries of key readings,
monitors/prompts/facilitates group interaction, responds to student questions
➤ In this course – tech expert!
➤ Provides feedback on draft TPOV each module
➤ Provides feedback on proposal & outline of course paper
14. Curriculum Course: Overview
➤ Content Focus
➤ Understand POLEs & related theoretical frameworks
➤ Apply knowledge in analysis of existing curriculum
➤ Apply knowledge in creation of curriculum
➤ Service Learning Projects
➤ After-school curriculum for refugee youth
➤ ProD curriculum for EFL teachers at beginner level English
proficiency
15. ProD EFL Curriculum Project
➤ M1: POLE in context
➤ Adopt assigned perspective (3 Ps)
➤ Reflect on (imagine) view of LE in assigned context from this perspective
➤ Reflect on pros and cons of designing curriculum from this perspective
➤ M2: Student Needs in Context
➤ Needs analysis from various perspectives
➤ Their view of situational & Ss’ language & non-language needs
➤ Type of needs analysis that might get at Ss’ view of the same
➤ Tentative decisions of which needs to address or not
16. ProD EFL Curriculum Project
➤ M3: Introduce Project Parameters (recent iteration)
➤ Curriculum: 3-week ProD course for primary school ELTs
➤ Scope: Language in 3 areas
➤ Classroom Talk (i.e., teacher talk—language skills needed to conduct and manage
an English class),
➤ Lunchroom Talk (i.e., small talk/casual conversation with colleagues—language
skills needed to interact informally on a social level with fellow teachers), and what
we are calling
➤ Conference Talk (i.e., formal professional talk—language skills needed to interact in
formal professional settings with visiting professionals/scholars/dignitaries).
➤ Scope: Technology
➤ Skills to safely and effectively use technology for educational purposes (e.g., mobile
phones, computers, tablets, the Internet).
17. ProD EFL Curriculum Project
➤ Foreword
➤ Table of Contents
➤ Introduction
➤ Selected External
Standards
➤ General Scope & Sequence
➤ Language Focus Overview
21. Challenges?
➤ In general
➤ Amount of work involved / time
➤ Different personalities / needs
➤ Different understanding of what needed to be done
➤ Creating for others but no firsthand knowledge of students or
teachers involved
➤ Understanding the limitations, especially cultural
➤ Design Perspective
➤ How to distribute the curricular components across groups while
maintaining coherence
➤ Right balance of support (e.g. starter ideas, templates, timeline)
➤ Time
22. Rewards?
➤ Writing for a purpose, not just an assignment
➤ Working together and navigating how to work with others
➤ Generating ideas and developing skills that can be directly
applied to own classrooms (in-service teachers)
➤ Group knowledge
➤ Sense of confidence in how to approach curriculum work
➤ Sense of accomplishment—incredibly rewarding
23. Adding it up
➤ The course
➤ how we have charted and navigated our online collaborative course
➤ Learning by participation in the community
➤ the SLTE community
➤ the MATESOL OL learning community
➤ the ELT community of practice
➤ EFL ProD project: legitimate peripheral participation (Lave & Wenger, 1991)
➤ Learning to think as professionals and colleagues of EFL teachers working within
challenging real world constraints
➤ Leading to growing ongoing participation in the ELT community
24. Insights
➤ Charting an online
collaborative course?
➤ Learning in the community
(Community of Practice)?
➤ See the handout
26. References
➤ Anderson, R. (2008). Towards a theory of online learning. In The theory
and Practice of online learning (pp. 45-74). Edmonton: AU Press.
Retrieved from: http://www.aupress.
ca/books/120146/ebook/99Z_Anderson_2008-
Theory_and_Practice_of_Online_Learning.pdf
➤ Lave, J., & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated earning: Legitimate peripheral
participation, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
➤ Harasim, Linda. (2012). Learning theory and online technologies. New
York: Routledge.