personal learning environments

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Personal Learning Environments Rafael Scapin, Ph.D. Coordinator of Educational Technology Office of Instructional Development Dawson College

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Presentation on Personal Learning Environments at Dawson College's Ped Day (October 13, 2009)

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Page 1: Personal Learning Environments

Personal Learning Environments

Rafael Scapin, Ph.D.Coordinator of Educational Technology

Office of Instructional Development

Dawson College

Page 2: Personal Learning Environments

Index

• Course Management Systems (CMS)

• Web 2.0 and Changes in Learning

• Connectivism

• Introduction to PLEs

• Creating your PLE

• Conclusions

• References

• Questions

Page 3: Personal Learning Environments

LMS/CMS

• In order to understand what a PLE is, let’s first analyze what a Course Management System (CMS) is.

• A Course Management System (CMS) is a web-based platform for delivering, tracking and managing courses online.

• Examples: Moodle, Sakai, Dokeos, ATutor, WebCT, BlackBoard, Desire2Learn

Source: Wikipedia

Page 4: Personal Learning Environments

LMS/CMS Characteristics

• Manage users, roles, courses, instructors, and facilities and generate reports

• Course calendar • Learning Path • Student messaging and notifications • Assessment/testing capable of handling student pre/post

testing • Display scores and transcripts • Grading of coursework • Web-based or blended course delivery

Source: Wikipedia

Page 5: Personal Learning Environments

LMS/CMS Tools A CMS provides a collection of tools such as:

• assessment (particularly of types that can be marked automatically, such as multiple choice),

• communication, • uploading of content, • return of students' work, • peer assessment, • administration of student groups, • collecting and organizing student grades, • questionnaires, tracking tools, etc. • New features in these systems include wikis, blogs, RSS,

e-portfolios and 3D virtual learning spaces.

Source: Wikipedia

Page 6: Personal Learning Environments

Moodle: an example of a CMS

Page 7: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

• Old way = linear, classroom based

• New way = networks of people and online resources

• The way we find, store, create, critique, and share information has also changed:

Information R/evolution

Page 8: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

It is not the development of technology per se which poses such a challenge to education systems and educational institutions…

…but the changing ways in which people are using technologies to communicate and to learn and the accompanying social effect of such use

• A refusal to engage in these issues risks school becoming increasingly irrelevant to the everyday lives of many young people

Page 9: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

Web 2.0

•Emphasis on online collaboration and sharing among users

• Users are encouraged to create and manage information

• Applications used entirely through a Web browser

• Social-networking aspects

Page 10: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

Web 2.0: User is the Protagonist

Web as an Information Source (v. 1.0)

Web as a Participation Platform (v. 2.0)

Page 11: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

Web 2.0

Page 12: Personal Learning Environments

Learning has changed!

Web 2.0

Page 13: Personal Learning Environments

Connectivism• Learning is a process of connecting

specialized nodes or information sources.

• A learner can exponentially improve their own learning by plugging into an existing network.

• Knowing where to find information is more important than knowing information.

George Siemens, Connectivism: A learning theory for today’s learnerhttp://connectivism.ca/about.html

Page 14: Personal Learning Environments

Connectivism

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Connectivism

Information is changing constantly and located in so many places.

The ability to find, collect, connect and sort information among a multitude of human and computer networks is a critical skill.

Mashup: Web application that combines data from one or more sources into a single integrated tool.

http://thru-you.com/

Page 16: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: Definition

• Personal Learning Environments (PLE) are systems that help learners take control of and manage their own learning.

• This includes providing support for learners to set their own learning goals, manage their learning; managing both content and process

• communicate with others in the process of learning

• and thereby achieve learning goals.

Source: Wikipedia

Page 17: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: Definition

A PLE is NOT:

• A specific software application

• A method for creating e-learning applications

Page 18: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: Definition

A PLE is :

• A concept (based on Web 2.0 and social network) rather than specific software

• A group of techniques and a variety of tools:– to gather information – explore/develop relationships between

pieces of information – browser-based (potentially)

Page 19: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: DefinitionA PLE is :

• An environment where you access learning from a variety of sources.

• A place where you do your own work. It’s not dependent on the university/school.

• A collection of tools and systems, not a single monolithic system.

• A collection of tools and systems chosen by each individual learner, rather than the university. More often than not these tools and systems will not be owned or maintained by the university.

Page 20: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: Definition

A PLE helps :

• View the subject as a landscape as well as individual pieces of information

• Create a personal repository of materials and relationships clustered around a unifying topic or concept

• Document, reflect, communicate, collaborate

Page 21: Personal Learning Environments

PLE Diagram (1)S

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PLE Diagram (2)S

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PLE Diagram (3)S

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PLE: Definition

• In contrast to traditional LMS-driven e-learning solutions, a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) takes a more natural and learner-centric approach and is characterized by the freeform use of a set of lightweight services and tools that belong to and are controlled by individual learners.

(Mohamed Amine Chatti , 2009)

Page 25: Personal Learning Environments

PLE: Definition

• Rather than integrating different services into a centralized system, the idea is to provide the learner with a plethora of different services and hand over control to her to select, use, and mashup the services the way she deems fit.

• A PLE driven approach does not only provide personal spaces, which belong to and are controlled by the user, but also requires a social context by offering means to connect with other personal spaces for effective knowledge sharing and collaborative knowledge creation.

(Mohamed Amine Chatti , 2009)

Page 26: Personal Learning Environments

How to Create a PLE

A PLE can be implemented by using some free Web 2.0 services available online.

• Web Aggregators: – Netvibes– PageFlakes– iGoogle

Page 27: Personal Learning Environments

How to Create a PLE

You can also use a platform to create your own social network:

Ning: www.ning.com

Elgg: www.elgg.org

Page 28: Personal Learning Environments

Conclusions

“PLEs are great. They’re just completely incompatible with the existing education system.”

Retrieved April 9, 2009 from:

http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/wordpress/category/uncategorized/

Learning Technologies Centre Research Blog

Page 29: Personal Learning Environments

Conclusions• PLEs are not another substantiation of educational

technology but a new approach to learning.

• A response to pedagogic approaches which require that learner’s e-learning systems need to be under the control of the learners themselves.

• PLE are based on the idea that learning will take place in different contexts and situations and will not be provided by a single learning provider

• The idea of a Personal Learning Environment recognises that learning is continuing and seeks to provide tools to support that learning

Source: Graham Attwell

Page 30: Personal Learning Environments

Conclusions

• The ‘pedagogy’ behind the PLE is that it offers a portal to the world, through which learners can explore and create, according to their own interests and directions, interacting at all times with their friends and community

• New forms of learning are based on trying things and action, rather than on more abstract knowledge.

Source: Graham Attwell

Page 31: Personal Learning Environments

References

• Connectivist Learning and the Personal Learning Environment (by Stephen Downes): Slideshare

• Networked Possibilities (by Alec Couros): Slideshare

• Colletion of PLE Diagrams: http://edtechpost.wikispaces.com/PLE+Diagrams

• History of Personal Learning Environments (Wikipedia)

• Personal Learning Environments - the future of eLearning? (Article by Graham Attwell)

Page 32: Personal Learning Environments

Questions

Page 33: Personal Learning Environments

ContactRafael Scapin

Coordinator of Educational Technology

Office of Instructional Development

(Dawson College)

E-mail: [email protected]

Phone: (514) 931 8731 ext 1404

Skype: rscapin

MSN: [email protected]

Twitter: rscapin

Page 34: Personal Learning Environments

Contact

This presentation is available at:

http://www.slideshare.net/oid