Sunday, July 19, 2015

Module 3 Reflection



There were a couple of things that struck me with the Module 3 reading, especially as I was actually using Web 2.0 tools for my presentation, and as a matter of full disclosure, let me preface this entry by saying that I will be developing an online class for educators on the use of such tools for this course.
The first was how closely Ko and Rossen’s presentation in Chapter 9 actually mirrored the syllabus that I had created for my own course. I’ll admit to writing the syllabus for my own course three weeks before I actually purchased the book. Given that this course is presented in a 7 week format, I wanted to get a jump on things, and as I knew that some sort of online course would be required, I decided to pursue a Multimedia Tools for Educators course. As you can see from the attached syllabus, my syllabus and their discussion in Chapter 9 are very similar. The one point at which we differ is that the authors discuss creating a web page first and images second, and I address graphics first. The reason for this, I believe, is the way we approach creating a web page.
During my undergraduate education, I took a course in computer graphics. At the time, I thought it would be one of those courses where I would get any easy A and learn very little. I was half right. I did get the A, but the instructor taught me something that has been invaluable going forward. I intend on passing on this knowledge. The instructor had us create something he called a “web treatment.” That is to say that he had us create a graphical representation of a web page. To the layperson, this may not seem entirely useful. After all, graphics don’t have dynamic content and can’t be linked to other pages, but what he did then, in my mind, was pure genius. He required us to split our graphical representation into different blocks and then use those blocks to create the web page using the <div> tag in HTML.
Here’s why this was a stroke of genius. All too often, novice web designers create their web pages as backgrounds with pasted pictures, much like a scrapbook. Creating the template first, allows the designer to break down their page into its component parts and then, if necessary, use javascript to manipulate those parts as required. There is much more I wish to say about this, but I’ll leave it for my course. Suffice to say that, like the Ko and Rossen, I believe it’s incredibly important that an educator understand the nuts and bolts of HTML before they move on to other Web 2.0 tools. One other area in which we differ is in the use of WYSIWYG tools. I’m not a fan. I may be old fashioned, but I still hand code each web page I create. It’s a bit more time consuming, but I believe it adds a bit of elegance that page mills can’t recreate.
The other thing that struck me about Chapter 9 was the author’s discussion of scripted versus unscripted content. Again, I fear, we disagree. Obviously things such as introductions should remain unscripted. The last thing that any learner wants to see is a teacher presenting themselves using cue cards. That being said, I feel that all presentations should be scripted and edited prior to being utilized as an audio track. Ko and Rossen liken the unscripted audio to a classroom presentation. They overlook one important factor. In the classroom environment, the instructor reacts to both verbal and non-verbal feedback, which would not be present when the instructor is recording the audio for a presentation. It has been my experience that an instructor who sits down at a microphone with the intent to ad lib will inevitably end up rambling thus reducing the effectiveness of the presentation. This is not to say that a script should be just read. An effective instructor starts the recording process with an aural picture (how’s that for an oxymoron) of what the lesson will sound like. With audio and video presentations, it is imperative that the instructor see themselves as an actor addressing an audience. They should attempt to visualize their students in front of them in order to add the proper degree of inflection. Utilizing such tools results in both interesting and entertaining presentations.
Lastly, where the text and I absolutely agree is the need for students to create their own content. Far too often in multimedia courses, the instructor demonstrates and the learner replicates. There are two things wrong with this approach.
Students tend to approach learning with what I like to call a math-centric approach. They desperately search for the one correct answer and every other answer out there is wrong. I honestly believe that this is what sparked the inclusion of rubrics for every activity under the sun. I’m going to veer off on a tangent here, but it is something I have wanted to express for quite a long time. My wife is English and was raise in the English school system. After moving to the United States and attending a large U.S. university, she spent 6 months in her homeland as a student abroad with her American peers. She has repeatedly related to me the frustration of her UK professors at the penchant for U.S. students to parrot the classroom lectures and cite experts in their academic work. This is a weakness, I feel, in the American education system. Far too often, students are looking for what the professor wants rather than what they themselves feel. To be sure, all statements should be supported by facts, but as an instructor, I want to know what the students know. I want to see how they can apply the tools I’ve given them in fun and interesting ways. I do not want to see a carbon copy of my lesson demonstration. Wow me, make me think, make me laugh. To me, that is the advantage that Web 2.0 tools give educators. Expression and knowledge transfer is no longer confined to the written word and a whiteboard. There are infinite possibilities for both teachers and learners to explore.
The second thing wrong with the demonstrate/replicate models is that, quite simply, it sucks the fun out of learning. For adults, learning should be both meaningful and fun. Adults in a classroom environment are investing one of their most precious commodities, their time. They are taking time away from their families or their jobs in order to participate in a class. At the very least, the class should provide something they can take away, but equally as important is the fact that it should be enjoyable. Students should be presented with opportunities to have fun while they learn. Adults are almost constantly confronted with serious situations, family issues, job obstacles. As an instructor of adult learners, I believe the classroom should present an environment where they can decompress and truly enjoy what they do.
Finally, what I’ve come away with this week is the knowledge that the course that I will be developing in this class is entirely marketable as an undergraduate offering. The fact that the authors discuss quite a few of the tools that I would introduce in the course lets me know that I’m on the right track. Additionally, the comments I received from my peers on my discussion this week shows me that there is a desire to delve into the workings of these Web 2.0 tools beyond a simple highlighting in a text book. 

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