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Virtual Reading Communities :Peer-to-Peer Annotated Readings Online

Paul Kawachi

kawachi@open-ed.net

AAOU-2010 Hanoi 27 October 2010

AAOU-2010

Virtual Reading Communities :Peer-to-Peer Annotated Readings Online

forCost-Savings and Improved Quality of Learning

Paul Kawachi

kawachi@open-ed.net

AAOU-2010 Hanoi 27 October 2010

AAOU-2010

International Collaborationto improve distance learning, and at lower cost

- rationale and background- methods : our new technique- pilot study findings and survey findings on efficacy- short-term outcomes and reduced costs- implications for improved quality of learning

overview

- rationale and background

teaching should focus on eliciting constructed meanings from studentsand questioning these through collaborative inquiry

= Stage 3 of the Transactional Distance Model

rationale

- rationale and background

teaching should focus on eliciting constructed meanings from studentsand questioning these through collaborative inquiry

= Stage 3 of the Transactional Distance Model

rationale

Transactional Distance Model :

this four-stage model has been previously published

briefly

rationale

Transactional Distance Model :

Stage Task1 : cooperative - activation of prior knowledge and recall of relevant schema, sharing prior knowledge, giving extension and expansion

2 : collaborative - determine and discover reasoning underlying prior knowledge

3 : collaborative - consider the merits and demerits of other alternative perspectives and choose a way forward to explore

4 : cooperative - test out new way experientially in familiar contexts and then in new contexts

rationale

adult students particularly do not suspend their own ideas disjunctivelyto consider other possible better ways

3 : collaborative - consider the merits and demerits of other alternative perspectives and choose a way forward to explore

rationale

Perry 1970 reported that college students could not achieve Stage 3

Piaget 1977 reported that even in adulthood, students might not reach the hypotheses-testing Stage 3

Renner 1976 reported that only 81 % of law students achieved Stage 3

McKinnon 1976 reported that only 50 % of all students at 7 colleges could complete Stage 3 and Stage 4

Gunawardena students did not move beyond the discovery 1997 and sharing of ideas, at ICDE95-online

Gunawardena “ the intended collaboration [ Stage 3 ] 2001, p.39 simply did not happen ”

rationale

Research efforts worldwide are working on achieving the critical thinking skills of Stage 3

Upon reflection, we note that traditional lecturesoverly spend time and energy in delivering content

and this content is above the level of the students

Moreover, the printed text is also above their level

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

A. Not a lot

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

A. Not a lot except information output …

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

A. Not a lot except information output ... ... and maybe

rationale

Q. What happens in the traditional lecture ?

A. Not a lot except information output ... ... and maybe note-taking

rationale

Traditional lectures use up expensive teacher-time

Teacher-student learning transactions could be more efficient if focused on the Stage 3 collaborative acquisition of critical thinking skills

Let’s look at what constitutes a unit of learning or ‘ learning transaction ’

rationale

Learning Transaction = 4 interactions

rationale

Learning Transaction = 1 student’s prior knowledge and need are identified

2 the text or teacher gives an amount of information

3 the student considers alternatives and outputs an own construction

4 the teacher or society confirms or denies the meaning

rationale

Learning Transaction = 1 student’s prior knowledge and need are identified

2 the text or teacher gives an amount of information

3 the student considers alternatives and outputs an own construction

4 the teacher or society confirms or denies the meaning

rationale

the student here needs timeto decode and encode meaning

Learning Transaction = 1 student’s prior knowledge and need are identified

2 the text or teacher gives an amount of information

3 the student considers alternatives and outputs an own construction

4 the teacher or society confirms or denies the meaning

rationale

the student here needs timeto decode and encode meaning

optimallythis should bepersonalised

Learning Transaction = 1 student’s prior knowledge and need are identified

2 the text or teacher gives an amount of information

3 the student considers alternatives and outputs an own construction

4 the teacher or society confirms or denies the meaning

rationale

the student here needs timeto decode and encode meaning

optimallythis should bepersonalised

Steps 1, 2 and 3can be achieved before the lessonusingguiding notes from other students

Learning Transaction = 1 student’s prior knowledge and need are identified

2 the text or teacher gives an amount of information

3 the student considers alternatives and outputs an own construction

4 the teacher or society confirms or denies the meaning

rationale

the student here needs timeto decode and encode meaning

optimallythis should bepersonalised

Steps 1, 2 and 3can be achieved before the lessonusingguiding notes from other students

expert

methods

What kind of guiding notes can help ?

methods

What kind of guiding notes can help ?

We have found - 7 - kinds of elaboration ...

methods

What kind of guiding notes can help ?

We have found - 7 - kinds of elaboration ...

These elaborations should be in context,

methods

What kind of guiding notes can help ?

We have found - 7 - kinds of elaboration ...

These elaborations should be in context, content-relevant,

methods

What kind of guiding notes can help ?

We have found - 7 - kinds of elaboration ...

These elaborations should be in context, content-relevant, and personalized …

methods

Grounded Theory analyses named 7 sub-categories within 2 main categories of elaboration

methods

Grounded Theory analyses named 7 sub-categories within 2 main categories of elaboration :

cooperative 1 re-phrasing, translating 2 to avoid misunderstanding 3 to extend to familiar or new context

collaborative 4 contrasting ideas 5 limiting the applicability 6 to warn of consequences 7 to raise inconsistencies

methods

Grounded Theory analyses named 7 sub-categories within 2 main categories of elaboration :

cooperative 1 re-phrasing, translating 2 to avoid misunderstanding 3 to extend to familiar or new context

collaborative 4 contrasting ideas 5 limiting the applicability 6 to warn of consequences 7 to raise inconsistencies

the institutional task is therefore …

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

Can we find out what help is needed ...

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

Can we find out what help is needed ...Can we check the accuracy of the peer advice ...

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

Can we find out what help is needed ...Can we check the accuracy of the peer advice ...

Can we put all this online alongside the text ...

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

Can we find out what help is needed ...Can we check the accuracy of the peer advice ...

Can we put all this online alongside the text ...

and can we get the students to read all this before the lesson ...

methods

Can we put personalised elaboration online ?

Can we find out what help is needed ...Can we check the accuracy of the peer advice ...

Can we put all this online alongside the text ...

and can we get the students to read all this before the lesson ...

methods

?

in early trialswe used intranet and pop-up sticky-notes

methods

in early trialswe used intranet and pop-up sticky-notes

methods

in early trialswe used intranet and pop-up sticky-notes

and arrowspointed to theproblem in the text

methods

in early trialswe used intranet and pop-up sticky-notes

and arrowspointed to theproblem in the text

methods

the next slide shows a screen shotof our website with text

methods

the next slide shows a screen shotof our website with text

various ways were tried to give help …

methods

the next slide shows a screen shotof our website with text

various ways were tried to give help …

the peer-to-peer notes were in their native languagesbut not merely translations.

methods

methods

After collecting annotations from students

these were integrated alongside the class readings

online for future students ...

methods

methods

methods

methods

methods

methods

methods

results

Pilot Study Findings and Survey Findings

results

Pilot Study Findings and Survey FindingsFindings supported adoption of this technique - wider ranging details are in the full paperVietnamese teachers reported that 75% of students needed the teacher alongside their reading texts, compared with Western teachers reporting 45%, and Japanese 13%Western teachers reported that 50% of students in difficultyconsulted their peers, and a further 40% consulted seniors

results

Pilot Study Findings and Survey FindingsFindings supported adoption of this technique - wider ranging details are in the full paperVietnamese teachers reported that 75% of students needed the teacher alongside their reading texts, compared with Western teachers reporting 45%, and Japanese 13%Western teachers reported that 50% of students in difficultyconsulted their peers, and a further 40% consulted seniors

Findings support the Conversation Theory of Learningand were highly context-dependentthis is remarkable since pre-printed texts are generally context-independent

results

discussion

How does annotation improve learning ?

- in decoding - to help recall prior knowledge and schema

- to cut through text noise

- in encoding - to value the reader’s own nascent view

- to increase size of chunking in working

memory, and suggest processing strategies

faster and better quality learning can be achieved

discussion

How does annotation reduce costs ?

- expensive teacher time delivering, explaining, highlighting content etc can be eliminated

- annotations can be reviewed and up-loaded by part-time low-cost graduate student

- no new technology is needed

lower-cost learning can be achieved

discussion

Our pre-Stage 1 technique ofpeer-to-peer annotated readings online

succeeds by providing to all students their own personal learning context

discussion

Our pre-Stage 1 technique ofpeer-to-peer annotated readings online

succeeds by providing to all students their own personal learning context

for better quality learning and at lower-cost

discussion

Our pre-Stage 1 technique ofpeer-to-peer annotated readings online

succeeds by providing to all students their own personal learning context

for better quality learning and at lower-cost

-- we have transformed the reading alone experience into a self-sustaining community of learning with virtual social presence

discussion

Thank you

kawachi@open-ed.net

AAOU-2010

This presentation is completed

email comments and any question to

Thank you

kawachi@open-ed.net

AAOU-2010

email comments and any question to

you may download these slides fromhttp://www.open-ed.net / library / reading .ppt

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