Sue Timmis expertly traced out the tensions in Higher Education that keep the learning and teaching theory-practice gap wide open. For example, that theories of learning are far more contested than those within many disciplines. However, Sue challenged us to seek and engage students in participatory learning activities. PowerPoint MP3
Jane Williams discussed her work with medical students who elect to develop e-learning materials for their optional module. Unlike the more programmatic materials developed by the department, the students target courseware that directly addresses content areas which they found challenging, thus increasing its value for ensuing cohorts. This was a perfect example of ‘participatory’ collaborative and cooperative learning that Sue had offered as a means of enriching and deepening learning. MP3
After a brief comfort-break, it was the turn of the Cardiff three...
Karl Luke outlined a small-scale study in which he explored Nina Dohn's critique of the assumptions made in education when Web 2.0 tools (especially wikis) are deployed in hopes that they will succeed unproblematically. He went on to offer practical solutions to Dohn’s points. PowerPoint MP3
Sadly, a few things, not just my relaxed approach to time-keeping, made
us run out of time, leaving me with just a few minutes before the close.
But even in a very short presentation there were practical and
theoretical lessons gleaned from a mini-project carried out last year
into aspects of informal learning by staff using an innovative
application of blogs for shared academic supervision record-keeping.
PowerPoint MP3
I was personally very pleased with the way that the seminar gave a real flavor of the conference. Networked learning does not do 'snake oil' and that can be confusing in learning technology circles... much the same as when my landline rings these days, I expect a sales pitch in broken English. The source of networked learning's 'non-splashy' power is in the humanistic values, transparent evidence and scholarly insight, and that should be good enough for anyone. Concluding comments MP3
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Introductions: Patricia Price MP3, Mike Johnson MP3
Sue Timmis PowerPoint MP3
Jane WilliamsMP3
Karl Luke PowerPoint MP3
Joe Nicholls PowerPoint MP3
Mike Johnson PowerPoint MP3
Concluding Comments MP3
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