For those that are wondering, it is cloudy with a chance of rain on the central Florida gulf coast. Truly! You could look it up.
The e-learning 2008 conference sponsered by the Instructional Technology Council (ITC) is off to a great start. Following a Saturday night keynote address on busting the myths of e-learning (and we do hold strongly to some of the myths!), Sunday saw a number of concurrent sessions presenting great ideas. I already have several pages of notes.
One session was how to reach the digital natives, aka the Millenial generation (those born 1982 and later). There are some interesting demographics and shared experiences in this group that really set them apart from those of us who are older. We really need to consider how to use Web 2.0 tools (as one slide I saw yesterday pointed out ... some folks may not even realize there was a Web 1.0 ... or a Web 1.5) to reach this generation. Examples are YouTube, blogs, wikis, RSS, the list grows longer each day. One common characteristic of this generation is that life is spent in continuous, partial attention. Hmm ....
Attended a great session on Online Instructor Competencies. The presenter challenged us to think about HOW learning occurs. This may be a more fruitful starting point than the course compentencies -- though we do eventually get to those. We need to look at the following 5 areas from the student perspective:
1. subject
2. type of relations (with the instructor and other students)
3. control of time, place, and PACE of learning
4. type of assessment
5. media used.
The presenter talked about the importance of the instructor reaching out to students ON THE DAY THEY REGISTER ... even before the first day of class. We'll be having more discussions about this among distance learning faculty (I know some already do just this).
Here's a link to the slides from that presentation:
http://bowene.edublogs.org/2008/02/12/elearning-2008/presentation-slides-2/Let me know via the "comments" below if this link isn't working correctly. Hard to tell on the computer I'm on.
A couple of the general sessions on Sunday covered
Learning from Our Worst Practices and a debate on the topic
Classroom Observation is an Administrator's Right (specific to the online environment). I'll share more on these two topics at a later time.
On to Monday's sessions!