Tne Natives are Restless (v.2)

Post on 11-May-2015

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Not all teenagers are digital wizards and that not all parents and teachers are 'digital immigrants' left behind by the rapid pace of technological change. The way most young people learn is quite different from what our educational institutions were built for and what our tutors and lecturers were trained for and drew on three examples to illustrate how radical the difference can be.

transcript

The natives are restless

Higher education and the culture of digital natives

Susanne Koch, Gunnar Schei and Inger Carin Grøndal

Educational Technology Group

University of Oslo

http://www.usit.uio.no/suf/dml/Photo: Ilpo's Sojourn (flickr)

Our talk today

• Who are we?• How views on education are changing• Digital natives:

– Who are they – really?– How do they prefer to learn?– How proficient are their teachers online?

Teachers and students cooperating to accomodate to new learning strategies

Read the paper!

You’ll find lots of statistics and some interesting cases.

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Educational Technology Group

• Permanent unit within the central university IT-center.

• Mission: To actively contribute to processes of pedagogical innovation by providing technological solutions integrated in teaching and learning.

• Coordination of central IT efforts in the area of ICT-supported teaching and learning.

Old school: Teacher-centered education

• The teachers own the truth

• Teaching means transfering knowledge to the students

• Learning is what gets into the students’ heads

Photo: foundphotoslj (flickr)

New school:Student-centered education

• The students know the truth

• Teaching means facilitating for learning

• Learning means constructing knowledge

• Students are assumed to be digital

natives

• Teachers are assumed to be digital immigrants

”Our school”

• Teachers have knowledge and digital competence

• Internet makes knowledge available to all, including students

• Students know some use of the available tools

• Together they can explore how they can use the information and tools available to learn and to construct common knowledge

Photo: Talent (flickr)

Digital immigrants but not digital ignorant

• 76 per cent of Norwegians between 36 and 44 are online daily

• Many of them have been digital since before the digital natives were born

• Many of them are teachers

Ref: Citizen Media Project and ssb.no

• Digital natives with digital learning strategies (25 per cent)

• Google generation using digital tools just for fun (50 per cent)

• 25 per cent do not use

the internet every day

Digital natives but not digital experts

Photo: merfam (flickr)

New technologiesNew cooperative strategies

• Digital tools (i.e. blogs, wikis, Twitter etc.)– Students and teachers collaborate in the choice of tools

– All tools are not automaticaly appropriate for learning

• Digital content– Students and teachers collaborate in constructing knowledge based

on the information availabel

– What is good information?

– What turns information into knowledge?

– How do you qoute?

– How do you mash and re-create?

This creates digital literacy and information competence

Conclusion• The teaching strategy must consider the students’

digital competency and learning strategies

• Digital tools change learning cultures and learning spaces

• Digital tools expand our pedagogical tool box

• Students know the tools, teachers know pedagogy, and together we can find out how to use the digital tools in teaching and learning

Thank you!

Learn more at:Slideshare.net/dmlgruppenDel.icio.us/dmlgruppen

We would like you to talk to us! Send us an email: dml-gruppen@usit.uio.nohttp://www.usit.uio.no/suf/dml/… or the old-fashioned way…

Susanne Knut Inger