Volunteering to work

December 8th, 2008 Tagged

Huh? This can’t be right?:

http://davidtjones.wordpress.com/2008/12/05/accept-the-fact-that-we-have-to-treat-almost-anybody-as-a-volunteer-implications-for-learning-and-teaching/

David Jones has quoted Peter Ducker:

                                        Accept the fact that we have to treat almost anybody as a volunteer.

Presumably, in order to accept this fact, we need to understand what the heck Ducker is talking about. And who accounts for the “almost”? Who’s the unpaid slave? The longer I luxuriate in academia, the less certain I become of anything. I take this as a positive sign.

David clarifies for us his take on the matter. He knows that in order to have all the cogs in the machine pullying the various weights (to use that tired, modernist metaphor of machinery), each needs to be happily oiled and free to move ….

Now that really is a bad metaphor of mine, isn’t it. People don’t just sit dormant overnight at their office desks, waiting for the supervisors to flick the on switch, each day at 9.00am. They don’t just circle repetitively through their tasks and then turn off at 5.00pm. They feel and breath and grow.  They pin their identity on what they do and the title they are given and the adhoc renumeration that fate has thrown to them. They are always engaged in a process of change. Nothing, they say, is certain except for death, taxes and restructures. Yet alikening the workplace and the people in it to a machine is commonplace. Seeing people as cogs in the machine is commonplace. Commonplace condescension and misconceptualisation abounds.

Yes, I think I have now talked myself into understanding Ducker. We can’t take volunteers for granted. They can choose to come and go. They are empowered through choice. And if we choose to work, just because we want to, even if we don’t have to, we are free and powerful and so best situated to contribute with generosity and joy. That should make for a happy and productive workplace, I suppose. Ducker might argue that we “have to” treat people as volunteers because, it the end, it’s profitable. I might add the suggestion that it is also ethical.

 

The End

ASCILITE 2008

December 2nd, 2008 Tagged , , ,

It’s nice to be back in Melbourne for the ASCILITE Conference. It was so much more meaningful for me this year, as I have had nearly three months of ICT on-the-job training since Singapore, 2007. So much of the talk is relevant to our research project into personal learning environments and Web 2.0 enabled social media. Interestingly, the various definitions of PLEs are surfacing. For some, it means customization of the existing LMS. We cannot assume a common understanding of the terminology. We will need to take care to discuss our work in the context of our own definitions, at least until it all settles itself through common usage.

My colleagues and I are satisfied that our little presentations were well received. It was encouraging for me to see a small but enthusiastic fan club in the audience of former work colleagues from Swinburne University. (Thanks, guys – especially the bit where you publicly congratulated us on our project!) My project partner, Nathaniel, has made some good contacts as a result of his presentation. There apparently are others out there who want to explore learner-centered pedagogy using platforms outside of the LMS. It seems that the universal difficulty is getting organisations to take their proverbial hand off the LMS control stick. Incidental discussion at this conference has indicated that the institutions, especially (and ironically) the technology divisions controlling the LMSs, are recalcitrant when it comes to shifting the center of learning management to the users. And of course there are logistical and pedagogical challenges associated with such change, which will need to be investigated. But already, there is an irresistible transition taking place. Novices like me, who used to hate being forced to be technically consistent and accurate, and therefore resisted technology, are now being creatively empowered by opportunities to control their own learning tools. I love it. Web 2.0 could draw in a whole new cohort of “end-users” who rather than doggedly “bringing up the rear” for the ICT task masters, can now venture forth as pioneers and leaders of their own experiential learning.

The session on second-life machinimas was inspiring. I really want to do something along those lines within my PLE. Now I just have to learn how to do it. The good thing is that the learning won’t hurt because the relevance of what I want to create will be ever-present throughout my transformation.

I wonder if I could blog with machinimas? Groovy. Watch this space.

The End

I don’t want to talk about it.

November 13th, 2008 Tagged , , ,

The End

What are we actually doing?!

November 12th, 2008 Tagged , ,

PLEs @CQU project            Reflections of the past six weeks…

Using the Ps Framework (Jones, 2008), I will reflect on my view (limited though it is) of the research project into personal learning environments.

Here are my perspectives of the project so far:

I have been working in pedagogy at universities for a little while now, as an Academic or Education Advisor (they change the title from time to time). The last couple of years have seen me leaning on lecturers and enforcing course-writing rules to comply with AQUA audits, but they were rules with which I would sometimes (secretly) disagree.

This thinking, firmly based in an epistemology of Objectivism (and let me declare right here that there is nothing necessarily wrong with that, and in fact, I chose to write my own PhD thesis in that domain – partly because it was methodologically subversive in content – but that’s a story in itself that I will leave alone for now) …where was I? …Firmly based in Objectivism, this was once known as “goal-based” assessment. It requires the course-writer to predict what will be learned and then, by some rational means, be able to measure the success with which the students have learned it! Ok for the six-times-table, I suppose.

How can this approach survive Personal Learning Environments and learner empowerment? Clearly it is not relevant to them. So, what sort of pedagogical questions should we now be asking, in the clear dawn of social- media-enabled learning?  What do we do with that learning objective, “At the successful completion of this course the student will be able to….” who knows? And who ever really knew anyway! Was it not just an exercise in semantics?

 

I am fascinated with this new pedagogical riddle about where PLEs will take teaching and learning, for surely it is no longer the metaphorical matter of the cart before the horse.  

           

 

Place

What is my place of work? My personal learning and working place is all about me – at home, on campus, on the beach where I (should) walk daily with the dog. I do a lot of synthesising of ideas in the car while driving, and when I walk the dog. This project would have advanced further had I kept my promises to the dog. My office is becoming more of a place for housekeeping work – emails, discussions with colleagues, meetings,  and planning activities take place there. I prefer working at home in the evenings if I really want to reflect and focus. Like now. After dark, when everyone is mostly asleep – except for the cats – the imagination conjures.

Since this project is about learning places, it seems fitting that I should emphasise the fact that (to put a new spin on an old term) I have a flexible learning and working environment – within reason.

 

People

The PLE project has an extraordinary workforce.

The people with whom I work are an unlikely bunch. We are all quite different, and yet there is something unusually cohesive about the group. It is as if we have landed our positions via some sort of intuitive phenomenon. It’s a remarkable group because it is unusually motivated and the individuals are respectful towards one another  - no, more than respectful – kind. Irreverently funny, and kind. I work with kind, funny and slightly peculiar people. They are highly intelligent and happy in their work. The fact that they are enduring a lengthy and cruel workplace restructure may have tempered the last factor a little.

Because I work with nice people, I have a sense of belonging and ownership in what I do. I feel a sense of responsibility towards them and their welfare, and although I am usually selfish about intellectual property, I am learning to relinquish my precious little claims to nothing. All of this makes me uncharacteristically happy. Clearly this can’t go on! I am trying to adopt the spirit of sharing that has been so ingrained for so long amongst the gorgeous geeks. I see that the Web has developed beyond all expectations because these blokes (mainly, for some reason) just share stuff. Now it’s out there, and the tide is not about to turn. And I think that’s good – but it’s confusing because it is not what I know. So much for those lectures on plagiarism that I delivered last year! The wave’s quite happily dumped me! I don’t know which way is up.

Process & Product

This might relate to the methodology (process) and the achievements so far (product).

What follows has been lifted straight from a draft of a paper I am trying to write.

It is a possible theoretical framework of our research methodology:

EPISTEMOLOGY: CONSTRUCTIONISM

 

 

 

 

EPISTEMOLOGY

 An epistemology of constructionism means that like the objectivism of positive research, we accept that for the purpose of this research, the real world objects and behaviours in existence that we will be able to observe and record. Unlike positivism, our focus will be on the interpretations that we make of those observations. Our subjective experiences of the worldly facts will result is an observed reality that has been constructed. Moreover, sometimes the construction will be from one researcher’s perspective, while at other times it may be a reconstructed idea, as one researcher persuades another to see things in a different way. This way of knowing the world is dynamic and organic because it will keep growing and changing throughout the research.

THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE: POSTMODERN INTERPRETIVISM

 

 

 

 

Let us first turn our attention to the perspective of interpretivism, and deal with the postmodern aspects of the research as they become more apparent when viewed alongside the methods of this design.

Interpretivism goes back to the thinking of Max Weber (1864-1920), C:\Documents and Settings\Jocene Vallack\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5\ID03A1U5\263,8,Max Weber- Interpretivistwho delineated between the type of research needed for the natural sciences – that of observation and certitude, and the sort of methods used by social scientists who needed to understand human behaviour rather than just report on it. Understanding will always involve some subjective mind activity on the part of the researchers as they construct their knowledge base. Providing the researchers are aware of this, and if necessary, disclose known biases in their understandings, interpretivism is a way forward for many research projects. In our discipline of technology, interpretivism seems to be increasingly adapted for use.

Throughout our research the questions that are emerging are about understanding PLEs and the users of Web 2.0 technology. In order to understand, we will need to employ qualitative methodology. It is quite likely, however, that more finite questions requiring quantitative answers will also be raised. The methodology of Action Research will accommodate a mixed method approach throughout the cycles of the research.

METHODOLOGY: ACTION RESEARCH

 

 

 

 

The key researchers for this project communicate daily. We share reflections, plan further action and so on it goes. Kemmis & McTaggart would assure us that we are on the right track with this Action Research practice – the researchers are committed to the project, we share information willingly and work in conscious collaboration towards our common goal of better understanding the impact of Web 2.0 tools on personal learning environments and lifelong learning, and exploring ways to better support the future directions of learners at CQU. (I apologise for the excessive verbosity of the last sentence. This is merely a symptom of early research questions that are awaiting concision. It’s part of the process towards clarification, and this is indeed a work in process.)

The three arms of Action Research- those of planning, acting and reflecting -  each hold a set of methods, which realise them. These are they: (see next post…)

PLAN

The planning for the first cycle of research included strategies such as

·          Researchers with differing experience and skills come together as odd ‘counterpoints’ to one another

·          the research plan involves seeking  the perspective of  the novice Web 2.0 user alongside that of the expert web designer.

·          Short and long term targets options discussed

·          Meeting with course designers and lecturers to plan for the inclusion of PLEs within courses (1st year Business)

·          ongoing evaluation of Ps Framework (Jones, 2008) as a means to locate PLEs in the current landscape of  educational technology

 

 

 

 

 

 

 ACT

·          Actively learning and/or refining Web 2.0 skills

·          Contact points made to engage staff and students in the pedagogy of PLEs

(Voice thread poster expo)

·          Conference presentation & paper (ASCILITE)

 

REFLECT

·          Blog writing for clarification of thought

·          Formal discussions

·          Informal conversations

·          Analysis of writing (including reading between the lines)

·          Altered consciousness revealing phenomena as metaphor and image

(I am the only one at present prepared to admit to this)

 

*A note on process

This is emergent research. If we tried to prdict at the beginning what we would achieve, then we would be closing our minds to seeing something new – beyond that which was forseeable and predictable.

As all Action Research must be, this is bottom-up research. If it was controlled autocratically, we would not avail ourselves to the diverse perspectives of everyone involved.Also, if this was not a transparent process that clearly valued the perspectives of various ones from various places within the workplace heirarchy, the research participants would not know the empowerment that goes alongside commitment and intrinsic motivation.

 

Pedagogy & Past experience

I have been working in pedagogy at universities for a little while now, as an Academic or Education Advisor (they change the title from time to time). The last couple of years have seen me leaning on lecturers and enforcing course-writing rules to comply with AQUA audits, but they were rules with which I would sometimes (secretly) disagree.

This thinking, firmly based in an epistemology of Objectivism (and let me declare right here that there is nothing necessarily wrong with that, and in fact, I chose to write my own PhD thesis in that domain – partly because it was methodologically subversive in content – but that’s a story in itself that I will leave alone for now) …where was I? …Firmly based in Objectivism, this was once known as “goal-based” assessment. It requires the course-writer to predict what will be learned and then, by some rational means, be able to measure the success with which the students have learned it! Ok for the six-times-table, I suppose.

How can this approach survive Personal Learning Environments and learner empowerment? Clearly it is not relevant to them. So, what sort of pedagogical questions should we now be asking, in the clear dawn of social- media-enabled learning?  What do we do with that learning objective, “At the successful completion of this course the student will be able to….” who knows? And who ever really knew anyway! Was it not just an exercise in semantics?

 

I am fascinated with this new pedagogical riddle about where PLEs will take teaching and learning, for surely it is no longer the metaphorical matter of the cart before the horse.  

           

 

Purpose

What is the purpose of the PLEs@CQU project? Education – purely. Self-education. Shared education. Redefined and dynamic…etc

 

Social media has changed me. Already I have learned so much that I actually found myself getting impatient with some dithering dope who couldn’t get the powerpoint to work at the PD session. Suddenly I’m the one who has become Helpdesk! If you knew how hostile, insecure and impatient I have been with technology- for decades- you might see the irony in having me now side with it against some stupid, lazy end-user who can’t even get her act together enough to deliver a damn powerpoint without someone having to go out of their way to say something like “F7″!

So now that I’m nearly an expert, like probably anyone who would bother to read this, let me say that (unlike me) you must be patient with the end-users, because they don’t have the luxury of spending the time in front of the screen like we do. That’s it. Lecturers have other priorities – pressure from other people making demands on their time and emotional energy.

As for me, I think I am becoming content in the zone of the computer screen. The more  literate you become, the more confident you get the better it is. And it’s an affective escape to communicate with your own mind via your own motor skills. I think I’m raving now. Good night.

                                                               

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The End

Ateleological!

November 2nd, 2008 Tagged

 

I have just noticed that I am using a new word. “Ateleological” best described the sort of research approach we are using with the PLEs@CQU project. I did not know that work (Freudian slip – try “word”) / I did not know that word a month ago. There were a lot of words and accompanying thought patterns of which I was unaware a month ago. If this is an Action Research project, these are the sorts of changes that need to be noted. The change in my language indicates a shift in thought patterns – stand back in awe Snowdon! I am using new words – “machinimo”, for heaven’s sake! I pick that one because I still haven’t viewed these machinimos, and we are always impressed more about what we don’t know than what we do know and just take for granted – do you think?. I didn’t need to repeat “ateleological”, because I know that now, I use it as a matter of course, in idle conversation, at a BBQ (actually haven’t been to a BBQ in years…), while purchasing milk – perhaps — so what?

I had better check these impressive machimos…my idle conversation is becoming cliche-ridden and predictable.

 

The End