Engineering Education – Week 6.1 – Reading Notes

Reading:

LOFT Process Guides: Define Phase. Techniques: Writing Learning outcomes

Summary:

Notes:

  • Creating and online course – tips:
    • Establish a community of practice
    • Start small
    • Start early
    • Gather your team
    • Gear up
    • Be aware of legal issues
    • Vary your approach
    • Use a style guide
  • Learning objectives
    • “Learning objectives describe the knowledge and skills we want students to gain from our instruction. Learning objectives are used to provide a framework for selecting and organizing course content and learning activities, guide decisions about assessment and evaluation methods, and give learners information for directing their learning efforts and monitoring their progress.

       An assessment is an exercise whose output can be used to measure the attainment of a learning objective.  Assessments can serve two purposes: evaluate student performance and foster learning.”

    • Main purposes of Learning Objectives
      • Communicate our intentions clearly to students and to colleagues.
      • Provide a framework for selecting and organizing course content.
      • Guide decisions about assessment and evaluation methods.
      • Provide a framework for selecting appropriate teaching and learning activities.
      • Give students information for directing their learning efforts and monitoring their own progress.
    • Goals vs. Objectives + Topics List
      • Goals are broader and describe the final state:
        • “The end toward which effort is directed”
      • Objectives precisely define observable skills and knowledge the audience must demonstrate to show achievement towards the final goal
        • “Something toward which effort is directed”
      • Topics list is simply a list of content that will be looked at within a course
    • Characteristics of an Effective Learning Objective
      • ABCD approach
        • “The audience is the learner who will demonstrate the behavior under specified conditions and to an acceptable degree.”obj_impl_abcd.jpeg
        • Not every learning objective must include a condition or a degreeobj_overview_abcd__exm_1_nobkg.jpg
        • The order is also not important obj_overview_abcd__exm_2.jpg
        • Audience
          • The better you understand your audience the more effective your learning objective, and thus your course might be
          • Prior Knowledge:obj_impl_working_memory.jpeg
          • Learning objectives are an important tool for the instructor, but most important for the students
            • Teacher- vs. Student-centric learning objectives
        • Behavior
          • An observable and/or measurable action
          • Bloom’s Taxonomy’s domains
          • KSA: Knowledge, Skills, Attitudeobj_overview_blooms_domains
          • Cognitive domain:Screen Shot 2016-04-30 at 11.27.32 AM.png
            • Examples:
              • Remember
                • Students will be able to define mitosis.
                • Students will be able to name the phases of mitosis.
              • Understand
                • Students will be able to explain the process of mitosis.
                • Students will be able to summarize the central limit theorem.
              • Apply
                • Students will be able to sketch the progression of mitosis in a five-stage diagram.
                • Students will relate the law of supply and demand to the costs of health care.
              • Analyze
                • Students will be able to compare and contrast classical conditioning and operant conditioning.
                • Students will be able to select a healthy exercise plan for an overweight child.
              • Evaluate
                • Students will be able to evaluate the George W. Bush administration’s actions in conducting the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq without declaring war.
                • Students will be able to assess current artificial intelligence technology and describe its potential applications in health care.
              • Create
                • Students will be able to compose a villanelle (a poem of 19 lines with two refrains and two repeating rhymes).
                • Students will be able to create a three-dimensional bump map in Adobe Photoshop.
          • Knowledge domain
            • Factual: Knowledge of terminology and of specific details and elements
            • Conceptual: Knowledge of classifications and categories; principles and generalizations; theories, models, and structures
            • Procedural: Knowledge of subject-specific skills and algorithms, techniques, and methods; criteria for determining when to use appropriate procedures
            • Metacognitive: Strategic knowledge; knowledge about cognitive tasks, including appropriate contextual and conditional knowledge; self-knowledgeobj_overview_bloomcolortable.jpg
          • Psychomotor domain Screen Shot 2016-04-30 at 11.31.31 AM.png
          • Affective domainScreen Shot 2016-04-30 at 11.33.57 AM.png
        • Condition
          • What is it?
            • What a student may or may not use to demonstrate mastery of the objective
            • The circumstance under which the behavior is to be performed.
        • Degree
          • Sometimes the degree is implied: “without errors” for example
      • Scope and size
        • Can be broad and all encompassing or small and specific
        • Can be for the entire course and can be for a specific module
        • Questions to reflect upon when creating a learning objective
          • Too big
            • Do your objectives sound generic, as though they could appear on a syllabus in almost any course or discipline?
            • Could your objectives describe an entire curriculum?

          • Too small
            • Do your objectives contain repetition and overlap?  

            • Do your objectives read like the task specifications for an assignment?
        • Developing learning objectives is
          • A time-consuming process: It takes careful thought and revision to produce a polished set of learning objectives. Allow yourself plenty of time for this task.
          • An iterative process: Learning objectives provide the foundation for designing your course, but once they are written, expect to revise and refine the objectives to keep them in alignment with your content, activities, and assessments.
          • A flexible process: You can find helpful tips and guidelines for developing effective learning objectives, but you will not find rigid rules. You (and your team if you work with one) must be flexible as you create objectives that work best for your course.

Engineering Education – Week 5.2 – Class Notes

Jan 2014c.jpg

Great class today with guest speaker – NYU professor Jan L. Plass – the author of this week’s reading on the foundations of Game-Based Learning. 

The biggest takeaway was the distinction between a game-based learning experience vs. gamification. Gamification is a “buzz word” that people love to use or think of as a way to engage their users, to make their product more appealing, or effective. In reality, it’s a simple way of adding game-based features such as points, badges, or reward systems…

 

 

Engineering Education – Week 5.2 – Reading Notes

Reading: 

Jan L. Plass, Bruce D. Homer & Charles K. Kinzer (2015) Foundations of Game-Based Learning, Educational Psychologist, 50:4, 258-283

Summary: 

I highly appreciated the reading in the sense that it does not claim to have found a holistic and generalizable theory or framework for game-based learning. It comprehensively analyzes the several aspects or considerations one takes (or should take) into account when designing a game-based learning experience, and concludes that no single approach is the most effective or essential. It also states that when designing, one can use several learning theories and several game design aspects to enhance the experience.

“In this article we argued that the integrated viewpoints of cognitive, motivational, affective, and sociocultural perspectives are necessary for both game design and game research in order to fully capture what games have to offer for learning.” (Plass et al, 2015)

I particularly enjoyed the definition of gamification which reduces it to a gimmicky buzz-word. Like most buzz-words, it is over and incorrectly utilized – with the best intentions of course – but creating a false sense that any process or interaction can be magically transformed into a game and thus increase customer satisfaction, retention, or engagement.

“What exactly is meant by gamification varies widely, but one of its defining qualities is that it involves the use of game elements, such as incentive systems, to motivate players to engage in a task they otherwise would not find attractive.” (Plass et al, 2015)

“Consider as an example the gamification of math homework, which may involve giving learners points and stars for the completion of existing activities that they con- sider boring. Game-based learning of the same math topic, on the other hand, even though it may also include points and stars, would involve redesigning the homework activi- ties, using artificial conflict and rules of play, to make them more interesting and engaging.” (Plass et al, 2015)

Notes: 

  • Game-based learning
    • Type of game with defined learning outcomes
  • Play and cognitive development
    • Piaget and Vygotsky already stated that play is integral to children’s cognitive development
  • The arguments
    • Motivation
    • Player engagement
    • Adaptivity
    • Graceful failure
  • Model of Game Based Learning
    • Games do not use a single theory, but a combination of a few

Screen Shot 2016-04-27 at 1.57.23 PM.png

  • Elements of Game Design for Learning
    • Game Mechanics
    • Visual Aesthetic Design
    • Narrative Design
    • Incentive System
    • Musical Score
    • Content and Skills
      • Preparation of future learning
      • Teach new knowledge and skill
      • Practice and reinforce existing knowledge and skills
      • Develop 21st century skills

Screen Shot 2016-04-27 at 1.59.48 PM.png

  • Cognitive Foundations of Game-Based Learning
    • Situatedness
    • Transfer of learning
    • Scaffolding and relevant feedback
    • Dynamic assessment
    • Information design: representation of information
    • Interaction design: learning mechanics
    • Gestures and Movement
  • Motivational Foundation of Game-Based Learning
    • Intrinsic motivation
    • Values and interests
    • Achievement-related goals
  • Affective Foundation of Game-Based Learning
    • Emotional design
      • Anything in the game that will provoke emotions: design elements, sounds, storylines, and so on…
      • “Research also shows that affective tutors that respond to players’ emotions can enhance learning. However, it still needs to be investigated what kinds of emotions best facilitate learning in general, and what kinds of emotions learners experience over time will optimize their emotional engagement and, as a result, their cognitive engagement.”
  • Sociocultural Foundation of Game-Based Learning
    • Very hard to relate social and cultural factors in design with learning outcomes as they are an integral part of the creation process and its subsequent use.
      • “The goal of learning designs that focus on social and cultural aspects of learning relate to how learners can participate in groups, use collective knowledge to meet goals, relate learning to aspects of cultural norms and identities, and use social and cultural influences as motivators for learning through features that are contained within immediate and more distributed game play.”
    • Activity Theory
    • Social Context of Learning
    • Participatory Learning Culture
    • Social Aspects of Agency
    • Observational Learning
    • Relatedness and Self Perception
    • Social Interaction Design
    • “In much the same way as was discussed in the sections relating to affect and motivation, however, although we know that sociocultural factors influence learning, establishing sociocultural design patterns that directly relate to learning across a broad range of games may not yet be possible.”

LDT Seminar – Week 5 – Class Notes

Not much progress on my Master’s project (LXD) but starting to talk more about a new idea James Leo and I had – a staffing agency combined with a bootcamp and mentorship for high-school students. Could be an interesting initiative.

At the moment I feel my project is more of a ‘nice-to-have’ performance tool that would have little impact in the world, expect for the few times it might be used by instructors… starting to feel like its purpose is dwindling… let’s see how this all pans out.

Job Search

This week had 2 informational sessions on a future job, besides starting to send out my resume and apply for jobs online.

Screen Shot 2016-04-29 at 1.27.33 PM

The first informational session was on Tuesday with Udemy. Spoke to one of their employees about the company’s management style, corporate culture, compensations, benefits and so on. Sounds like a great place to work. Now I have to keep my eye open for open positions.

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The second one was with IXL, a company that creates online content for K-12. This was a group informational session. Interesting company and sounds like it’s very profitable and doing well.

 

LDT Seminar – Master's Project – Candace Thille

Met with Candace to talk about my Master’s project. Amazing feedback.

What I’m trying to build seems more like a performance tool than a learning tool – which I already knew but phrased this way makes it more precise. Have to think about what am I trying to teach the user; what will they be able to do after they interact with the learning experience that I create?

Another important point she made was that the interaction I was designing where you iterate through speaking and editing the transcription, involves several cognitive tasks and domain shifts that may not be advantageous for learning or for the purpose of the project. Preferably, the cognitive load has to be small and the domain shifts kept to a minimum.

Finally, she suggested that I focus on a specific task of the Understanding by Design framework, such as “creating learning objectives”, or creating assessment strategies for a specific learning goal. This was I’d be able to focus on the learning rather than the entire system of creating a smart-feedback/advice system.

Zoom out… rethink… zoom in again… test… talk to more people

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Lytics Seminar – Week 5 – Class Notes

This week we kept on advancing on the Machine Learning, more specifically about textual analysis. We went over the “bag of words” technique of trying to make predictions about the type of annotation created with Laguna Stories.

Seems a little counterintuitive that by simply analyzing the word count in the comments would generate any viable conclusion, yet it seems like it could. Not to say that this is magic, but very detailed work in coding the information, training the algorithm with enough data, and then iterating through the process of adjusting the parameters, groupings, and sometimes even going back to coding the data.

Brazilian Education – Week 5 – Class Notes

paulo_blikstein-010-croppedThis week Paulo Blikstein presented on the topic of equity in education and how technology could potentially help reduce it – with a warning that it might actually increase the gap between the privileged and the less privileged.

An interesting point was the distinction between Instructional and Constructionist technologies where the former talks about direct instruction while the latter, about engaging with the content and building knowledge from that interaction.