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Title: Digital autobiographies: blogging across years to enhance university learning


1
Digital autobiographies blogging across years to
enhance university learning
  • Alan Gleaves
  • Caroline Walker
  • University of Sunderland

2
Project Aims
  • The aim of this paper is to discuss the results
    of a research project that investigated the
    potential of study modules utilising blogs as
    digital autobiographies for supporting the
    development of academic and technological
    literacies and learning in undergraduates within
    a university department within the North-East of
    England.

3
Project motivations
  • This project is motivated by a strong local and
    national need to improve undergraduates
    abilities and achievements in writing, multimodal
    narrative, thinking and critical reflection,
    whilst at the same time, furnish them with
    enhanced employability skills such as team work
    and interpersonal relationship building.

4
Theoretical constructs
  • At the time of this study, relatively little
    research had been carried out into the use of
    digital autobiographies for the development of
    specific academic skills for learning purposes
    (Stiler Philleo, 2003) rather than for
    assessment purposes alone, by pairs of students,
    especially in this cross-year study mode.
    Further, whilst blogs are gaining credibility as
    discursive and writing development tools, there
    is currently limited work(but see for example
    Flatley, 2005) to show how they might be used
    cooperatively and dialogically, to enhance
    learners interpretations and understandings both
    of subject specific concepts, as well as
    meta-level experiences of learning.

5
Our study
  • During a re-design and re-validation of our
    modules and programmes in ICT Education, we wrote
    two modules, designed to model and foster
  • Module 1 Approaches to Criticality (comprising
    critical thinking, digital literacies, narrative
    structures). This module was trialled by Year 1
    Undergraduates (21 students).
  • Module 2 Digital Autobiographies (comprising
    autobiographical approaches to teaching and
    learning, digital narratives, mentoring). This
    module was trialled by Year 2 Undergraduates (18
    students).
  • Although this seems ambitious, there were many
    reasons for doing so

6
Purpose of module re-design
  • Our students report that (and our analysis and
    experience bears this out) prior study
    backgrounds emphasise process and information
    gathering at the expense of analysis massive
    assessment loads often at the expense of
    developing understanding or very frequently,
    discouragement of critical thought (such as in
    the uniformed services where the focus is on
    procedure and adherence to protocols)
  • Modular structure has led to an inflation of
    assessment objects in teacher education, where
    there are diverse kinds of assessment to be done
    (values, ideals, behaviours, knowledge), this has
    led to hugely un-necessary assessment loads for
    students.
  • Because of the content heavy nature of teaching
    courses, we needed vehicles by which students
    could investigate values, autobiographies,
    relationships earlier, and learn how to
    understand their effects on their own learning
  • Perhaps most importantly, we believe that the
    best way to teach and for students to learn
    values, behaviours and their impact, is to model
    them, using Noddings (1986) ideas of fidelity
    modelling, dialogue, practice and confirmation.

7
So what did we do?
  • Both groups were introduced and the modules
    described. The reasons for doing the modules was
    explained and questions taken.
  • For both modules (20 credits, 3500 words
    equivalent assessments), there were three parts
    to the assessment
  • 1. The keeping of a blog
  • 2. A record of critical conversations between
    pairs of students as to the content of both
    blogs, answering questions, discussing issues,
    mentoring one another
  • 3. A critical analysis of their own blog in terms
    of narrative structures, autobiographical links
    to learning, and the use of digital forms
  • It is important to point out that all of the
    blogs were anonymous. The identities of the
    writers were known only to us (tutors) and to
    pairs working together, although all blogs could
    be read freely - a list of code names was given
    to both classes.

8
So why blogging?
  • Blogging, when used in a systematic way, lends
    itself very closely to the stages of fidelity
  • Modelling we (the tutors) both wrote blogs for
    the duration of the modules we taught the module
    content - criticality and narrative - using
    standpoint theory (Harding) and different ways
    of knowing(Belenky) we used our own experiences
    and blogs as vehicles to analyse our practice.
  • Dialogue in separate and combined classes,
    students were confronted with their entries
    (anonymised) and asked to reflect on their
    thoughts and words. We (as tutors) offered
    strategies to clarify problems, sort out
    difficulties, and considered other philosophies

9
So why blogging contd.?
  • Practice although pre-service teachers obviously
    need to practice certain values and behaviours,
    it is usually content and procedures that are
    practiced and assessed. In this case, the
    critical conversations allow students to
    practice listening, mentoring, being autonomous,
    empathy and compassion.
  • Confirmation this last stage involves us
    (tutors) holding a mirror up to each students
    thoughts, and letting each see a reflection of
    themselves, in the context of their own history,
    thoughts, actions, and of course, learning
    process. It is at this point, that we tackle
    self theory, idealised I, and how these
    relate to others. This stage is the culmination
    of all their work and results in the production
    of the critical analysis.

10
Project outcomes (1) The Blogs
  • Although we imagined we were very clear as to the
    content of the blogs and spent a great deal of
    time discussing this (reflections on the module
    content, understanding of issues, learning
    issues, problems with the activity, writing,
    asking questions, barriers to understanding), the
    eventual content showed that there was a great
    diversity of entries. We did focus group
    interviews with students which showed why
  • Lack of confidence in free writing scared to be
    honest in public (even though anonymised)
    unconfident about their voice or whether they
    had one or should have one lack of clarity about
    what they thought that we wanted.
  • The content of the blogs was extremely
    interesting and useful to us we found that
    students often dont understand feedback have
    difficulty participating in discourse in class
    support each other as a community dynamically and
    proactively a lot more than is given credit for.

11
Project outcomes (2) The cross-years critical
conversations
  • These were either loved or loathed by students
    (fortunately mostly loved)! We paired students
    randomly and obviously, this led to some issues
    with relationships, particularly with students
    that were perceived to be unmotivated for
    whatever reason.
  • Again, although the content was prescribed, we
    found the conversations far more wide-ranging and
    potentially therefore more potent. Some students
    remarked that this was the most useful learning
    experience they had ever had, and thanked us for
    giving time to such a powerful opportunity as a
    pre-cursor to teaching.
  • Reservations about this aspect ranged from
    age-related biases (unfounded in almost every
    case - from student testimonies) class related
    biases and religious and cultural issues. One
    student was paired with a student from a
    travelling community, and the conversations were
    profound as they were disturbing initially.

12
Project outcomes (3) The critical analyses
learning about themselves and the whole point of
the exercise
  • Perhaps the most enlightening aspects of these
    were the unexpected outcomes for the students.
    Excerpts include
  • I didnt want to look at what I had written
    usually I never look at assignments and never
    read the feedback. In this one, I had to do the
    opposite face what I had said and then really
    try and understand why I had said it.
  • I knew had a problem with doing coursework. It
    always makes sense in the class but then I come
    out and I cant get my head around it. This made
    the work on a thread that stayed there and so I
    could keep banging on about the same thing and I
    got credit for it! And I understand why now!
  • In terms of content, I think Ill use some
    techniques (digital stuff) later rather than get
    use out of them for this module. I think they
    were just tools, but the main purpose was
    expression and feelings. Understanding how we
    feel about ourselves and others and using it.

13
General outcomes for students
  • The evidence from this project suggests that such
    learning interventions may well support the
    formation of autonomous communities of learners,
    whose experiences are validated as very positive
    contributions not only to knowledge and skills
    such as critical thinking, writing and literacy,
    cooperative teamwork and mentoring, but also to
    crucial, but often overlooked, aspects of
    university learning, such as resilience,
    self-theory formation, and the cultivation of
    Ideal-I identities.

14
And for us as teachers?
  • Further, using blogs in this way provides a
    template for teaching and learning as active
    interventions in which deep learning is not a
    matter of chance, and in which both teachers and
    learners can capture the complexity of cognition
    embodied in classrooms of diverse learners.

15
References and contact details
  • Alan.walker-gleaves_at_sunderland.ac.uk
  • Caroline.walker-gleaves_at_sunderland.ac.uk
  • Refs
  • Flatley, M. E. (2005) Blogging for Enhanced
    Teaching and Learning. Business Communication
    Quarterly 68(1) 7780.
  • Noddings, N. (1986) Fidelity in teaching,
    teacher education, and research for teaching.
    Harvard Educational Review, 56(4) 496-510.
  • Stiler, G. M. and T. Philleo. 2003. Blogging and
    Blogspots An Alternative Format for Encouraging
    Reflective Practice Among Preservice Teachers.
    Education 123(4) 78997.
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