1. ‘LearningTechnology is everywhere…Or is it?’ ask post-16
Skills sector learners
Nick Jeans, Ellen Lessner, Emma Barrett and Sarah Davies
ALT-C
06/09//2016
#digitalstudent http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org
2. http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org
» Phase 1 study reviewed students’ expectations and experiences of the digital
environment at university and we spoke to 500 staff and students during our
consultation (2013-2014)
» We conducted a review of practice in schools to identify likely incoming expectations
(2014)
» In phase 2 we focused on FE speaking to 220 learners and 300 staff from colleges across
the UK (2014-2015)
» Phase 3 Skills study speaking to adult & community learners, work based learners
including apprentices and offender learners (2015-2016)
» Phase 4 Online learners study, speaking to students studying on online or partly online
courses (2016)
Jisc Digital Student http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org.uk
3. Digital student online learners study
» What makes a successful online
learner?
»Findings of the Digital Student
Online learners’ expectations and
experiences of the digital
environment
»Available from
http://ji.sc/onlinesurveyreport
Jisc Digital Student http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org.uk
4. Student digital experience tracker pilot
» Student digital experience tracker
offers a short survey for use with
learners to gather their expectations
and experiences of technology
» Full report is available from:
http://bit.ly/student-tracker-report
» Sign up for open pilot from
September:
https://www.jisc.ac.uk/rd/projects/stu
dent-digital-experience-tracker
Jisc Digital Student http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org.uk
5. Skills sector digital student project
» Scope of the ‘Skills Sector’ project covers: adult & community learners, work-
based learners, apprentices, offender learners
» What do learners WANT (expectations) in relation to the digital?
» What do learners NEED to succeed (experiences)?
» Literature review| stakeholder interviews | learner focus groups | consultation
events
» Guidance for providers on how to gather learners’ views, how to engage
learners in an ongoing dialogue about the digital and how to better support
learners digital experience
» Identify top challenges in relation to the digital learner experience and
identify what support providers need in addressing these challenges
6. Focus groups
» Reached 123 learners
» Good geographical spread
» Learners from a range of skills
sectors and study levels:
apprenticeships, adult and
community learning and prison
learning
» Dropouts (of providers and
learners) has been challenging
» Amazon vouchers resolved this
issue!
We conducted 12 focus groups:
8. The basics: Recording the results
»Card sort process
»Technology
»Room arrangement
»Permissions
(organisations
and individuals)
9. Experiencing the card sort
»Take the cards out of the envelope and lay them on the
table so that all are visible
»Put the ‘theme heading’ at the top and after a group
discussion, put the remaining cards in order of
importance underneath the theme card
»If you want to add something to the existing cards, use
the blank card(s)
»If you don’t understand a card or consider it unimportant,
put it back in the envelope
12. Work-based learners - issues
» Problems: access to good laptops, printers and internet
connectivity
» Students want experience with software + hardware that’s used in
their work places
» VLEs are NOT redundant - maybe yet to reach their potential
» Students’ technology skills vary widely – even amongst same age
groups.We can’t take skill levels for granted
» Lack of student voice in the sector
» Students can feel isolated in work placements, so appreciate
online forum with peers, Skype with tutors
14. Adult and community learning - issues
» Lack of good equipment + wifi
» Difficult transporting equipment to venues, blocks on websites at
schools, not getting passwords from venue
» Teachers lack training in how to use technologies + no time to
prepare materials / backups
» Shortage of tutors
» No uniform skill levels (applies to all sectors)
» No enthusiasm for MOOCs
» Learners value face-to-face interaction in class, use of technology
during intervening week to maintain skills learnt
» Little student voice in the literature.
16. Prison learning – significant issues
» Restricted access to devices, internet, information and support
(target security above rehabilitation)
» Access to meaningful learning opportunities often decreases as
students near release
» No continuity of learning support between prisons or after release.
Prisoners released without skills for employment
» Need for dedicated technology-enabled learning space and
supervised Skype to improve family contact
» Virtual Campus has potential but limitations of access, support and
quality content
17. Overall conclusions
» Clear need to assess and cater for different digital literacies across
the sector
» More tutor training needed on use of assistive technology to
support range of learners and to embrace learners’ own skills
» Need to focus on infrastructure and access above more
“charismatic” technologies
» Jisc pages on Developing Digital Literacies with resources and
links is first point-of-call:
https://www.Jisc.ac.uk/guides/developing-digital-literacies)
together with Building digital capability service:
https://digitalcapability.jiscinvolve.org/wp/
18. Links and further information
»Digital student blog (http://bit.ly/2cf9Tsh)
›Resources from FE and Skills study
»Online digital student study -
http://ji.sc/onlinesurveyreport
»New online guide Enhancing the digital experience
for skills learners with case studies launched early
October 2016
»Learners’ journeys with technology – October 16
19. ALT-C sessions of other Jisc projects of interest:
› Wednesday 10:25 am -Arts - Creating online experiences
that learners will value
› Wednesday 16:30pm - Tracking students’ digital
experience: development and use of a cross sector
benchmarking tool
20. What one thing?
Jisc Digital Student http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org.uk
» Send a text to 0207 183 8329
starting with digi
» NOTE - if you don’t start the text
with digi, it won’t go to our inbox
What one thing can you do to
better support the gathering of
your students’ digital
expectations and experiences
of technology?
21. Find out more…
Digital Student project
Sarah.knight@jisc.ac.uk
http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org
#digitalstudent
Join our mailing list:
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/jisc-
digitalstudent-data
Except where otherwise noted, this
work is licensed under CC-BY-NC-ND
Jisc Digital Student http://digitalstudent.jiscinvolve.org.uk
Editor's Notes
Final report with the complete list of groups and organisations: Insert link
Link to Learner Profile, focus group process and card sort on blog (insert link)
Learners are not in one place for a long time like FE and HE so not a ‘captive’ group.
Consent form, permissions from organisations, especially prisons
Hand over to EL
Timing
Participating in the discussion is important to this exercise
Listening to the students’ (or staff if used in staff training) discussion will give you a lot of information. Recording comments isn’t easy but it may be valuable. Taking notes at the time works as well.
If you would like to look at the cards from another theme, just ask but please put first theme cards back in the envelope.
There are deep-seated and persistent problems with regards to students accessing the quality of devices and internet connectivity that they require and expect. Their expectations of the technical-infrastructure are not excessive and chiefly involve the ability to use machines running standard Office and Word type packages (or similar) over a domestic equivalent-standard internet connection.
That access to a decent quality laptop, or the facility to use their own, high speed, reliable wifi and printers is consistently the top-rated student priority suggests that policy makers at all levels may be wise to focus on these rather prosaic goals above more “charismatic” technologies.
Learners expected the same or better services that they had had in school. Given that spending at school level – whilst also under severe pressure – is relatively protected there has to be a risk that students become disillusioned when they experience a notable decrease in the quality and availability of the technology.
On another level, students working in industries which make use of specialist packages expect their providers to furnish them with those packages – and machines of sufficient power to run them.
Generally, students expect their colleges to provide the experience of the hardware and software, and opportunity to develop the skills, which will prepare them for work and enhance their employment opportunities.
VLEs and LMSs are far from redundant technologies. It may even be that they are yet to approach reaching their potential.
Students’ technology skills are far from homogeneous – even amongst age groups. Do not take skill levels for granted. Students’ skills with “learning technologies” further complicate this. The digital immigrants versus digital natives typology is not particularly helpful.
There is a lack of student voice (with some honourable exceptions) in the research. This leads one to ask whether there may be a lack of student voice in the sector.
By comparison with the HE sector and the compulsory education sector (or perhaps age group? NOTE TO SELF) there is little research focusing on learning with technologies.
There does not seem any desire amongst students for anything resembling MOOCs. In fact, some college (skills) students were clear that they did not want any “external” engagement other than that which involved their places of employment. That is not to say there is no potential.
Persistent problems with access to the quality of devices and internet connectivity that learners require and expect.: access to a decent quality laptop, or the facility to use their own, high speed, reliable wifi and printers are consistently the top-rated student priority suggests.
Generally, students expect their training providers to prepare them to use the technology they will find in their work places
Students working in industries which make use of specialist packages expect their providers to furnish them with those packages – and machines of sufficient power to run them.
VLEs and LMSs are far from redundant technologies. It may even be that they are yet to approach reaching their potential.
Students’ technology skills are far from homogeneous – even amongst age groups. Do not take skill levels for granted. Students’ skills with “learning technologies” further complicate this. The digital immigrants versus digital natives typology is not particularly helpful.
There is a lack of student voice (with some honourable exceptions) in the research. This leads one to ask whether there may be a lack of student voice in the sector.
Again, the existential issue is the lack of good quality equipment and unreliable and/or limited wifi - but with the added challenges of transporting equipment to venues, blocks on sites when using school venues, not being provided with passwords by the venue. Not surprisingly, the practitioners faced their own barriers in terms of obtaining training in how to use technologies and insufficient time to prepare materials or backups and these will have impacted on the learner experience.
There is also a lack of tutors.
Do not take skill levels for granted. On the other hand, do not assume the worst.
Again, there seems to be little enthusiasm for MOOCs in their current guise amongst learners in the Community and Adult Learning Sector. There is obviously some potential but the need to identify correctly and address the skills of the learners against the skills require may be too onerous at the present. Given the high dropout rates for MOOCs and the impact that perceived “failure” has on non-Higher Education adult learners serious consideration must be take place before deploying a technology and pedagogy which could potentially do more harm than good.
Again we found little student voice in the literature – once again with honourable exceptions. Again, this raises the possibility that student voice is little heard in the sector. It may, of course, be that the research was not easily identifiable. But, given the heterogeneous nature of the learning constituency, even if student voices were collated, it may be nearly impossible to act on it.
Lack of good quality equipment and unreliable and/or limited wifi - but with the added challenges of transporting equipment to venues, blocks on sites when using school venues, not being provided with passwords by the venue.
Practitioners faced their own barriers in terms of obtaining training in how to use technologies and insufficient time to prepare materials or backups and these will have impacted on the learner experience.
There is also a lack of tutors.
Do not take skill levels for granted. On the other hand, do not assume the worst.
There seems to be little enthusiasm for MOOCs in their current guise amongst learners in the ACL sector.
Little student voice in the literature – once again with honourable exceptions. Again, this raises the possibility that student voice is little heard in the sector. It may, of course, be that the research was not easily identifiable. But, given the heterogeneous nature of the learning constituency, even if student voices were collated, it may be nearly impossible to act on it.
Access to devices, access to the internet, access to information and access to support are all priorities for incarcerated learners. At times, this is further complicated by students being denied access to existing technologies due to competing priorities and/or philosophies.
Access to meaningful learning opportunities often decreases as incarcerated students progress through the prison system towards release.
This is further aggravated by the lack of continuity of learning, support and access post-incarceration.
Amongst the key student requests is for a dedicated technology-enabled learning space within prisons.
Despite persistent problems, in terms of access, support and quality of content, the Virtual Campus is still viewed by incarcerated learners as having considerable potential. Perceptions of a lack of tangible progress may ultimately erode this enthusiasm.
Do not take students’ digital skills levels for granted. In addition, do not assume the worst.
There is more student voice evident in the literature for this sector (particularly for the incarcerated learners).
But there is little evidence of student-voice actually influencing anything on a substantial scale.
Champion and Edgar (Champion & Edgar 2013) are reasonably positive about the potential for MOOCs as a supplement to the prison learning toolkit. Of course, there are possible explanations for what might at first seem counter-intuitive: not least that whilst the vast majority of prisoners have below average qualifications there are prisoners of all ability levels and some are already graduates and/or post-graduates.
“Eynon and Helsper (2011) identified the relationship between digital exclusion and digital choice as important in students’ use of new technologies for learning. There is, however, a fundamental assumption in their discussion that people should have empowered and informed choices in how they access or use technology for learning, which is not necessarily the case in a prison context.” (Pike 2015)
“The best practice was observed where a prison had a learning ethos which was shared by the staff, where higher-level learners were given dedicated space and time for learning and where learners were encouraged to take responsible peer-support positions which raised self-esteem and helped to develop a community.” (Pike 2015)
Modelling ways to connect with students – using a Text Wall
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