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Theory Meets Practice: Piaget and Bandura Go OnLine

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2 blank sheets of notepad paper. We will give away all of the books we brought. If you write your name on a notepad sheet and submit it to us, you might receive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theory Meets Practice: Piaget and Bandura Go OnLine


1
Theory Meets Practice Piaget and Bandura Go
On-Line
  • Innovations 2009
  • Rich Cerkovnik, Ph.D.
  • Anne Arundel Community College, MD
  • Mike Cerkovnik, J.D., M.A.
  • Mary Institute and Country Day School, MO

2
Please Do Now
  • Obtain
  • Presentation Disk
  • Resource Handout (hardcopy)
  • 2 blank sheets of notepad paper
  • We will give away all of the books we brought.
    If you write your name on a notepad sheet and
    submit it to us, you might receive one of these
    books. Please do this now.

3
Introduction Questions
  • Organizations K12, CC, 4 year, other
  • Who Instruction, Administration, Student
    Support, other
  • Beliefs about on-line instruction

4
Overview
  • Disk Documentation
  • Presentation Preview
  • Purpose
  • Beliefs, Engagement, and Models
  • Contextualization, Dialogue, and Examples
  • Conclusion
  • Questions

5
Disk Documentation (16)
  • Some Beliefs and Constraints
  • Complete Course Policy and Related Documents for
    Set Up
  • Concept Conference General Topics and Topics of
    the Week
  • Examples of Conference Interactions
  • Concept Conferences and Participation Reports
    Implementation and Evaluation Documents
  • Seminal Resources (12 books, 7 articles, 1
    audio-cast, 3 summaries) (Handout)

6
Seminal
  • Seminal does not necessarily equal new
  • Handout (write on, fresh copy on disk)

7
Presentation Preview
  • Focuses on beliefs about on-line instruction
  • Many educators and the general public have
    beliefs about OL instruction that influence their
    decisions concerning OL instruction
  • This presentation centers on the fundamentals of
    sound learning theory and motivation theory that
    is manifested in high quality instruction that
    surrounds us everyday, regardless of format.
  • This presentation contextualizes this focus with
    some examples from a current on-line classroom
    and provides contexts for the participants to
    explore their own beliefs related to what we know
    about learning and motivation.
  • One of the take-aways will be a concise and
    efficient list of the most seminal or thought
    provoking books (about 10), articles (about 5),
    audio-casts (1) , and summaries (3). Plus a
    complete set of softcopy documents of the
    on-line course materials.

8
Purpose
  • Identify personal beliefs about OL teaching and
    learning
  • Explore these personal beliefs through a
    knowledge lens (what we know about learning and
    motivation)
  • Reflect and self-assess per personal beliefs

9
Do This Now Please
  • Write down, on a single blank notepad paper, two
    personal beliefs you have about OL teaching and
    learning (2 minutes)
  • These beliefs do not have be generally accepted
    beliefs, but MUST accurately represent your own
    personal beliefs or feelings about on-line
    instruction.
  • Anonymous.
  • Submit to the front

10
Tetrahedron of LearningBransford/Jenkins
11
Parallels Between Classroom and Presentation
  • Reflection and Self-Assessment
  • Learning Theory
  • Motivation Theory
  • Cyclical
  • Non-threatening environment
  • Motivation Theory
  • Learning Theory

12
Why Explore these Beliefs?
  • We design our classroom environments based upon
    what we believe about
  • Ourselves as instructors
  • Students
  • Technology
  • Administrators/Evaluators
  • Our Global Environment
  • Participants Beliefs

13
Some Beliefs and Constraints
  • Some students will cheat if given the
    opportunity
  • Long held beliefs (concepts) are highly resistive
    to change
  • During face2face instruction I rely upon many
    non-verbal cues to evaluate my students degree
    of understanding, and base my instruction upon
    these spontaneous assessments
  • I have limited time

14
More Beliefs Constraints
  • Some students should not take on-line courses
  • An instructor has significant influence over how
    a student feels about the academic environment
  • There are teachable moments and sometimes
    information/instruction/ learning activity is
    best timed to these moments
  • More on Resource Disk

15
What My Beliefs Made Me Do
  • Create a non-threatening environment to
    facilitate student reflection and self-assessment
  • Maximize the impact and efficiency of student and
    instructor responses
  • Choice (respecting individual differences)
  • Timing the teaching moment to coincide with the
    learning moment
  • A word about FAQs
  • Minimize the frivolous postings
  • Respect time
  • Accurately assess student reflection and
    self-assessment (Participation Grade)

16
Concept Conferences
  • Topics
  • My Question (no points)
  • Makes Sense
  • Does Not Make Sense
  • My Life
  • Change in Thinking
  • Resource
  • Topic of the Week (1-3)
  • Project/lab related
  • Additional content
  • Additional learning activity/misconceptions
  • Timing (10-13 per semester)
  • Choice/Personally Relevant

17
Participation Reports
  • 3 participation reports
  • Start with 70
  • Do not require that students present a correct
    scientific view of a concept
  • Student selfassessment
  • Student is responsible for arguing for the merits
    of their participation (sample format provided)
  • Reduce end-of-semester crush

18
Participation Report 1
  • I hope this is close to what you're expecting
    except for the amount of participation. I didn't
    realize how little I was actually participating.
    I'm working with the family tax prep business and
    working on getting more time to focus towards
    this class.
  • Student Comment

19
Results
  • I rarely see a trivial conference posting
  • No student has complained about their
    participation score
  • Participation scores vary across students over a
    broad range
  • There is a sense of community within the
    classroom

20
So
21
  • Who was this Lev Vygotsky anyway, and why should
    I care?

22
Conclusion
  • Audience Beliefs
  • Next step ponderings/actions
  • Presentation on League Website (not disk)

23
Questions
  • ?

24
The End
25
Additional Reference
  • Reflection in action, reflection on action
    Designing for Reflection in On-Line Courses,
    2002, Harrington and Oliver

26
Theory Meets Practice Piaget and Bandura Go
On-Line
  • Innovations 2009
  • Reno, NV
  • March 16, 2009
  • Mike Cerkovnik, J.D., M.A.
  • Rich Cerkovnik, Ph.D.
  • Anne Arundel Community College

27
Recap
  • Generate student reflection
  • Writing reveals student thinking about concepts
  • Other students identify with reflection
  • Instructor modifies or deepens concept
  • Tone of instructor response is critical

28
Bandura/Dweck
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