Dublin is a city undergoing rapid technological transformation as Ireland strives to become a tech-hub of Europe, including educational technology.
I recently presented a paper at the World Conference for Online Learning in Dublin, Ireland. The theme for the conference was “Transforming Lives and Societies,” and the best part of the conference was listening to critical voices seeking to understand how lives and societies are being transformed, why, and what are the long-term implications of these transformations? Perhaps my favourite was closing plenary speaker Dr. George Siemens; Dr. Siemens was my research methods instructor at Athabasca University and one of the reasons I chose the Athabasca program. In a fairly popular blog post from 2015 entitled “Adios Ed Tech. Hola something else,” Dr. Siemens announced a personal transformation:
It’s time for a change. A curious disconnect has been emerging in my thinking, one that has been made clear with the hype-oriented buzzwords of today’s edtech companies. I no longer want to be affiliated with the tool-fetish of edtech. It’s time to say adios to technosolutionism that recreates people as agents within a programmed infrastructure.
In his plenary, Dr. Siemens asked if technology is helping us to become what we want to become?
It certainly is for Ireland. Ireland’s Minister of State for Higher Education, Mary Mitchell O’Connor, clearly stated Ireland’s aspirations to become the “tech capital of Europe, and that includes educational technology.” In many respects, Ireland already is a tech-hub with headquarters for Google, Ancestry.com, LinkedIn, Facebook, and the National Institute for Digital Learning. And, as it is with most online learning conferences, this one was also full of optimism and excitement for the future of educational technology.
Here are, in no particular order, snippets of key takeaways that I jotted down in my learning journal from the many dialogues of transformation taking place at the World Conference for Online Learning (I wish I would have done a better job of writing down names):
Students have to be at the epicenter of all decisions about online education. This includes synchronous support – live calls because relationships with students are important.
It may also include a “regulatory environment” that supports the use of technology to supplement and strengthen the intrinsically interactive nature of teaching and learning. Courses and programs must consistently incorporate the frequent and substantive personal interaction that is central to the learning process.
Online education requires a redefinition of our understanding of teaching and learning. It is neither Sage on the Stage nor Guide on the Side. “Universities must evolve their paradigm, from student to learner, from teaching to designing and managing learning experiences, from degree based to continuous learning.”
Everyone is striving to think beyond the 18-24 year old demographic and beginning to think into genuine lifelong learning. Upskilling is the future of education; 30-50% of adult learners will need to be reskilled during their careers.
Credentials are the core business of education. Alternative digital credentials potentially mean less time to spend, and less bills to pay. "Universities and colleges that fail to adopt the Alternative Digital Credential movement will experience a slow decline in relevance and market position.”
"It is a precious thing to have a job. After all, we all have jobs, whether you think that's the primary role of education or not."
There are a lot of quality assurance frameworks in online education, but all are little used – institutions have to use a credible framework, modify an existing one, or develop their own.
Our current assessment system (grades) undermines all attempts at learning.
“We need to put forth collective effort to better understand and address the challenging conflicts in online higher education contexts to make openness and innovation authentic dialogues rather than just rhetoric.”
Dr. Siemens, in his closing remarks, admitted he was less interested in what is changing and how it is changing. Instead, he is increasingly interested in whether technology is helping us become what we want to become. And to become what we want to become, we have to stop creating problems that only new technology can solve. We will also have to acknowledge systemic problems and resolve those, not with technology, but with human morals, values, and principles.
My digital badge from Educause is integrated with my LinkedIn account. Who cares?
I had the chance to talk to the AB Deans of Business about microcredentials, which I then turned into a short article for MHC’s monthly, called The FAX.
Much has been made of micro-credentials, but are they the future, or are they just fantasy? In short, micro-credentialing is a way to recognize competencies or skills acquired through a wide variety of learning experiences, including international experiences, community-service learning projects, and short courses. The micro-credential is often represented by a digital badge, or an icon that includes metadata on who issued the badge, when it was issued, and the criteria and/or evidence for earning the credential. A user can share the micro-credential as part of an integrated method for demonstrating their learning in ways beyond just formal coursework and the transcript (Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning, 2017).
Microcredentials and digital badges are easy enough to create, but the big question is who values them?
The opportunity exists for badges to find their place in postsecondary education, but just because you can develop a digital badge or microcredential, that does not mean it has any value. The value may come from the ability to break learning down into chunks, or providing some evidence of skills that are harder to demonstrate, such as communication skills. Even though claims of change are rampant, microcredentials have not yet had much impact.
As Dianne Conrad and I wrote in our book (Conrad & Openo, 2018), my favorite example of the successful deployment of micro-credentials comes from a hands-on undergraduate chemistry course. Students earned badges in the proper use of lab equipment. In the videos that learners submitted for assessment, students stated their names, showed their face and hands, and then did a task, such as performing a close-up shot of a calibration mark on lab equipment. Mid-semester examinations on how to use the equipment demonstrated that between 74% and 95% of students who received their laboratory badges answered laboratory use questions correctly. At the same time, the department saved $3,200 in equipment costs—two very different ways to prove that students had more effectively mastered the learning outcomes of safely and effectively using lab equipment.
What is the lesson here? As the use of digital badges increases, it may become clear when and where they are most effective in influencing student engagement and motivation. It’s unlikely that badges are going to replace the parchment any time soon, but perhaps there are specific cases (new graduates, evidence of soft skills, or experiential learning opportunities) where micro-credentials make sense (Selingo, 2017).
Casilli and Hickey (2016) put forth two strong arguments indicating that badges might become a more prominent feature on the assessment landscape. The first is that digital badges provide an opportunity for schools to generate more claims of student learning, with more evidence to support those claims. Secondly, digital badges increase the transparency of assessment practice, and through the transparency of badges—which includes metadata, assessments, and artifacts—it is possible that the importance of conventional forms of recording learner performance, for example, transcripts, where there is no supporting evidence of student learning, may diminish. Or a blockchain verified transcript might be enhanced through the integration of the transcript, attendant micro-credentials, and evidence of learning from a student’s e-portfolio.
Maybe. Maybe not. Micro-credentialing is not a new idea, but there are some new approaches emerging. Wilfrid Laurier is now using a tracking tool to capture students’ experiential learning experiences, and the University of Alberta awards a Community-Service Learning Certificate as part of a student’s co-curricular record. These are good examples, but significant challenges remain.
First off, micro-credentials haven’t gained acceptance in work or academic worlds, so they need to evolve and mature (Harvey, 2017). Plus, not all degrees are created equal. Sometimes, institutional prestige determines the signal value of the parchment. In areas where you need a specific credential to practice (Registered Nurse, for example), micro-credentials won’t do you a lot of good (Duque, 2018). And a remaining problem is coming up with rigorous and reliable measure that someone has achieved the competency specified for the badge (Greene, 2019). This takes us back to perennial problem of assessment in general; what proof do we have that learners have actually acquired any of the knowledge, skills, or values we claimed they have?
So here is my not so bold prediction: some institutions are going to continue to play and experiment with micro-credentials because of increasing pressure on postsecondary institutions to provide evidence of learning, which will increasingly be tied to funding and performance-based outcomes. They will also continue to play and experiment with micro-credentials as a new business model. Incredibly prestigious and well-resourced universities (Cambridge, Harvard, and MIT) are all working to figure how achieve scalable modularity, and I suspect someone will eventually figure out a model that works. Arizona State University’s Global Freshman University (a micro-Bachelors) failed, but it might end up being a failure in the right direction.
References
Casilli, C., & Hickey, D. (2016). Transcending conventional credentialing and assessment paradigms with information-rich digital badges. Information Society, 32(2), 117–129. doi:10.1080/01972243.2016.1130500
Conrad, D., & Openo, J. (in press). Assessment strategies for online contexts: Engagement and authenticity. Edmonton, AB: Athabasca University Press.
Duque, C. T. (2018, September 21). No one has figured out successful, sustainable microcredentialing. LMS Pulse. Retrieved from https://www.lmspulse.com/2018/no-one-has-figured-out-succesful-sustainable-microcredentialing/
Greene, P. (2019, February 16). Education micro-credentials 101: Why do we need badges? Forbes. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/petergreene/2019/02/16/education-micro-credentials-101-why-do-we-need-badges/#30b808424190
Harvey, D. (2017, November 12). Micro-credentials: Fad or skills training disruption? LinkedIn. Retrieved from https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/micro-credentials-fad-skills-training-disruption-david-harvey/
Selingo, J. J. (2017). The Future of the Degree: How Colleges Can Survive the New Credential Economy. Washington, DC: The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning. (2017). UCalgary badges. Retrieved from https://badges.ucalgary.ca/.
In May, I had the privilege and honour to present a session at Mount Royal University’s Liberal Education conference. https://www.liberaleducation.ca/
My presentation was a 30-year retrospective on Ursula Franklin’s The Real World of Technology. Franklinewas prescient.
Franklin suggests that technology tends to displace the human and transform the nature of experience. As technology displaces human muscle and human mind and alleviates the shortcomings of being human, the human is not so much enhanced as much as it is minimized. Franklin says,
As more and more of daily life in the real world of technology is conducted via prescriptive technologies, the logic of technology begins to overpower and displace other types of social logic, such as the logic of compassion or the logic of obligation, the logic of ecological survival or the logic of linkages to nature.
This is not just polemic. A good example of this overpowering displacement is that when, in 2007 the Oxford Junior Dictionary was published — a sharp-eyed reader noticed that around forty common words concerning nature had been dropped. Apparently they were no longer being used enough by children to merit their place in the dictionary. The list of these “lost words” included acorn, adder, bluebell, dandelion, fern, heron, kingfisher, newt, otter, and willow. Among the words taking their place were attachment, blog, broadband, bullet-point, cut-and-paste, and voice-mail.
Franklin suggests we need to consider machines and devices as cohabitants on this earth, and in Simon Winchester’s The Perfectionists, he writes, “The numbers are beyond incredible. There are now more transistors at work on this planet (some 15 quintillion) than there are leaves on all the trees in the world.” This is the overpowering and displacing effect of technology.
Liberal education is also being overpowered and displaced. Throughout this symposium, several presenters suggested that automation and liberal education can play nicely with one another. If they can, it will only be to the extent that liberal education serves the logic of technology. If more examples and events like this cannot be accomplished to question the logic of technology and its displacing effect, Franklin warns that the house that technology built will not become anything more than an unlivable techno-dump. Franklin says, “I have long subscribed to what I call Franklin’s earthworm theory of social change. Social change will not come to us like an avalanche down the mountain. Social change will come through seeds growing in well prepared soil – and it is we, like the earthworms, who prepare the soil.”
My fellow worms, let us thank MRU and MHC for preparing the soil.
Medicine Hat College in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada, has recently embarked on several innovation projects in the renewable energy sector with the intent of providing students, faculty and the community an opportunity to learn about emerging technologies. Currently, the post-secondary institution has a micro grid at its Medicine Hat campus that includes an electric vehicle charging station, solar panels and wind turbines. Recognizing the growing opportunity in this industry, the college is providing learners a chance to broaden their skills, so they are prepared for tomorrow’s workplace. The EBSCO grant will allow Medicine Hat College to expand its investment and continue its research into renewables at the Brooks campus.
The EBSCO Solar grant will provide the college an opportunity to showcase a creative and functional solar ‘garden’ that will educate students, residents and businesses in the region on how to effectively implement the use of alternative resources. The project will be incorporated into the natural landscape with the help of Built Environment Engineering Technologies and Trades students. Jason Openo, Director of Teaching and Learning at Medicine Hat College Library, says, “I am most excited about the opportunity this grant provides to our Built Environment Engineering students, who will have an authentic learning experience in designing and constructing for the library a beautiful, solar-powered classroom and community space. This literally equips them with the skills necessary to build a new future for our community and our province.”
Absolutely thrilled to be have been part of this project. My role was to pull the right people together. So blessed to work with a group of talented and committed people.
Over half a million international students now study in Canada. This rapid increase in international enrollments has intensified focus on academic integrity because the stakes are high for both international students and the institutions that host them. Academic integrity violations involving international students may garner scandalous attention, and the international students who become entangled in incidents of academic misconduct face potentially devastating life consequences, including expulsion from academic studies and dishonor in family life. International students studying in Canada, particularly those whose first language is not English, face several hurdles not experienced by their Canadian counterparts. Overcoming these cultural barriers is a shared interest and a top strategic priority because academic credentials are a signal that assert students have mastered academic norms of the new culture. There remains considerable debate surrounding international students regarding their increased likelihood to commit academic integrity violations, and this integrative literature review explores the intersection of academic integrity and international students. It takes a broad and holistic approach to identify areas of conflict and knowledge gaps, with a focus on successful institutional interventions that proactively reduce the likelihood of academic misconduct. Little research details efficacious methods to reduce incidents of academic integrity violations involving international students, but taking stock of current interventions provides some guidance to institutions welcoming international students, and the faculty who teach them, so that they can both be successful in addressing academic integrity issues.
Openo, J. (2018). Assessment blues: How authentic assessments saved my teaching soul. Journal for Research and Practice in College Teaching, 3(2), 171-174. Retrieved from https://journals.uc.edu/index.php/jrpct/article/view/908/816
Abstract
I was either going to quit teaching or I was going to make assessment mean something to me. My interest in creating engaging and meaningful assessments did not start with students, it arose from my desire to stop the stultifying process of inviting meaningless student work (that I had assigned!). I was, after all, ultimately responsible for doing this to them and to me. Authentic assessments are the answer. Authentic assessments are ill-defined and open-ended tasks that provide opportunities for students to apply their learning on real-world problems relevant to their discipline (Conrad & Openo, 2018). Students work collaboratively and practice communication, problem solving, self-management and teamwork in mastering course content. I didn’t know about authentic assessments when I first started instructing, but that’s the direction I headed in instinctually.
I am presenting a session at the sold-out Canadian Symposium on Academic Integrity next week. Here is the abstract and the integrated model that my brilliant graphic designer Andrea Woods came up with.
Abstract
Over half a million international students now study in Canada. This rapid increase in international enrollments has intensified focus on academic integrity because the stakes are high for both international students and the institutions that host them. Academic integrity violations involving international students may garner scandalous attention, and the international students who become entangled in incidents of academic misconduct face potentially devastating life consequences, including expulsion from academic studies and dishonor in family life. International students studying in Canada, particularly those whose first language is not English, face several hurdles not experienced by their Canadian counterparts. Overcoming these cultural barriers is a shared interest and a top strategic priority because academic credentials are a signal that assert students have mastered academic norms of the new culture. There remains considerable debate surrounding international students regarding their increased likelihood to commit academic integrity violations, and this integrative literature review explores the intersection of academic integrity and international students. It takes a broad and holistic approach to identify areas of conflict and knowledge gaps, with a focus on successful institutional interventions that proactively reduce the likelihood of academic misconduct. Little research details efficacious methods to reduce incidents of academic integrity violations involving international students, but taking stock of current interventions provides some guidance to institutions welcoming international students, and the faculty who teach them, so that they can both be successful in addressing academic integrity issues.
To cheat or not to cheat? This integrated model outlines the research-based reasons why students choose to commit or not commit academic integrity violations. Most have some theoretical correlation. International students face intensified pressures around success, rewards to be gained (permanent residency), and social norms (some may come from countries where corruption is commonplace). Conversely, some international students may have stronger ethical beliefs related to respect for authority.
This positive review of our book came out 04 March 2019.
Mulder, D. J. (2019, March 4). Review of Conrad, D., & Openo, J. (2018). Assessment strategies for online learning: Engagement and Authenticity. Edmonton, AB: Athabasca University Press. Tech Trends. Retrieved from https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11528-019-00380-8
Mulder, D.J. TechTrends (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11528-019-00380-8
With a title including the phrase Assessment strategies, you might think that this book is full of how-to chapters that offer nitpicking advice on evaluating students’ learning. You would, however, be mistaken. Dianne Conrad and Jason Openo’s approach takes the reader on a philosophical, yet accessible tour of high-quality assessment options for authentic learning in online spaces.
As an experienced online instructor and course designer, I enjoyed reading the book. The research that went into this book was comprehensive, and it captures a diversity of perspectives related to creating authentic assessments in online learning spaces. While I would not say this book is breaking new ground, I believe I would be welcome in the cocktail party of the appendix. I suspect other readers familiar with the landscape of online learning would feel the same way: while much of the content is recognizable, it is laid out in a way that made it feel fresh, and it invites the reader to join in the conversation. I believe this book might best be suited for graduate students studying instructional design or educational technology, or faculty members who are new to online teaching and learning. They will surely find Conrad and Openo effective tour guides able to call attention to both foundational principles as well as practical applications for incorporating authentic assessments in online learning.
Thank you, David, for such an excellent review.
My April 2019 contribution to FAX, MHC’s Faculty Association monthly magazine.
T. S. Eliot said April is the cruelest month; the lilacs emerge from the dead land and their scent stirs memory and desire. In a less poetic way, April is that time of year when many of us get a chance to look up and look around. For many (not Trades instructors or those who teach the Spring semester), the grind of teaching and marking lets up, and for a very short while, we have a chance to focus on other possibilities, like our reading lists and long-awaited writing projects.
And, perhaps as you reflect upon on your past year of teaching and learning, you have the inkling of an idea for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Project but don’t know when or how to get started, especially because the application for research ethics feels time-consuming and daunting. One of things I have to complete in April as part of my dissertation is my research ethics application for Athabasca University, and as I approach this, I thought I would share some resources that have been helpful to me.
Athabasca University requires all of their graduate students to complete the Tri-Council Policy Statement 2nd Edition (TCPS 2) Core training. The online course on research ethics is an introduction to the 2nd edition of the Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS 2). It consists of eight modules focusing on ethical guidance in TCPS 2 that is applicable to all research regardless of discipline or methodology. The purpose of TCPS 2: CORE is to provide an introduction to TCPS 2, primarily for researchers. It is actually quite interesting and only takes a couple hours to complete.
MHC’s application for research involving human subjects corresponds to the TCPS 2 expectations, and while our application may be slightly different from other institutions, many institutions provide examples of successful applications and walkthroughs for how to complete a successful research ethics application. Some of my favorites include:
Fedoruk, L. (2017). Ethics in the scholarship of teaching and learning: Key principles and strategies for ethical practice. Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning Guide Series. Calgary, AB: Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning at the University of Calgary. Retrieved from https://taylorinstitute.ucalgary.ca/sites/default/files/Ethics%20in%20SoTL-Taylor%20Institute%20Guide.pdf (great guide of how the TCPS 2 is applied to research conducting in a teaching and learning setting)
uWaterloo’s Guide to completing a human research ethics application (step-by-step instructions for how to complete certain sections of the application, including data ownership, storage, and destruction)
University of British Columbia’s Behavioural Research Ethics Board hosts a number of previously approved applications to give a sense of the information members of the research ethics board will be looking for.
One of my favourite comments from the UBC site is, “bear in mind that regardless of the quality of your application, the REB is likely to have some comments and requests for clarification.” That is the REB’s role after all. I have seen it said that the Research Ethics Board should be a partner in research. That spirit of partnership doesn’t always play out at other institutions, but it does here. Members of MHC’s Research Ethics Board encourage a revise and resubmit approach, and I am willing to provide as much assistance as I can.
So don’t let the prospect of research ethics stop you. It is a productive and necessary step to conducting quality research, and the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning can be high-quality research. Some people still don’t know what SoTL means; others think of it as scholarship-lite. But SoTL is now recognized within the Roles and Mandates Policy Framework for Alberta’s Adult Learning System. SoTL is research to better understand the teaching and learning process and generate new knowledge around curriculum, teaching practices, and how students acquire knowledge. It is a valid component of strengthening understanding of teaching and learning and improving practice.
I am also very interested in in Joshua Eyler’s umbrella ethics approach.
Ecampus Research Unit. (2018, October 29). Dr. Joshua Eyler on umbrella IRBs. Oregon State University [institutional blog]. Retrieved from https://ecampus.oregonstate.edu/research/podcast/e135/