Post on 07-Nov-2014
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Beyond the Brainstorm:
Deepening online collaborative dialogue for learning
Simmons College
Blended Learning Institute
Sarah Haavind, Ed.D. ~ shaavind@lesley.edu
Lesley University, School of Education
New Venue: new opportunities
Anytime, anywhere, but “scheduled asynchronous.”
Asynchronous, text-based reflective, dialogue.
Collaboration at a distance. Shift away from lecture-based to learner-
centered, inquiry-based or online pedagogy.
Starting Point & Bridge
• How do we take advantage of online discussion opportunities to foster collaborative dialogue, or collaborative presence?
• How do we define the instructor's role when students are working as a group?
• How do we define the learner’s role?
Fostering Collaborative Presence
Set a community culture; Construct discussion prompts that are
inherently collaborative; Explicitly teach participants HOW to engage
collaboratively; Nurture collaborative presence by facilitating
from the side/coaching; Assessments that support and recognize
collaborative efforts.
Research on Collaborative Online Pedagogy
Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C) Hiltz & Goldman (2005)Learning Together
Online The International Review of Research in
Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL) Garrison & Anderson (2003) E-Learning in
the 21st Century Collison et. al. (2000) Facilitating Online
Learning
Research (continued)
White & Weight (2000) The Online Teaching Guide;
Bender (2003) Discussion Based Online Teaching to Enhance Student Learning: Theory, Practice & Assessment
Roberts (2004) Online Collaborative Learning: Theory & Practice
Roberts (2006) Self, Peer and Group Assessment in E-learning
Setting a Community Culture
Make expectations explicit (Learner Support Agreement, Up-front info)
Weekly announcements that remind participants of upcoming responsibilities and opportunities
Respond to Tech and “What do I do?” questions asap
Sit on your hands when questions about content appear. Online wait time!
Peer Moderating with training/support.
Purposeful Discussion Spaces
Student Lounge Technical Questions Questions about Content Class Debriefing Meetings
Community Building
Quick and helpful support
Community-building activities
Virtual Cafe for networking
Safe environment for risk-taking
Expectations for Learners
You and your peers are expected to read everything in course discussions.
Therefore: Be succinct (re-read, refine); Enter a new message subject for
each post; Cite phrases you are building on.
5 Keys: Facilitating the Learning
Generative questions for dialogueGrounded questions for dialogue Interventions for wandering discussions
& Landscapes, not summariesRubrics that support deepened dialogueAssessments that support deepened
dialogue
Cast a Wide Net, Avoid Generic “What did you think?”
What did you underline or note in the margins and why?
What connections with your own experiences did you make?
What disagreements did you have with the author/speaker?
What questions did the activity bring to the fore?
Grounded Questions
Given what the author suggests, what new steps might you take in your practice?
Is video clip A or B more useful in your context and why?
What observations can you make about your data, having tried the new protocol?
How does this author illuminate patterns in current events?
Explicit Teaching of HOW to engage collaboratively
NOT:
Post two or three responses to this discussion.
INSTEAD:
After posting your initial thoughts, ask a question, build on someone else’s observation, extend an idea, or otherwise engage with one another’s comments.
Facilitating Beyond Brainstorming
What if no one posts in three days?
What if eighteen ideas get floated in the first 24 hours?
What if disagreement emerges and flaming takes place?
New Voices are needed
Generative Guide Conceptual
Facilitator Mediator
Personal Muse Role Play Reflective Guide
Guiding... Leading...
I was intrigued… Mary’s comment,
“…” got me thinking…
John’s note that…made me wonder…
Guide on the Side/
Expert Learner
I loved that Ann said, “…”
Great comment, John! Thanks for pointing out…
Good point, Mark…
Expert in the middle/
Tells what I think
=) ;-) 8-) Tone ^-^ :-z :^)
• Neutral• Nurturing• Informal• Curious• Imaginative• Whimsical• Analytical• Humorous
• ????• !!!!• !• Devil’s Advocate• Explaining• Telling• Praising• Suggesting
Critical Thinking Strategies
Id DirectionSort for RelevanceFocus on Key PointsHonor Multiple Perspectives Making Connections
Full Spectrum Questioning
Guiding InterventionsIn an earlier dialogue, Louine asked
What about moderators that "play the devil's advocate" to encourage discussion???
Bob builds on that thought now, asking,
Why would we want to have a voice different than our own? What purpose does it serve and I think there is a question of honesty here? I know that sometimes in f2f settings that you will play the devils advocate and in this way stimulate discussion.
They were clearly on to something. But now, after reading and thinking so much more about online moderators' voice and tone, what are your thoughts about the common face-to-face "devil's advocate" voice/tone for cyber-learning?
Nurturing their Community
Avoid public praise (you in the middle)Wait til next week (!) to answer a question -- or point to it againEffusively praise in private feedbackExplicitly teach people how to engage
collaborativelyFoster pragmatic dialogue
Rubric for Postings
Completed: Single entry, no interaction with other participants’ postings evident.
Collaborative: The response builds on the ideas of another one or two participants and digs deeper into questions or issues, contributes half-baked ideas for others to add to, or asks the group a question.
Rubric (continued)
Generative:
The post integrates multiple views and/or provides a seed for reflection evinced by other participants' responses in its thread.
The post highlights a tension or contributes language, a metaphor or a study tool that serves to deepen the dialogue.
Evaluation: Ongoing assessment
• Postings make assessment continuous, on-going.
• Evidence of learning is embedded in student contributions alongside assignments and projects.
• Cycles of peer-review and revision prior to submission for instructor feedback are included.
Activity Design Features that explicitly promote collaborative dialogue
Should the US allow greater use of irradiation to decrease food contamination?
10 points for posting your initial comments (by Thursday)
10 points for adding something to the discussion…knowledge, a website, a question for clarification, etc. (by Friday)
10 points for responding to at least two others (by Sunday)
10 points for your final thoughts about the topic (Monday or Tuesday)
Before making your final comment you should read all other comments posted. Your final comments may include something you learned, something that surprised you, a summary, a shared thought, what you consider important about the topic, what you still wonder about, etc.
Discussion Design without Collaborative Emphasis
Think about the following questions and make a comment to the discussion called “Environmental Problems.” What do you think is Earth’s most serious environmental problem? What caused, or causes, the problem? How do you think this problem should be dealt with?
Collaborative Course Design
UN Simulation classWk 2: Meet the DelegatesWk 3: Who Is That Man?Wk 4:Discussion: What is the UN?
OK everyone now that you are all “experts” on how the UN is organized let’s see what you think. In this discussion you can post answers to questions or ask questions. I would like to stress that for classroom discussion you should * not * only ask questions. Posting questions and not doing any more than that is easy. I want to know your ideas as well. I’ll get things started with this: What do you think are positive aspects or strengths of the way the Security Council is organized?
UN Simulation (cont.)
Wks 5-10: Prepare & present Nation reports.Those students not reporting on a country will be graded on the quality
and frequency of their participation in the weekly discussions on the countries assigned last week. You must comment frequently and in a relevant manner on each report…I will be looking for a relevant comment/question from each student on each report listed. You must also check back to see what the reporters have responded to your comment…The person who reported on this country and topic is responsible for facilitating discussion and answering questions students may have.
Wks 11-14: UN Simulation with each delegate representing their nation in the context of a global challenge.
Sarah Haavind, Ed.D. ~ shaavind@lesley.edu
Lesley University, School of Education