Keynote at the 2014 BCNET conference in Vancouver, BC. In this presentation I shared stories of learners' and scholars' experiences online, arising from multiple years of qualitative research studies, and framed in the context of the historic realities of educational technology practice. These stories illustrate how emerging technologies and open practices have (a) broadened access to education, (b) reinforced privilege, and (c) re-imagined the ways that academics enact and share scholarship. They also illustrate the multiple realities that exist in online education practice, and the differences between reality and potential and beautiful vs. ugly online education.
The Beautiful, Messy, Inspiring, and Harrowing World of Online Learning
1. The Beautiful, Messy, Inspiring, and
Harrowing World of Online Learning
George Veletsianos, PhD
Canada Research Chair, Associate Professor
School of Education and Technology
Royal Roads University
5. • Serve & support working professionals (i.e. what most
Schools/Colleges of Education do in Canada/US)
• Focus on outcomes and the learning experience
• Guided by social learning theory
• Refined by learning sciences & education research
• Learning designers working with faculty members
• Flexible
• (1-3 weeks Face-to-face + online = Hybrid) OR (Online)
• Prior-learning assessment, flexible admissions policy
But, here’s what you really need to
know…
8. a worldwide
economic downturn
globalization and
competition
changing
demographics
reduction of public
funding
accountability
pressures
impact of emerging
technologies
(Morrison, 2003; Schwier, 2012; Siemens & Matheos, 2010; Spanier, 2010).
Questions around the
purpose of education
Rebirth of edtech
10. 1922: “motion picture is
destined to revolutionize
our education system …
in a few years it will
supplant largely, if not
entirely, the use of
textbooks”
1999: “education over
the Internet is going to
be so big it is going to
make e-mail usage look
like a rounding error”
26. • Engaging students in knowledge
production
• Creation of worthwhile digital artifacts
– E.g., E-books and online textbooks
Beautiful Online Learning
27. Veletsianos, G. (2013). Learner Experiences with MOOCs and Open Online Learning. Hybrid
Pedagogy: Madison, WI. Retrieved from http://learnerexperiences.hybridpedagogy.com
Beautiful Online Learning
29. Beautiful Online Learning
“My oldest [child] will be 4 this June, and I'm
thinking about her education and…what
resources I want to be able to offer her…so I'm
looking at spending my time in [open courses]
acquiring some of this knowledge, so that I can
enable her education”
Female, 38, homemaker
Engages w/ online learning through iPhone
during “downtime” described as “feeding and
nursing and stuff”
30. Beautiful Online Learning
“My oldest [child] will be 4 this June, and I'm
thinking about her education and…what
resources I want to be able to offer her…so I'm
looking at spending my time in [open courses]
acquiring some of this knowledge, so that I can
enable her education”
Female, 38, homemaker
Engages w/ online learning through iPhone
during “downtime” described as “feeding and
nursing and stuff”
31. Beautiful Online Learning
“A routine visit, friendly chit chat … and then
suddenly a quiet chill in the room,
professionals looking at each other but not at
me, an emergency biopsy, a result. I’ve had a
thyroid scan, a chest X-ray, a CT scan, and
tomorrow I’m having a bone scan.”
36. Harrowing Online Learning
“My most vivid memory was this huge
argument that broke out at the [open course]
discussion board about an assignment that I
submitted… [I received] this absolute torrent of
rudeness, just vicious personal attacks that I
never experienced on the internet before… I
mean, I know that they happen on YouTube,
but I did not expect that in a class at all!
The professor was totally checked out, he
never visited the discussion board… and it was
just depressing and discouraging”
37. Harrowing Online Learning
“I posted a comment stating that the grading
was incorrect. [One] of the teaching staff
[scolded me] stating that it was obvious I
hadn’t viewed the lecture. While I didn’t
expect staff to instantly take my word that
there was a mistake, I certainly didn't expect
negative and condescending remarks...[I was]
left with a partial sense of accomplishment
and feelings of hollowness and
incompleteness.”
42. Inspirational Online Learning
Students
collect
water
data
in
the
field
and
upload
it
to
a
database.
Students
post
blog
entries
describing
what
they
are
learning
and
experiencing
on
their
expedi8on.
45. Messy Online Learning
To understand the messiness of
learning, the reality of what it means
to learn in digital contexts, we need
empirical inquiry that uses a variety
of methodologies.
46. Digital learning environments, that replicate traditional
classroom approaches often result in “showcase
environments that are often not much more than computer
assisted page turning” (Kirschner et al., 2004, pp. 47-48).
The reality
47. • Educators, researchers, and designers working together
• Collaboration, not competition (e.g., institutions to
collaborate on offerings)
• Use the affordances of the technology & the affordances
of openness, to change practice
• Understand the history of educational technology
• Learn from the existing research on learning technologies
• Offer solutions, design the future that you want.
Potential approaches to rectify this…