Toolbox or Trap? Course Management Systems and Pedagogy

Lisa Lane has an article in the most recent issue of EDUCAUSE Quarterly, “Toolbox or Trap? Course Management Systems and Pedagogy.”  For a brief article, she does a good job laying out the criticisms I hear most frequently about course management systems: their design is focused on integrating resources (as “inventory control”) instead of being focused on innovative teaching.

“The construction of the course syllabus, a natural beginning point for most instructors, is a good example of how the software imposes limitations.  When they first enter a CMS, new instructors see the default buttons of the course menu, which are based on type rather than purpose: Announcements, Course Content, Discussion, even Syllabus.  The buttons link to pages that simply provide a place to upload a document, which is exactly what most instructors do: upload a word-processed file of their in-class syllabus.  It would be more natural for novice instructors to see a blank schedule in which they could create each week’s (or unit’s) activities.  Most professors think in terms of the semester and how their pedagogical goals can be achieved within the context of time rather than space.  The default organization of the CMS forces them to think in terms of content types instead, breaking the natural structure of the semester.”

Lane suggests that constructivist, learner-centered, or inquiry-based approaches are better supported by Web 2.0 applications, or by learning management systems that focus more on pedagogy than content management.

We’re exploring these tools at Richmond now, but at this point we’re connecting with our early adopters, not the majority.  I wonder what it will take for most faculty to embrace social tools: they require more consideration up front, and if they want to use more than one tool, it’s multiple logins for them and their students.  The effort has to be justified, and I think we’ll see that as early adopters share compelling stories of transformed learning.  But is there something more we need to do, either to be sure the stories are communicated effectively or the administrivia streamlined?

I guess I’m trying to step into our learners’ shoes, to be sure our plans are effective.  I can be patient, as social technologies work their way into instructor toolboxes, but I also want to be sure I’m not missing any opportunities.

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RMA First Friday with Dr. Edward Ayers

Dr. Ayers speaks to the Richmond Merchants Association on May 2. An interesting overview of the University, but it’s especially interesting to see how he’s reaching out to make connections to the community.

Thanks to Andy Morton for the link.

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SCS Directors – Presentation Outline

The Center for Teaching, Learning, and Technology

Resources

 

Faculty Support

  • Answering questions
  • Connecting with resources
  • Coming to class

Faculty Development

  • Technology overviews and workshops
  • Instructional workshops – suggestions to Pat Brown
  • One-on-one teaching consultations – contact Terry Dolson
  • School-specific programs
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A Very Nice Place to Start

On my way out to the ELI Annual meeting in San Antonio, I started reading Derek Bok’s Our Underachieving Colleges.  It’s fascinating reading, and I know the book is something our president has been discussing recently.

I don’t have enough time to respond to everything I’m reading, but Bok has a definition of critical thinking that is good enough that I want to write it down someplace.  Too long for a tweet, so it will live here.

Bok says of critical thinking:

Among these qualities are an ability to recognize and define problems clearly, to identify the arguments and interests on all sides of an issue, to gather relevant facts and appreciate their relevance, to perceive as many plausible solutions as possible, and to exercise good judgement in choosing the best of these alternatives after considering the evidence and using inference, analogy, and other forms of ordinary reasoning to test the cogency of the arguments.

Bok goes on to say that critical thinking also may include “certain basic quantitative habits.”  I think his definition is a great starting point.  What’s missing?  What could be expanded upon or clarified?

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Content systems: Joomla! vs. Drupal

Since 1991 I’ve been the list owner / moderator of Milton-L, a discussion list on the life, literature and times of the poet John Milton.  In 1994 I created The Milton-L Home Page as a support site for the discussion list.

I’m now ready to take the web site to the next level, allowing the community of Milton scholars to contribute events, publication notices and more to the site.  It’s my hope that the site will become as useful as the discussion list has been.

The current site is on a static (i.e. non-cgi enabled) web server.  This server is slated for some big changes and I know the web address for the site is going to change.  A few months back I purchased the johnmilton.org domain, and I plan to use this domain for the new site.

When I first started with hosted servers, I looked at several of the open source content management systems. I settled on Joomla! because both the front end and back end were intelligible not only to me but to the community that will use the site.  I also liked the theme templates that are available.

In the back of my mind, though, Drupal has always been lurking as the best solution.  D’Arcy loves it. NMC switched to it.  It seems infinitely configurable, but that makes it seem infinitely complex, to me and the community.  Unless I could wrap my brain around it all and architect the site well.

The most recent upgrade of Joomla! broke both of the installations I was using.  Users can no longer log in on the front end.  So now I’m really looking at Drupal.  Here are my questions:

  • What’s the state of spam and spam protection for Drupal?  Is there a Spam Karma 2 equivalent to keep me safe with a minimum of effort?  I plan to create user roles carefully, but I’d love to have a good security system in place.
  • What are the best plug-in modules for Drupal?  I’m already looking at the Events module, since I need to have that kind of content on my site.  But what are the best plug ins overall?  I’ve always appreciated blog entries listing WordPress plug ins – love to see a Drupal list too.
  • Do you have any theme recommendations?  I want to keep things simple, but Drupal’s default themes are a little plain.
  • Other than Drupal.org, what are some good web sites for Drupal admins to follow?
  • What am I not asking that I should?

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Posted in Education, Milton, Technology, Web | 12 Comments

A Simple Piece of Cloth

Last night we had our second and final reading of A Simple Piece of Cloth, a play by Jeffrey D. J. Kallenberg. Jeffrey arrived in Richmond Tuesday and provided feedback to the cast as we finished rehearsing the reading. It was the first time I’ve had the opportunity to work on a show with the author attending rehearsals.

It was great to work with Dorothy again. She’s brilliant, and it was fun to see how she put Alice, the family matriarch. Nice dialect, and cleverly nuanced line readings that turned on a dime at points. This was the first time I got to work with Dorothy on a comedy, and she noted last night that I was able to achieve my wish and play a nice guy in a play that my daughters saw. Previously I’d been the king of Naples in The Tempest, wearing an SS uniform, and the constable who kicks all the Jews out of town in Fiddler on the Roof.

Willy – my character in this week’s play – is a nice guy. He’s hard working and a loving husband, even if he doesn’t take his wife Sydel out to dinner very much. He’s often corrected by Alice, but mostly a spectator to the evolving relationship between Alice and her eldest grandson, Stanley.

It was nice working with Billy, Dan and Anne – student members of the cast. I’d worked with Billy last in Fiddler. I also had the pleasure of working with Neal Sonenklar again. Jody Smith Strickler played Alice’s older daughter Ruth. I last worked with Jody in 1991 in Death of a Salesman. Once again she brought a sensitive reading to her part.

It was also nice meeting and working with Charity Schubert (my wife Sydel) and Darryl Clark Phillips (Bernie). Charity is a recent graduate of Centinary. When Harold and Kumar 2 comes out, she’ll be a stewardess. I never saw the first movie and am not sure it’ll have much to do with the second, but I’ll definitely see the movie. Charity is a thoughtful actress and it was fun to work with her this past week. Darryl is an experienced actor from the Richmond stage. I saw him in Richmond Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part 1 earlier this summer, and it was nice to have the opportunity to work with him.

I hope I get the chance to act again sometime soon. I was asked to be in the Scottish play this fall, but I don’t have the time for all those rehearsals. Too bad – I think it’ll be a good show.

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Seminars on Academic Computing 2007

I’m in Snowmass Village for the 2007 Seminars on Academic Computing.  It’s my first time at SAC, and, after 33 years, the last time SAC will be held in Snowmass Village.

I’m not the type that pays much attention to the venue of a conference.  I’m not usually interested in exploring the towns that host these events.  I am interested in making connections with colleagues, in learning, and in reflecting on what I have learned and on how I can apply what I’ve learned to my work back on campus.

But Snowmass is beautiful.  The flight into Aspen was breathtaking.  I haven’t seen mountains and valleys like this since Jean and I visited Salzburg in 1989.  Even after I had landed, I found myself staring at the mountains that surround everything.  There are few places I find myself wanting to revisit, but I would really like to come here again someday to explore.

My first morning here I took a walk on some bike trails on the mountain, and came across flowers in each of my girl’s favorite colors.                                                 
             
                    Img 0079-2                          Img 0078-2

More on the seminars in my next posts.

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Transmedia Learning

In Convergence Culture, Henry Jenkins spends a chapter describing how the creators of The Matrix engaged storytellers in many different media to tell complimentary parts of the entire Matrix story.  Playing the video games, reading the comic books and watching The Animatrix extended the story with some overlaps to the movies.

In the May/June 2007 issue of EDUCAUSE Review, Carie Windham makes suggestions to faculty considering podcasts for their classes in her article “Confessions of a Podcast Junkie“.  One particular suggestion struck me:

Offer something more: For the professors who have implemented podcasting technology, the most common concern they hear from their peers is that students will stop showing up to class if the material is downloadable.  In reality, they say, the opposite is true.  The trick, students say, is to make sure that there is something to gain by attending class and downloading the lecture.  Podcasts should add a new perspective or offer supplemental material.  If lectures are podcasts, faculty should use classroom time to facilitate discussion, demonstrate models or simulate problems.  “You’re going to gain something out of the classroom experience — it’s that personal lecture experience,” says Maier.  “You get comments from other individuals, and examples are brought to the table by other parts of the class.”

This reminds me too of the e-mail that’s sent out a day or two after each installment of the BBC radio show In Our Time is recorded.  The host, Melvyn Bragg, extends the story of the broadcast by sharing the conversation he and his experts had before and after the show.

By using different media to discuss the subject in complimentary – and not redundant – ways, faculty can create an engaging and complex learning environment that, like The Matrix or In Our Time, lets the learner build the bigger picture.

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Social Networking and Network Stress

NetworkWorld has a cover story on the stress that social networking sites like MySpace put on DNS servers.  Pages on MySpace point to content all over the internet, causing browsers to perform dozens, sometimes hundreds of DNS lookups per page.  That combined with the popularity of social networking sites has threatened the performance of DNS servers.  Some, including the Department of Defense, have blocked access to these sites.

The article includes comments from Travis Berkley, supervisor of LAN support services at the University of Kansas.  Faculty, staff and students generate an average of 20,000 visits a day.  Kansas didn’t have to update their DNS servers, though.  They’re running BIND version 9 software, which  apparently handles the load comfortably.  The article also notes that Kansas limits how much internet bandwidth students can consume from their rooms, which probably also helps.  Does limiting bandwidth reduce the number of DNS lookups?  Other than slowing the rate at which pages are loading, I would think this would be true only if the limited bandwidth caused students to use the internet less.

The challenge is that more social networking sites are coming, many integrating new kinds of media.  Just yesterday I received an invite from Intellagirl (thanks!) to Pownce, yet another social networking site.  Pownce is like Twitter: you create a network of friends, all of whom can read and respond to short messages, or microcontent as Bryan Alexander calls it.  Twitter restricts you to 140 characters; I’ve never made use of TinyURL until I met Twitter.  Pownce seems to allow longer messages.  They also allow for other types of microcontent, including links, events and files. 

I’m waiting for my social network to sign up for Pownce.  At this moment I have fewer than five friends there, and that’s not enough to sustain conversation.  If you’d like an invite to Pownce, let me know and I’ll send an invite so long as I have any left.

One annoying bit about Pownce is the inline advertising.  Pownce inserts advertising messages at random points in your message stream.  Not good.  I can pay $20/year to make the ads stop, but unless my social network decides to use Pownce over Twitter, I’m more likely to abandon Pownce.

Another bit about Pownce that I’m not crazy about is the Pownce client.  They’ve built an application to deliver Pownce content to my desktop, but it runs on a new Adobe technology called AIR.  I don’t know why I had to install the AIR framework to get my Pownce content, but the real issue is that Pownce doesn’t seem to be opening their APIs.  That means there won’t be any innovation around the site other than what the company comes up with itself.

Hopefully they’ll get smart and open up their APIs.  In the meantime I’m keeping an eye open, hoping to be impressed, but ready to walk away if it doesn’t tip.

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Posted in Technology, Web | 2 Comments

Welcome, President Ayers

The Times-Dispatch had a profile of our new President, Edward Ayers, earlier this week.  Today President Ayers writes about the strengths and directions for the University as he takes the reigns.  His reflections are juxtaposed to two others who assume leadership roles at other institutions in the region.

It’s really going to be a few weeks before President Ayers is on campus full time.  But I am exited to see where he wants to go, and how I can help.  For now, I’m focusing on the new school year and how we in The Center, along with our colleagues in the Library, can engage the faculty in discussions on the scholarship of teaching and learning, learning spaces, and IT fluency.

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