Sunday, June 28, 2009

Elements of Distance Education Diffusion

From the constructivist standpoint the new online learning movement presents participants in the learning environment with an opportunity to reexamine the ways in which different aspects of traditional instruction can be reconstructed in order to operate effectively in the online asynchronous environment. This technological shift—from fixed knowledge given at a certain time, to knowledge being accessible anytime at anyplace is creating new wave in the online learning environment and acts as a changing agent in the way learning is transacted from those who provide information meaning facilitators to those who receive it (i.e. students).

George Siemens in his video presentation states that collaborative interaction is one of three elements that attributes to the growing acceptance of distance education in today’s corporate and educational spheres. Social software such as wikis, blogs, social bookmarking, instant messaging, Skype, Ning to name a few provide opportunities for learners to create, dialogue about, and disseminate information. Researchers believe that collaborative learning bring positive results such as deeper understanding of content, increased overall achievement in grades, improved self-esteem, and higher motivation to remain on task.

While I tend to agree with Siemens’s view collaborative interaction in the online learning environment requires many new skills to learn, work with, and adapt to the ever-changing world. The level of technical skill and continuing professional development required to effectively use these systems in the classrooms can be daunting. Bruner (1986) asserts that “learning in most settings is a communal activity, a sharing of the culture” (p.127). So to say, that collaborative interaction should not be encouraged in the online classroom would be wide of the mark. Promoting collaboration that represents social views enables learners “develop their own plans and understandings through joint effort and have the opportunity to come to new understanding through the give-and-take of interaction, argument and discussion” Vygotsky, (1978); Watson et al, 1999, p. (142).


While this new movement has the ability to change the traditional way we interact with each other in the classroom in terms of student-teacher relationship to improve learning outcomes, changes in instructional design does not cause significant impact upon learning outcomes of the students. One reason is due to inadequate professional training. In other words, even though technology may change the way students learn, it will have very little impact without teacher support.

References

Bruner J. S. (1966). Toward a theory Of instruction, Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University.

Vygotsky, L. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press: Harvard.

Watson, M., et. al. (1999). CDP cooperative learning: Working together to construct social, ethical and intellectual understanding. In Sharan, S. (ed). Cooperative learning methods. (pp. 137-156), Praeger Publishers: Westport, CT.

No comments:

Post a Comment