Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Appointment as a fellow at Education Research Lab

According to a memo I received, I has been appointed as a fellow at the Education Research Lab (EduLab @ UPSI) or Makmal Penyelidikan Pendidikan, UPSI since June 2013. From what I understand, a fellow appointed in the Lab is a member who work together with other fellows in the pursuit of mutual knowledge or practice in educational research. However, as fellows are not paid to work in the lab, the contribution is solely voluntarily.

I have been proposing the establishment of an educational creative content design and development unit in UPSI. While the idea is welcomed and supported mentally by colleagues in UPSI, multiple challenges await me ahead to realise the proposal. Eventually, I found an ideal canopy that suits the unit, that is the Education Research Lab. And because of this, I had been appointed as a fellow to put the proposal into practice.

Then I began to think about the issues of the Lab in UPSI:

1. The need of branding EduLab @ UPSI as a vivid and tangible vision.
2. The need of a role model of EduLab @ UPSI that we can refer to in achieving success.
3. The need of measurable strategies to leverage the profile of EduLab @ UPSI in Public Service, in private sectors, and at international level.

The EduLab @ UPSI should have raised its national and international profile rapidly--making the whole world know our presence, and more importantly, spare their hands to bring EduLab @ UPSI up for the benefit of Malaysia and Asia. To achieve this, we need to initiate traditional media (slow and costly) and social media promotion (free of charge and effective proven) of our presence and what we offer.

I came across the Education Innovation Lab at Harvard University (http://www.edlabs.harvard.edu/) a simple but straight forward role model which I think UPSI can replicate. I really like to idea of "teaching in the future classroom" advocated by the newly appointed Director, Assoc Prof Dr. Nurulhuda Abd Rahman. I am thinking of making people I am connected to as partners of the Lab, particularly in visualising and realising classroom for the future. Example of activities that they can sponsor is organisation design and/ or essay writing contest at school, university and open levels on "my dream classroom" or "classroom for the future".

Friday, 14 June 2013

The need for a virtual consultation provision platform

After returning to Malaysia, my former colleagues in the oversea intend to keep in touch with me, particularly when they need advice on game-based learning and learn-based gaming practices. I personally see this as an opportunity to raise the profile of UPSI at global R&D arena while at the same time offer me chances to provide oversea consultation service

Ideally, distance consultation services could be offered through tele- or video-conferencing mechanism, such as Skype or Facebook. The problem of using existing online communication tools like Skype or Facebook is that the tools do not link to service invoicing and paying mechanism, i.e. charging clients systematically at a predetermined price. The payment of consultation fee would have to direct into UPSI account, and this mechanism is absent in the current consultation system. 

Besides, when academics like me try to offer consultation services to oversea clients, particularly those who physically stay in different time zones, I usually face the following information and communication technology (ICT) and management challenges:
  • the need for flexible consultation modes (synchronous and asynchronous); 
  • the requirement of a slot booking and scheduling mechanism;
  • the collection of consultation fee from clients in oversea;
  • the fluctuation of conversion rate; and 
  • the reliability of online security and cross-national confidentiality. 
I propose to design a business model for the above mentioned consultation service provision. Once the model is ready, a prototype of the consultation service provision and management system will be developed to tackle the challenged stated above.

As UPSI has been sponsoring academics to oversea to pursue master's and PhD, I believe UPSI scholars might encounter similar needs to offer consultation services to their former colleagues in foreign countries. Therefore the proposed system could benefit other academics in UPSI as well.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Exposure to PBL and Thinking-based Learning (TBL) - how to practice PBL and TBL in GBL?

What I knew about PBL prior the exposure:

I see problem as a form of challenge, that is one of the structural elements of game. The nature of learning outcome (LO) in PBL would be problem solved. Learning occurs in the problem solving process.

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Traditional approach:
Teachers + Contents + Learners = Teacher-centred

PBL approach:
Problem-solver + Problem + Facilitator = Student-centred

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The nature of problem in PBL

- ill-structured
- require making assumptions
- includes a hook

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When I flashed back, I actually had practised PBL in MRE3014 Design Aesthetics course recently. I browsed through the web and found a journal (http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/ijpbl/) which I can report my practice of PBL.

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Teaching of thinking: explaining the nature, types and characteristics of thinking
- emphasize on thinking skills.
Teaching for thinking: teaching content and the approach supports students to think
- emphasize learning contents.
Thinking in thinking: infuse teaching contents in thinking. (TBL)
- emphasize both thinking skills and the learning content.

Three components: skilful thinking, meta-cognition, habits of mind

Positive habits of mind: mental habits or disposition that enhance thinking thus making it more effective and therefore more skilful.

Scientific reasoning skills: STEM (Science, technology, Engineering, Mathematics)
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Thinking strategy maps for classifying deductively.
1. What are the categories that you want to classify the given items under?
2. What are the defining characteristics of these categories?
3. What are the characteristics of the items?
4. Based on their characteristics, what categories do the items fall under?
5.



Training Teachers for the Future - workshop conducted by Assoc Prof Dr. Nurulhuda

I was attracted by a workshop titled "Training Teachers for the Future" two weeks ago. I started to think about how teachers for the future would be like when I did my PhD in Warwick Institute of Education. I self-brainstormed to conceptualize the characteristics of technology-enabled teachers (see Tan, Johnston-Wilder & Neill). Herewith the characteristics that I conceptualised:





With these mindset, I enrolled myself into the course. The course is conducted by Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nurulhuda. 

TBD...




Thursday, 6 June 2013

How to prepare interactive lecture notes?


This morning, during my invigilation of exam, I received an invitation from HRD to run a workshop on “Interactive Lecture Notes”. I am grateful for this invitation because I have been thinking about how to prepare an interactive lecture recently. At the end of the current semester, I gave my MRE3014 Design Aesthetic students an opportunity to criticize and improve my lecture notes. These students did not do well in their mid-term test and they requested to “make-good” of their score, hence the idea of challenging them to criticize and revise my lecture notes. Herewith the selected feedback, suggestion and revision I received from them:
  • Survey the language competency and expectation of students at the beginning of semester 
  • Dual-language notes 
  • Colourful slides 
  • Background music and appropriate sound effects 
  • In-lecture reflexion plus Q&A session 
  • Include physical activity as intermission, e.g. debate, discussion in small groups 
  • Enrich the lecture notes with relevant or provocative graphics or images as examples 
  • Include relevant animation or video 
  • Insert hyperlink to every slide for self-pace learning after class 
Their suggestion and views are genuine because they went through the lesson and sufferred from the use of non-interactive lecture notes—although all of them enjoyed my lecture which filled with a lot of interesting stories. In a word, they need an interactive lecture note, at least for after class revision.

To me, Gagne’s Nine Events of Instruction is still applicable, and I am going to revise all my lecture notes to make them interactive using Gagne’s approach and ADDIE instructional design model.

Before diving into revising the notes, I need to study the nature of “interactive lecture notes”. I believe that in the context of student-centred learning, lecture notes are interactive if they are embedded with educational technology or media that empowers students:
  • to engage with the lecture in classroom or in e-learning environment; 
  • to retain memory of events happened during lecture (interaction between lecturer and students or between lecturer and lecture note); 
  • to conduct post-lesson self-pace learning or revision (remedial of learning); 
  • to initiate post-lesson discovery learning (enhancement of learning); 
  • to prepare for upcoming lesson. 
In other words, the interactivity of lecture notes can be grouped into three phases of a lesson, i.e. pre-lesson, during the lesson, and post-lesson. Both pre- and post-lesson are off-class or beyond class period; while during the lesson is in-class or during the conduct of lecture, which could be conducted in a physical classroom or in e-learning environment.

After clarifying my thought, now I have set the learning outcomes for the two-day workshop, that is “upon the completion of the workshop, the participants should be able to make interactive lecture notes”. And the lecture notes should enable students to:
  • engage with the lecture when it is being delivered either in a classroom or through e-learning environment; 
  • recall events happened during lecture that can become memory cues of learning content; 
  • conduct revision of the lesson at their own pace; 
  • explore materials beyond the given learning contents; and 
  • prepare for upcoming lesson or lecture. 
Having thought through the intended learning outcomes of the workshop, I need to prepare the contents of the workshop. Since an interactive lecture note should achieve five learning outcomes, I decided to break the contents of the workshop into five parts.

Part 1: How to prepare an interactive lecture note that engages students in the lesson? 

To answer this question (the title), I decided to use Prezi. First of all, I registered myself for a Edu Account, and then downloaded Prezi Desktop for Windows.

The use of Prezi resolved the issues highlighted by my students as I turned one of my PowerPoint slides, titled "Effective Presentation" from a monotonous colour scheme slide into a colourful presentation with animated transitions. Herewith the Prezi:

Effective Presentation

Apart from Prezi, I also used Socrative to conduct in-class quizzes and survey. As the answers given by individual students can be recorded in Excel file, I can keep track of students' performance over time.

Part 2: How to prepare an interactive lecture note using mnemonics?

I came across the Supermemo Model developed by Dr. Piotr Wozniak, SuperMemo Research, Poland. Herewith an interesting chart called "forgetting index".



Source: http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1605/ff_wozniak_graph_f.jpg

I also tried his Supermemo 2004 software and discovered the 20 rules of formulating knowledge:

  1. Do not learn if you do not understand 
  2. Learn before you memorize 
  3. Build upon the basics 
  4. Stick to the minimum information principle: (simple is easy & repetitions of simple items are easier to schedule) 
  5. Cloze deletion is simple and effective 
  6. Use imagery 
  7. Use mnemonic techniques 
  8. Graphic deletion is as good as cloze deletion 
  9. Avoid sets 
  10. Avoid enumerations (列举;细目) 
  11. Combat interference 
  12. Optimize wording 
  13. Refer to other memories 
  14. Personalize and provide other examples 
  15. Rely on emotional states 
  16. Context cues simplify wording 
  17. Redundancy does not contradict minimum information principle 
  18. Provide sources 
  19. Provide date stamping 
  20. Prioritize 
Herewith the website if you intend to discover more about the supermemo model.

http://www.supermemo.com/


Part 3: How to prepare an interactive lecture note that facilitates self-pace revision?

Part 4: How to prepare an interactive lecture note that encourages discovery learning?

Part 5: How to prepare an interactive lecture note that motivates preparation for upcoming lesson?