Monday, June 22, 2015
As a new round of training comes along, I start to think
about how well my training sessions have run in the past ,and to what extent
they have achieved their desired effect. A particular request for training
that I felt had been covered by timetabled delivery plus the
availability of instructional videos caused me to get thinking though. One of the
reporting options I have is being able to see utilisation, and in this
particular case this did not appear to be so good, so why? Not an easy
question, or one that I suspect has a single answer, but from my web design
knowledge I am aware of the issues surrounding click-depth, and in this case it
was 4. If it turns on depth, then I perceive further accessibility issues
developing as the click-depth to our new toolkit resource bank is also 4. So is
the solution to raise the level of materials on the site, as with
Google, everyone would like to be on the front page. At this point I decide to
consider what I would actually like to happen here. Well basically, the
materials having a highly persistent visibility. And it was thinking about this
last point that led me to consider that maybe I need to have a physical presence,
and from that came the idea of what I discovered are called Minted Cubes. Minted
cubes are small plastic boxes, filled with mints (the clue is in the name I
found), and how does this help me, it helps because each of the six surfaces of
the cube has an image, in my case, an image of a resource, please see accompanying image, plus some links below.
So
the plan is I hand these out at training sessions and they find their way onto desktops,
shelves, computer tops, filing cabinet tops and window ledges, in fact any flat
surface hopefully in arms reach. First off I downloaded a cube cut-out template
and constructed a model, then copied a random sample of six images from our
toolkit pages; see accompanying screenshot. My wider plan is to create cubes
for combinations of toolkit resource such as media, presentation tools, gamification
etc, in the hope that this may further buy into the psychology of collecting,
though I may be a little to ambitious on that one. Anyway, the good news is that following a short presentation, the
idea has the green light, and this week we will be putting together the
proposals for the first batch. If you have any ideas or experience in
supplementing training with merchandise then please feel free to comment or
tell us about it.
Bye for now Skipper
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Blended Learning
Maybe its just coincidence, well of course it is, but this
week seems to have been full of requests and postings coming my way on blended
online learning.
It all seemed to start off with a request to convert some
course options for one of the professional programmes to being fully online, in
fact students could in theory even take just the online course as part of
professional development anyway, and it was that possibility that raised a
whole raft of other considerations. So first off, what are the considerations
for moving from class based to online delivery, well I have talked about that a
lot over the years on this blog, particular the move away from class support
materials written in Word to something more eLearning compliant and for that we
have been making very successful use of Wimba Create for some time now, I can
recommend it. We soon realised however that an online course should have online
payment, online enrolment and of course following that, seamless access to the
actual Moodle course itself, all through a new web page on our college website.
As you will I am sure know, if you have been through this one yourselves, it
very soon gets complicated. However it seems not beyond realisation, as online
payment and registration has already been successfully tested, and it appears is
in need of an early trial, well here it is then, and we move on, great. So this
was not so much actually doing from my perspective, but connecting.
Getting back to those blended learning postings that I
mentioned earlier, the first was headed ‘Navigating the Digital Shift:Implementation Strategies For Blended And Online Learning’ by John Bailey,
Carri Schneider, Tom Vander Ark.
While written around the Common Core standard, this little eBook
is well worth downloading , though I confess that I am yet to read through all
270 pages of it, so I will be including my usual chapter breakdown. The clear
and central role of enduring commitment required
to get these processes in place in order to realise the potential benefits
makes for a refreshing read, rather than
the all to often throwing of technology at a very long term need and the inevitable
consequences I seem to come across in postings. Please free to reply on this
one.
Finally, if you find yourself being pushed for justify a blended
learning option, then this posting
‘7 Top Blended Learning Benefits For Corporate Training’ from
Litmos.com and by Christopher Pappas may be just what you are looking for, providing as is does a brief and concise
outline under the following heading:-
1.
It offers the best of both worlds.
2.
It enhances corporate training effectiveness.
3.
It simplifies corporate training logistics.4. It is cost-effective.
5. It allows your employees to have control over their training.
6.
It enhances employees soft skills.
7.
It facilitates corporate training feedback.
hope
you find it useful , and that’s all for now, but please feel free to comment
and you may like to follow my Twitter feed Hash Tag SkipperAbel.
Monday, June 08, 2015
Internet Report
Interested as you clearly must in eLearning and so to some
greater or lesser extent what is going on re the Internet, then if you have yet
to get site of it, the “State of the Internet” presentation running to some 196
slides is going to be a slide turner for you. Delivered by Mary Meeker
of Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield, and Byers in May this year, the report brings
out a whole raft of key data points that I feel certain you will be grabbing
for reference. I found the timeline showing the “Evolution of Content discovery”
particularly relevant to any ideas I may be forming on the way forward for
design and distributing of content particularly with regard to trending on
horizontal / vertical screen orientation
views; that all starts from slide 24 by the way. And if you are of the view
that students are always going to be students, then please take a look at the
qualities for Generation X and Millennials hiring managers feel they are most
likely to posses; this must surely also say something not insignificant about
our cohorts (slide 113). In fact you may to look at the the lazy ‘Generation Y myth ’ of playful,
collaboration producing nervousness of
how this 80% of the coming workforce presents challenges to accepted practice
and process. Their focus on short term success link to poor commitment is
unjustified, they feel there are better ways to work and this should be our
driver toward a constructivist pedagogical shift to leverage the affordances of
story and online technologies.
Moving forward to the section headed “Connectivity has
Changed” (slide 115), makes it start to come real that if we are still living
in the world of being defined by location, alluding to the classroom, then it
seems to me we should be thinking more in terms of being defined by who we are
connected to, and that last point, before you even get to slide 169, take a
guess at which country has the highest percentage of mobile Internet traffic, I
was surprised; will this and similar trends affect your decisions on eLearning
design? let me know please post a reply. Anyway great report, thoroughly
enjoyed the read and will most certainly read again, and again.Please follow hashtag SkipperAbel for more frequent updates on eLearning trends, software and practices.
Bye for now
Tuesday, June 02, 2015
Multi-Tenancy in Moodle
Have I considered Multi-tenancy for our Moodle, my quick response
to that question was no, actually a new one on me, though I ask are you already a Moodle mutli-tenancy site? If
like myself this was a new, then it seems that multi-tenancy is when the same data / information and content infrastructure is used
by different groups or organizations. Which I guess in our case may be applied
to the areas of 14 to 16 provision, FE, HE and then Professional Studies, not a
particularly unusual combination for a college I would suspect these days.
Anyway each of these would become an LMS tenant, each having their own courses,
materials and requirements. Without the multi-tenancy concept this would have
to be implemented through separate LMS, and I do recall one college not so long
ago having five! And the shed load of admin work that with it.
Apparently though Moodle unlike Totara while not being able
to fully support the concept, does have a pseudo-multi-tenancy capability by
combining the front-page settings with the use of Course Categories, which
according to the posting and I quote - can
be done by configuring the “Front page items when logged in” setting to
Enrolled Courses. With regard to branding courses to specific departments or
business units, the Course Categories can be named after the department, and
Subcategories can be labelled as Course Topics. Each Category and Subcategory
can then be themed separately from the Corporate/Organizational theme. Roles
and capabilities can be assigned to specific categories to allow access to edit
courses. Additionally, this can be done by inheritance to the Subcategories and
courses.
If all this grabs your interest then follow this link From
Lambda Solutions and
read some more, there is even a free white paper on the subject.
Finally, I know I have mention Twitter before in my postings,
but when I came across this little info-graphic I just had to include it in
this weeks roundup. While my own postings to Twitter these days seem be almost
exclusively from other social networks, that still leaves me feeling a regular
education user of the micro blogger, just hash tag SkipperAbel my avatar name from SecondLife