Archive for June 9th, 2008

09
Jun
08

ELI Web Seminar – Assessing the Impact of Technology On Learning

I can already see the addictive nature of edublogging. This is going to be a fantastic way of keeping track of webinars and recording my feedback for future ref. Fantastic I tell you!

This particular webinar (http://net.educause.edu/eliweb086) is a subject near and dear to my heart. How DO we determine the impact technology has on learning? There seems to be plenty of agreement that it does have an impact, but how much of an impact? Significant? Minimal? And having an impact doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s a *positive* impact. And which technology? Not all technologies are created equal. So often faculty ask me about various apps and I want to encourage their experimentation and curiosity, but we also have to address why to use something, not just the how.

In this webinar Karen Swan is emphasizing the importance of instruction over the technology: you can’t ask generalities because there will always be exceptions. Instead, look at the particular instance: does this podcast improve learning in this course subject? Can’t argue with that at all. Start with desired outcomes and then look at specific inputs. I’m not sure how faculty will respond to this response- the ones who are willing and able to do this are already doing it (theoretically); faculty who want to try out technology usually want a blanket answer, however- they’re already going through a time investment in learning how to use the tool in the first place, and I suspect that they wouldn’t thrilled about having to add additional assessment rubrics on top of that.

I’m amused that the survey data on student learning is pulled from UCF’s recent assessment data on learner characteristics (thanks Chuck!). Professional development equals more than knowing how to use the technology- they need to know how to use it in meaningful ways. This is the key issue I’m concerned with. The workshop training I provide almost exclusively deals with the how- in a group I can give different applications as examples, but it primarily rests on the faculty member to use what they have learned in a meaningful way for student learning.

UCF conducts a dedicated professional development track that addresses online pedagogy, but not all faculty have access to this (strictly limited seating). My department (Course Development & Web Services) and the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning are looking for ways to make pedagogy input more accessible to faculty outside the professional development track, especially for adjunct and transient faculty.

Overall, I can’t say that I took much new away from this session- some new assessment ideas and a fresh look at the intersection of teaching and learning, but the presentation was mainly geared toward semester-long events. The session title really only peripherally had to do with the content- the focus was on assessment and less on technology- a valid point in Swan’s approach, but I would have liked to have seen a case study of the system applied to an actual instance of technology use in the classroom to move it out of the theoretical.

I must admit, however, that I was marginally amused by some of the technical issues they had with Connect- it sounded very much as if the presenter was using a stationary mic and occasionally moved closer and farther away while speaking. I’m guilty of this myself, which reminds me to get my mic jack fixed before Friday’s online training workshop. *snerk*

09
Jun
08

From Bassa Nova to Biggie Smalls…

Welcome to the world from the Redtech pen (metaphorically speaking, of course). What, pray tell, is Redtech, you may well ask? What is the meaning behind the post title? What is the answer to life, the universe, and everything? (by the way, if you don’t know that last one, please move along.) Well, let me tell you a story…

A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, a hungry English grad assistant found herself in need of extra income to expand her unappetizing diet of ramen. Rescue appeared in the form of a data entry job in the Dean’s office. The GA soon found herself challenged by things she had never dreamed of doing: managing listservs, editing webpages, even *gasp!* teaching faculty how to do these things. Eventually, the English teacher to-be found herself caught up in a world of learning and technology and eventually became *drumroll please* an INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNOLOGIST.

Flash to today, ten years later. Said GA now resides at the University of Central Florida, continuing to pursue dreams of fresh sushi and Thai noodles. But each of us, at some time, begins to ponder: Who am I? What am I doing? What is this thing called Instructional Technology? Is this my beautiful house? And so I have come to create this blog, to explore what it means to be an Instructional Technologist in a time when technology is king, education is evolving, and there is still no better way to rile up a cocktail party than by asking a group of academics to define learning.

So, back to the initial questions: what is Redtech? Well, in my search for meaning in regards to the beast known as the Instructional Technologist, I made a few amazing discoveries. First and foremost, there are nearly as many definitions of Instructional Technology as there are Instructional Technologists. Being the literary-minded gal I am, I then began to assemble my own definition, only to slowly realize that my definition of my role does not quite correspond with the institutional definition of my position. In addition, few of the folks who I would pin as ITs (a coarse abbreviation to save my fingertips and the length of these posts) carry this title, and a few who do, don’t fit into this scheme. Whu? So, I decided to go to the source- find other ITs and get THEIR ideas, definitions, descriptions and decisions, only to discover that probably 3/4ths of the blogs I was able to dig up are either stagnant or empty. Quelle horreur!

Anyhow, left to my own devices (always a risky thing to do) I decided to start my own blog to collect sources, resources, and points of view as I continue my hunt for the elusive Instructional Technologist. As an Instructional/Educational/Academic Technologist (interesting how popularity of some of these titles have waxed and waned, but I’ll save that for a later post) I foolishly wanted my blog name to somehow reflect this search. After sifting through the scads of empty or defunct blogs already in existence, and the few wildly successful ones, I found my options slightly limited. Edtech, while moderately descriptive, did not quite have the catchiness for which I was hoping. Enter: people with poor memory. How does this correlate? Well, my hair is red. Yes, it often occurs that if someone cannot remember my name, they call me “Red”, and for reasons unknown even to myself, I actually respond. *shrug* So, viola! Redtech is born.

Oh, and the post title? Well, if you haven’t noticed by now, I occasionally ramble. Expect to find things here that don’t necessarily contribute to my quest, but which I’ve stumbled across along the way.




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one chick's search to define her role as an instructional technologist

 

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