SlideShare a Scribd company logo
JISC LADIE project   Learning Activity Design in Education Gráinne Conole University of Southampton Email: g.c.conole@soton.ac.uk UNFOLD meeting,University of Braga 15 th  June 2005
Partners Main partners University of Southampton University of Dundee Intrallect Ltd Associates CPCET – Consortium for Post-Compulsory Education and Training SIESWE, Scottish Institute for Excellence in Social Work Education LAMS International RELOAD Open Universiteit Nederland Icodeon Software CETIS
Aim To consider the  design, construction and execution of learning activity  in a way that can be used and shared by multiple institutions and learners  To include learning activity management, sequencing of learning content within a single activity, use of interoperable learning and content packaging from a teacher's perspective
Focus To develop a  series of learning activity use cases  from both a pedagogical and technical perspective Abstraction of the services  needed to support these use cases
Reference model Will support two distinct stages Learning Activity Authoring   including the design and construction of learning activities and the discovery, specification, sequencing and packaging of content Learning Activity Realisation   including construction of the environment in which learning activities are to take place and execution of the learning activities themselves
 
Activities Top-down approach To develop and test a method of gathering learning activity use cases from teachers and provide simple use cases  Iteration 1: Bottom-up approach To establish a framework for creating the reference model and its implementations Iteration 2: Top-down approach To gather and analyse a complete set of use cases to feed into the final iteration   Iteration 3: Top-down approach To compare the reference model and its implementation with teachers expectations and perform a gap analysis  Iteration 4: Bottom-up approach To produce a reference model for the domain and a demonstrable implementation
Process Based on two tried approaches Intrallect use case methodology DialogPlus learning design taxonomy Series of workshops with practitioners Development of use cases Evaluation of approach Mapping to the e-learning framework
What is a use case? A use case is a way of capturing the expected behaviour of a system when a person uses the system to achieve a specific goal The use case is a means of communication between people It should be simple, readable text
Why use cases? Defines the behaviour of a system without considering its architecture Easy to understand and communicate Can be used to  distil requirements of a system test that a constructed system meets the use for which it was intended
Use Case Summary Procedure Consider possible primary actors (the person or system that wishes to perform an action) Consider an activity to model Write one sentence overview of use case Example A lecturer wishes to make his/her research results freely available but wants to be acknowledged if sections are copied and redistributed
How to write a use case Capture a summary use case an overview in a sentence Identify actors and their goals actors can be people, systems, organisations stakeholders and their interests Write success scenario as steps Define exceptions to each step
Use case template Authors Use Case Summary Primary Actor ( and goal) Other Actors (and goals) Stakeholders and Interests  Main Success Scenario Extensions
Example Use Case Summary A lecturer wishes to make his/her research results freely available but wants to be acknowledged if sections are copied and redistributed Primary and other Actors (and their goals) Researcher (primary) To make research results widely available Repository To store research results and make it possible for them to be found User To discover and use research results
Example (Continued) Stakeholders and Interests  Researcher’s Institution Institution would also like to be acknowledged for material. Institution would like to take responsibility for archiving and cataloguing of publication. Person making use of material Would have to acknowledge the author in a specified way  
Example (Continued) Main Success Scenario Researcher “publishes” material in the institution’s e-prints repository Selects the rights under which the material can be used from a set of possible licences proposed by the institution Includes metadata (title, description, keywords) Metadata is quality-controlled by a library cataloguer and the object is classified and given a unique reference identifier  The library system automatically archives the material…..
Example (Continued) Extensions Researcher may publish the material by making it available on a personal or departmental web page Researcher could pass details of URL to librarian who catalogues web-based resources Researcher may produce an updated version of the publication and not publish it through the same route Institution may not have an agreed set of licences from which the researcher can select what is appropriate
Learning activity toolkit  Gap between the potential   of the technologies  (confusion over how they can be used) and  application   of good pedagogical principles (confusion over which models to use) Plethora of tools and resources Enormous potential but underused Wealth of knowledge about learning Didactic/behaviourists models predominate
 
 
Experiential Practicing Mimicking Experiencing Productive Creating Producing Writing Drawing Composing Synthesising Communicative Discussing Presenting Debating Adaptive Modelling Simulation Info Handling Gathering Ordering Classifying Selecting  Analysing Manipulating Not assessed Diagnostic Formative Summative Adaptive   simulation modelling virtual worlds Communicative email  disn. boards lists commentary chat Productive s/sheet d/base Narrative text video audio  Web page image Interactive engines libraries  Indiv learner Group leader Coach Participant Mentor Supervisor Rapporteur Facilitator Deliverer Pair person Presenter Peer assessor  Moderator 1 – many Group based Class based 1-1  to S Individual Artefact Assignment Brainstorming Buzz words Dissertation Drill & practice Essay Exercise Fishbowl Ice breaker MCQ Mindmaps Pair dialogues Performance Portfolio Product Q and A Resource-based Role play Rounds Short answer Snowball Debate Test Voting Assimilative Reading Viewing  Listening Assessment Tools & Resources Roles Interaction Technique Type Types of learning activities
Stakeholder benefits Teachers Supports tutors through the process of design, construction and integration of online and face-to-face activities  Reference model will provide a common language for sharing learning activities between teachers Educational technologists Work with teachers to create learning environments for students Reference model will be designed both from the pedagogical viewpoint (the top-down approach) and from the technical viewpoint (the bottom-up approach) it will bridge the gap between teachers and “techies” Technology providers Need to produce technical solutions which meet the needs of teachers and students Reference model will provide these requirements in a form that will allow technology providers to abstract the services  Reference model will either confirm that existing specifications are adequate or it will identify gaps in specifications and highlight areas for further specification work
JISC LADIE project   Learning Activity Design in Education Gráinne Conole University of Southampton Email: g.c.conole@soton.ac.uk UNFOLD meeting, University of Braga 15th June 2005

More Related Content

PPT
DialogPlus toolkit
PPT
Conole Inaugural Final
PPT
Conole Jisc Lxp
PPT
Learning From The Uke U Experience
PPT
The impact of e-learning on organisations, individuals and the curriculum
PPT
Bridging the gap: e-learning research
PPT
E-learning research methodological issues
PPT
Evaluation of the Passit project
DialogPlus toolkit
Conole Inaugural Final
Conole Jisc Lxp
Learning From The Uke U Experience
The impact of e-learning on organisations, individuals and the curriculum
Bridging the gap: e-learning research
E-learning research methodological issues
Evaluation of the Passit project

What's hot (20)

PPT
EBank evaluation
PPT
A learning design toolkit for creating effective learning activities
PPT
Conole Prie Workshop
PPT
The Future Looks Digital - TCCTA
PPTX
Getting started with your 2020/21 digital experience insights surveys
PPT
Evidence of Learning in Blogs
PPT
2 fleck cbm intro_may2010
PPT
Unisa2019 keynote2
PPT
Modeling Collaboration: Researching professional development and learner nee...
PPTX
Grand challenges for the Educational Data Mining and Learning Sciences Commun...
PDF
Learning Analytics (or: The Data Tsunami Hits Higher Education)
PDF
‘Sweet’ strategies for higher education developers working in the third space
PPTX
Learner digital experience insights survey 2020: UK further education (FE) su...
PDF
2015 11-17 Venia Legendi Kairit Tammets
PPT
Project-based Collaborative Learning Environment with Context-aware Education...
PPTX
RALF (Redesigning Assessment and Learning with feedback in the VLEs) Project
PPT
The Digital Learner: Myth or Reality
PDF
Learning analytics dashboards
DOC
An ontologyforopenrubricexchangeontheweb
PPTX
2015-11-19 Venia Legendi: Vladimir Tomberg
EBank evaluation
A learning design toolkit for creating effective learning activities
Conole Prie Workshop
The Future Looks Digital - TCCTA
Getting started with your 2020/21 digital experience insights surveys
Evidence of Learning in Blogs
2 fleck cbm intro_may2010
Unisa2019 keynote2
Modeling Collaboration: Researching professional development and learner nee...
Grand challenges for the Educational Data Mining and Learning Sciences Commun...
Learning Analytics (or: The Data Tsunami Hits Higher Education)
‘Sweet’ strategies for higher education developers working in the third space
Learner digital experience insights survey 2020: UK further education (FE) su...
2015 11-17 Venia Legendi Kairit Tammets
Project-based Collaborative Learning Environment with Context-aware Education...
RALF (Redesigning Assessment and Learning with feedback in the VLEs) Project
The Digital Learner: Myth or Reality
Learning analytics dashboards
An ontologyforopenrubricexchangeontheweb
2015-11-19 Venia Legendi: Vladimir Tomberg
Ad

Similar to JISC LADIE project Learning Design In Education (20)

PPT
Dc Ed Use Case Session Cetismdrsig 120208
PDF
Employing the 3E Framework to underpin institutional practice in the active u...
PPTX
Armellini Future Research Questions elearning
PPTX
Conole athens sep
PDF
Learning Analytics - A New Discipline and Linked Data
KEY
Edu614 session 5 SF 12 AT
PPT
16th Annual SEDA Conference 2011
PPT
Information Skills presentation, 30th July
PPT
E assessment taylor2011
PPTX
Diving Deeper: Integrating Epigeum Modules into Stream+
PPTX
Conole tel methodology
PPTX
What Skills do we need for the digital age? The future of the digital adminis...
PDF
Mobile Learning in the CELSTEC Medialab - Marcus Specht
PPTX
Pietsch - Embedding transliteracy values: staff development in the post digit...
PPTX
Conole soton final
PPT
Current issues and approaches in developing digital literacy
PPT
Synthesising JISC Institutional Innovation
Dc Ed Use Case Session Cetismdrsig 120208
Employing the 3E Framework to underpin institutional practice in the active u...
Armellini Future Research Questions elearning
Conole athens sep
Learning Analytics - A New Discipline and Linked Data
Edu614 session 5 SF 12 AT
16th Annual SEDA Conference 2011
Information Skills presentation, 30th July
E assessment taylor2011
Diving Deeper: Integrating Epigeum Modules into Stream+
Conole tel methodology
What Skills do we need for the digital age? The future of the digital adminis...
Mobile Learning in the CELSTEC Medialab - Marcus Specht
Pietsch - Embedding transliteracy values: staff development in the post digit...
Conole soton final
Current issues and approaches in developing digital literacy
Synthesising JISC Institutional Innovation
Ad

More from grainne (20)

PPT
Conole sydney
PPT
Conole ld overview
KEY
Conole compendium ld
KEY
Conole poe
KEY
Conole svea
KEY
Conole
PDF
Conole vilnius 3_nov
KEY
Conole vilnius 3_nov
KEY
Conole vilnius 3_nov
KEY
Theory methodology
KEY
Conole ld
KEY
Oer panel
KEY
Conole creativity
DOC
Conole keynote icde_sept_28
KEY
Conole keynote bali
KEY
Conole iaidis 22_july
DOC
2 09 groinne conole_july_final_2011
KEY
Conole opal
KEY
Conole finland workshop
KEY
Conole finland 5_june
Conole sydney
Conole ld overview
Conole compendium ld
Conole poe
Conole svea
Conole
Conole vilnius 3_nov
Conole vilnius 3_nov
Conole vilnius 3_nov
Theory methodology
Conole ld
Oer panel
Conole creativity
Conole keynote icde_sept_28
Conole keynote bali
Conole iaidis 22_july
2 09 groinne conole_july_final_2011
Conole opal
Conole finland workshop
Conole finland 5_june

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PDF
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
PPTX
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
PDF
Pre independence Education in Inndia.pdf
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PDF
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
PPTX
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
PDF
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
PPTX
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
PPTX
BOWEL ELIMINATION FACTORS AFFECTING AND TYPES
PDF
Mark Klimek Lecture Notes_240423 revision books _173037.pdf
PDF
Business Ethics Teaching Materials for college
PDF
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
PPTX
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
PDF
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
PDF
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ 4 KỸ NĂNG TIẾNG ANH 9 GLOBAL SUCCESS - CẢ NĂM - BÁM SÁT FORM Đ...
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
Physiotherapy_for_Respiratory_and_Cardiac_Problems WEBBER.pdf
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
Pre independence Education in Inndia.pdf
master seminar digital applications in india
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
Anesthesia in Laparoscopic Surgery in India
PPT- ENG7_QUARTER1_LESSON1_WEEK1. IMAGERY -DESCRIPTIONS pptx.pptx
BOWEL ELIMINATION FACTORS AFFECTING AND TYPES
Mark Klimek Lecture Notes_240423 revision books _173037.pdf
Business Ethics Teaching Materials for college
Insiders guide to clinical Medicine.pdf
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ 4 KỸ NĂNG TIẾNG ANH 9 GLOBAL SUCCESS - CẢ NĂM - BÁM SÁT FORM Đ...

JISC LADIE project Learning Design In Education

  • 1. JISC LADIE project Learning Activity Design in Education Gráinne Conole University of Southampton Email: g.c.conole@soton.ac.uk UNFOLD meeting,University of Braga 15 th June 2005
  • 2. Partners Main partners University of Southampton University of Dundee Intrallect Ltd Associates CPCET – Consortium for Post-Compulsory Education and Training SIESWE, Scottish Institute for Excellence in Social Work Education LAMS International RELOAD Open Universiteit Nederland Icodeon Software CETIS
  • 3. Aim To consider the design, construction and execution of learning activity in a way that can be used and shared by multiple institutions and learners To include learning activity management, sequencing of learning content within a single activity, use of interoperable learning and content packaging from a teacher's perspective
  • 4. Focus To develop a series of learning activity use cases from both a pedagogical and technical perspective Abstraction of the services needed to support these use cases
  • 5. Reference model Will support two distinct stages Learning Activity Authoring including the design and construction of learning activities and the discovery, specification, sequencing and packaging of content Learning Activity Realisation including construction of the environment in which learning activities are to take place and execution of the learning activities themselves
  • 6.  
  • 7. Activities Top-down approach To develop and test a method of gathering learning activity use cases from teachers and provide simple use cases Iteration 1: Bottom-up approach To establish a framework for creating the reference model and its implementations Iteration 2: Top-down approach To gather and analyse a complete set of use cases to feed into the final iteration Iteration 3: Top-down approach To compare the reference model and its implementation with teachers expectations and perform a gap analysis Iteration 4: Bottom-up approach To produce a reference model for the domain and a demonstrable implementation
  • 8. Process Based on two tried approaches Intrallect use case methodology DialogPlus learning design taxonomy Series of workshops with practitioners Development of use cases Evaluation of approach Mapping to the e-learning framework
  • 9. What is a use case? A use case is a way of capturing the expected behaviour of a system when a person uses the system to achieve a specific goal The use case is a means of communication between people It should be simple, readable text
  • 10. Why use cases? Defines the behaviour of a system without considering its architecture Easy to understand and communicate Can be used to distil requirements of a system test that a constructed system meets the use for which it was intended
  • 11. Use Case Summary Procedure Consider possible primary actors (the person or system that wishes to perform an action) Consider an activity to model Write one sentence overview of use case Example A lecturer wishes to make his/her research results freely available but wants to be acknowledged if sections are copied and redistributed
  • 12. How to write a use case Capture a summary use case an overview in a sentence Identify actors and their goals actors can be people, systems, organisations stakeholders and their interests Write success scenario as steps Define exceptions to each step
  • 13. Use case template Authors Use Case Summary Primary Actor ( and goal) Other Actors (and goals) Stakeholders and Interests Main Success Scenario Extensions
  • 14. Example Use Case Summary A lecturer wishes to make his/her research results freely available but wants to be acknowledged if sections are copied and redistributed Primary and other Actors (and their goals) Researcher (primary) To make research results widely available Repository To store research results and make it possible for them to be found User To discover and use research results
  • 15. Example (Continued) Stakeholders and Interests Researcher’s Institution Institution would also like to be acknowledged for material. Institution would like to take responsibility for archiving and cataloguing of publication. Person making use of material Would have to acknowledge the author in a specified way  
  • 16. Example (Continued) Main Success Scenario Researcher “publishes” material in the institution’s e-prints repository Selects the rights under which the material can be used from a set of possible licences proposed by the institution Includes metadata (title, description, keywords) Metadata is quality-controlled by a library cataloguer and the object is classified and given a unique reference identifier  The library system automatically archives the material…..
  • 17. Example (Continued) Extensions Researcher may publish the material by making it available on a personal or departmental web page Researcher could pass details of URL to librarian who catalogues web-based resources Researcher may produce an updated version of the publication and not publish it through the same route Institution may not have an agreed set of licences from which the researcher can select what is appropriate
  • 18. Learning activity toolkit Gap between the potential of the technologies (confusion over how they can be used) and application of good pedagogical principles (confusion over which models to use) Plethora of tools and resources Enormous potential but underused Wealth of knowledge about learning Didactic/behaviourists models predominate
  • 19.  
  • 20.  
  • 21. Experiential Practicing Mimicking Experiencing Productive Creating Producing Writing Drawing Composing Synthesising Communicative Discussing Presenting Debating Adaptive Modelling Simulation Info Handling Gathering Ordering Classifying Selecting Analysing Manipulating Not assessed Diagnostic Formative Summative Adaptive simulation modelling virtual worlds Communicative email disn. boards lists commentary chat Productive s/sheet d/base Narrative text video audio Web page image Interactive engines libraries Indiv learner Group leader Coach Participant Mentor Supervisor Rapporteur Facilitator Deliverer Pair person Presenter Peer assessor Moderator 1 – many Group based Class based 1-1 to S Individual Artefact Assignment Brainstorming Buzz words Dissertation Drill & practice Essay Exercise Fishbowl Ice breaker MCQ Mindmaps Pair dialogues Performance Portfolio Product Q and A Resource-based Role play Rounds Short answer Snowball Debate Test Voting Assimilative Reading Viewing Listening Assessment Tools & Resources Roles Interaction Technique Type Types of learning activities
  • 22. Stakeholder benefits Teachers Supports tutors through the process of design, construction and integration of online and face-to-face activities Reference model will provide a common language for sharing learning activities between teachers Educational technologists Work with teachers to create learning environments for students Reference model will be designed both from the pedagogical viewpoint (the top-down approach) and from the technical viewpoint (the bottom-up approach) it will bridge the gap between teachers and “techies” Technology providers Need to produce technical solutions which meet the needs of teachers and students Reference model will provide these requirements in a form that will allow technology providers to abstract the services Reference model will either confirm that existing specifications are adequate or it will identify gaps in specifications and highlight areas for further specification work
  • 23. JISC LADIE project Learning Activity Design in Education Gráinne Conole University of Southampton Email: g.c.conole@soton.ac.uk UNFOLD meeting, University of Braga 15th June 2005

Editor's Notes

  • #2: It’s a rather a daunting proposition having to do an inaugural as it is difficult to know how to pitch it and it feels as if you are leaving your research philosophy very much bear. Also should one describe some in depth research or a broad overview? I have decided to opt for the latter. What I hope to do in this talk is three things. Firstly, I hope I can share with you my passion for this area of research and show you why I think it is such an exciting area to be working in. Secondly, I hope to be able to demonstrate why this is an important area, highlighting ways in which it is impacting on policy and practice. Thirdly, I would like to give you a snapshot of some of my current research interests.