Given the
bleak outlook for the VET sector in Victoria - for the TAFE sector anyway - it
was encouraging that ConVerge went ahead this year, and was well attended with
about 300 delegates participating.
On the flight
home I was reading about blogging in Howard Rheingold's NetSmart . Rheingold says
that when people criticise bloggers for writing about things they might
consider trivial they are missing the point. The point is that whenever people
commit thoughts to writing it is a valuable exercise in clarifying your thinking
and disciplining the mind. Writing is of itself, ipso facto, a good thing to do. And so my thoughts on the sessions
I attended at ConVerge12.
Tim Longhurst
The
opening keynote was from Tim Longhurst, 'futurist', and CEO of consultancy firm,
Key Message An engaging and entertaining speaker he based his talk around three themes:
1.
Wisdom is
in the group
2.
Barriers
are collapsing
3. the power of
small
He quoted Chris Anderson ( from Wired) saying that the
world is getting better in many ways, but then showed a rather trite example of
Lil Demon, the break dancer. As good a break dancer as this kid may be it's a
stretch to think this has improved the world! Perhaps the point
was better made by citing examples of people who have never met f2f collaborating
with others across geographical and temporal boundaries - this is significant progress.
An
exercise followed where it was revealed that 80% of the ConVerge audience have
used their smart phone for banking - apparently a good indicator of the extent
of 'digital-ness' of people. (I haven't!)
Best bits of the future
1 We will all become cyborgs
He cited
the example of people who took the Turing test, and who were unable to tell if they were talking to a person or robot. In some cases they were wrong. When
they thought they were talking with a robot it was a person and vice versa. So
machine intelligence is improving.
2. Live on the edge
·
Innovation
is really about asking is there a better
way of doing this?
·
Find and
foster the edge in your organisation
·
Make a
point of listening to an 'edger' for 20 mins a month. (I like this idea -
simple to implement.)
3. Abundance
Jamie
Oliver gives his recipes away to generate a million dollar business. Copyright
is a product of a time of scarcity of resources. This philosophy of abundance ties in nicely
with the work of Martin Weller who includes a chapter title The Pedagogy of Abundance in his book, the Digital Scholar.
Abundance:
- gives power to the small
- individuals
can use services like Kickstarter.com to crowdsource funds for creative
projects. (Similar to kiva.org for micro-financing of development projects.)
- Barriers to
traditional education are collapsing -
eg the Khan academy
An
informative session (such a lame word!) detailing
the results of a project using Big Blue Button - the tool that many hope will become the Open
Source alternative to proprietary virtual classroom products like Adobe and Blackboard Collaborate.
Alas,
while some were impressed with the audio
quality of this tool it is still a long way short of being a viable alternative
to the major players.
·
Poor mark
up tools? seems better in presenter view.
·
Browser
based > easy loading
·
Presenter
can enlarge screen; no app share but has webtour
·
Won't work
with inbuilt mics
As an
aside Tim told us that he didn't think Blackboard were supporting Moodle
integration any longer.
The obligatory session on MOODLE 2.3 by the
inimitable Julian Ridden revealed:
· new text
editor is much improved; you can now paste from Word and junk code is removed
automatically
·
using tables
is MUCH easier
·
Cleaner
interface
·
Navigation
options - eg show one topic per page
·
Plugin
resources now standard (but not sure what this means)
·
Eg a new
and better feedback tool replaces the clunky questions and surveys of older
versions
·
Book
module now core
Gilly Salmon was the keynote speaker late on day 1 but apparently did not have the
version of the presentation she wanted
to deliver. Slides were too small to see easily.
Offered
just this:
55% of
Australians have a Facebook account
Learning Analytics and EPortfolios @ Box Hill
(Julieanne Seaman and Pauline Farrell)
While
there was an element of the speakers clearly believing their own publicity, Box
Hill TAFE are a good example of an organisation that has gone for the long term
view of implementing systemic change from the top down. That is, management is
behind the change, and a whole of institute approach is employed.
They have done extensive profiling of their student body:
·
78% of
students prefer workplace learning; text based is least preferred mode of
learning
·
97% have
mobile phones ; 63% have smart phones;
78% own a laptop
Also:
·
have
implemented Echo 360 and apparently are struggling to
keep up with demand
·
they have
developed a script that allows them to track amount of blended, interactive nature
of Moodle sites. This data is fed to managers - they call them traffic light reports. These results are published throughout
the organisation and encourage section managers to come forward and ask how
they can improve their section's standing - wonderful!
ePortfolios
(Mahara) are used in conjunction with a Personal Learning Plan unit for students
·
some students
like to use epfs collaboratively
·
Blockers:
staff and student skills/system usability - limited customisation options
· Box Hill distinguishes
between learnER and learnING analytics; learning analytics is more about whole
of organisation
·
more PD
needed for staff to include assessment tasks suited to epfs
·
they sit
with staff at Training Package stage and redesign content for e-delivery from
the start