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Justin M. Bonzo
Gale Parchoma
Centre for Studies in Advanced Learning Technology - Established in 1992
The Paradox of Social Media and Higher Education Institutions
Harness the wind
The melding of minds
• Distributed medical education• Learning communities• Social media?
– Grassroots– User-directed
• Academic set of values– Quality assurance
Grassroots and Social Media
“It’s a story about community and collaboration on a scale never seen before. It’s about the many wresting power from the few and helping one another for nothing and how that will not only change the world, but also change the way the world changes.” --Time Magazine 2006
“Participatory Web”--Bart Decrem, Founder of Flock
Social Media
• Interlinking of people• Engaging actively and interactively with
content
• Google as a case study:– Approach usability based on users needs– Tools built to allow users to customise and use
as needed
Social Media/Formal Learning
• Many complexities• Researched from a variety of perspectives• What are the social media components that
can be used to improve learning• Academy is still struggling with how best to
integrate social media
Social Media/Academy
• Could it be the very nature of social media that leads to this conflict?
• Social media draws into question the role of power structures and relationships.
Social Constructivist Learning1. Learning requires active participation by the learner.
Learning is not passive.
2. Previous experience coupled with and compared to new experience results in a reinforcement of /or adaption of that knowledge.
3. Individual knowledge construction requires a social interaction element within the environment.
4. Negotiation within the learning environment is essential to the development of shared meaning and common knowledge.
5. Learning best takes place within a sociocultural context - a community of practice.
(Yilmaz, 2008, p. 167):
Social Constructivist Learning and Social Media
SOCIAL MEDIA SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIVISM
Are dynamic and based on active participation rather than passive viewing
Active participation where learning is created based on collaborative effort
Information sharing Knowledge is built upon experience
Communication Social interaction
Information is created by the individual participation and interactivity of the users/Collaboration
Shared interaction creates common knowledge
Information sharing Learning takes place best in a sociocultural context
Comparison of social media and social constructivism principles
Conflict and Paradox
Potential areas of conflict
• Existing hierarchical structure of higher education institutions– Students, support staff, lecturers, faculty…– Who are the knowers?– Social media – anybody can create, modify and
transmit information
• Need for negotiations between hierarchical stance of the institution and the openness of social media
Potential areas of conflict
• Accreditation and quality concerns– Accreditation boards: to insure traditional
standards are being met– Social media is non-traditional and may be
difficult to measure, assess and accredit
• Standards are set to help prepare students for the future. Social interaction, collaboration, and technology are all key elements to current society.
Potential areas of conflict
• Formal and informal learning– Informal learning not traditionally within the
remit of the institution– Twitter
• Social media is more than technology. It is a set of collaboration and active participation principles.
• It is about openness, user-generated content, and flexibility
• Potential to change how we learn
The use of social media is not a technological
revolution, but rather a social movement.”
(Downes, 2004, 7)