Monday, February 25, 2013

Let's Talk about a Dirty Word: Money!




 careerservices.lafayette.edu
The topic of this week's blog entry is the flipped classroom. That is the topic I am addressing here. However, at the risk of being deemed a pariah, I want to look at it from the perspective of money. More specifically, I want to look at it from the perspective of the flipped classroom's potential negative impact on the income stream of educators.  

I want to believe that those of us who become professional educators do so for three reasons. First, we enjoy imparting knowledge, know-how, and wisdom to our students. Second, we believe that through educating our fellow man we can help the world become a better place. Third, well, we need money! We are professional educators, not volunteers!

Judging by events taking place at the college where I teach, flipping my classroom may force me to get an additional job flipping burgers. The administration seems to place a premium on time spent in front of my students lecturing and seems to substantially undervalue lab time spent standing behind each one helping him or her resolve issues and correct errors. 

I teach digital art courses. These courses require that I teach the students how to use computers and software. While it is possible to just lecture to my students, the only way that they will ever learn to master the material I teach is by using the software and working their way through the projects. As necessary, I devote class time to helping my students learn the required computer skills by having them work through each one with me guiding them. The administration considers this sort of instruction as lab work. 

The administration wants to establish a new pay structure which places a premium on lecturing and devalues lab work. If the proposal becomes policy, due to the nature of the courses I teach and the way I teach them, I will either have to teach an additional course to maintain my current level of compensation or I will simply receive even less compensation per credit for the work I do now.

ilearnproject.com
If I flip my classes and, in effect, turn my face-to-face time with my students into lab time, the administration may very well increase my teaching load or reduce my compensation per credit even more than they are already trying to do! Unless someone can figure out how to make the day longer than 24 hours or I decide to live in my truck, I do not know how I could survive if I flipped my classroom and the administration deemed my new class structure as 100 percent lab.

Flipping the classroom does sound good in theory. As an educator I love the idea of flipping the classroom. It would be awesome to have my students come to class prepared. It would be fantastic to be able to spend the precious commodity that is face-to-face class time trying to help my students polish their understanding. However.... Knowing my students, knowing that the vast majority of them do not bother, or cannot be bothered, to read the material I painstakingly create and prepare for their benefit, I doubt, seriously doubt, that they would take advantage of the educational opportunity presented in theory by flipping the classroom. 

Remember that education is the one thing that people will pay dearly for but for which they will often not partake. Even if I could lead my students to the educational waters presented through the flipped classroom, I doubt that many of them would drink!

Flipping the classroom would most likely encourage the administration to try to either increase my workload or decrease my rate of compensation. It would not serve about 90 percent of my students well. Viewed through the lens of these possibilities, in my case, flipping the classroom would just be a bad idea!

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Copyright? Copy Wrong!

Source: www.lib.odu.edu














This week’s topic, copyright, is near and dear to my heart. Not only did I study copyright law in Japan, I am also a photographer who zealously protects his copyright. Adding to my natural interest in the topic, the presentation during our class’s Blackboard Corroborate based meeting was excellent and very informative. The only thing missing from this week’s excellent educational opportunity was an actual application of the copyright law. Or so I thought. Fortunately for my education but potentially unfortunately for his educational future, one of my students decided to draw attention to his blatant copyright infringement by lying to me in class. His obvious lie caught my attention and I was forced to confront the reality of his copyright infringing behavior.

Honestly, his lie was just the final straw. Thinking back on the last few weeks I now realize that this student had consistently demonstrated a blatant disregard for the copyrights of both the author(s) of the textbook and the software we use. I now realize how naive I was. I should have put the facts together sooner. I should have realized just how extreme and blatant his copyright violations are. I guess that I just did not want to cause him any trouble. Now, having removed the naive blinders from my eyes, I realize that I have no choice. I have to put the wheels in motion which may put the student’s continued college enrollment in jeopardy.

I have decided to use the opportunity presented by the topic of this week’s reflective blog to think back on all the now seemingly obvious signs of the student’s malfeasance.

On the first day of instruction the student approached me and informed me that he was willing to install the course’s $1000 application on the computers of his classmates for only $50 a computer. He asked me to announce his offer to the class. I informed him that I would not and that making such an offer was inappropriate.

That night he used the Mail Tool from the course’s course management site to email the $50 offer to his classmates. Learning of the misconduct, I wrote to him and informed him that his behavior was in violation of the school’s code of conduct, computer usage agreement, and the copyright law.
Around the third week of instruction, the student used his phone during class to photograph pages from another student’s copy of the course textbook. After I got over the shock of his audacity, I told him to stop and informed him that such conduct violated the author's copyright and the student's code of conduct. 

The textbook we use in the course requires students to use a unique code found inside its back cover to register with the publisher. Only through registering do students gain access to the resource files. These files are required to do both the in class practice and the at home projects. Since the student had been doing the work in class and had submitted the required projects, I had just assumed that he had forgotten his textbook again.

The class I teach is not difficult. However, students do need to pay attention and they do need to keep up with my instruction. I often walk around the classroom looking over their shoulders to confirm that they are “getting it.” During one of these rounds I noticed that, unlike his classmates, the student, once again, was without his textbook. I asked him where his textbook was. I expected him to tell me that he had, once again, forgotten it. Instead, he lied to me. He told me that he had ordered it online and was waiting for it to arrive. 

How do I know he lied? First, his statement does not stand up to the light of reason. At the time, we were four weeks into the semester. There is no way it would take four weeks for a textbook to arrive, especially when I know that the publisher will express mail them to the bookstore overnight. Second, and most damningly, he had been using the resource files that one can only get AFTER they have purchased the textbook, registered with the code, and lawfully downloaded the resource files. That fact that he had been using the resource files to practice and complete his projects means that he already had the resource files. How could he have them if he was still waiting for his textbook to arrive? The only way he could have gained such access is through the illegal copying of them from a classmate.

For the record, the publisher is very protective of their copyright over these resource files. At the beginning of the semester one of my students was unable to access these necessary resource files due to an error in the code. I wrote to the publisher and asked if I could give the student a copy of the necessary files while they resolved the issue. The "absolutely not" response came incredibly quickly. I am afraid to think what they would do to this student if they learned of his blatant violation of their closely guarded copyright.

I guess that I am naive. I never expected a student to so clearly violate the copyright law. Nor had I ever expected anyone to do it so blatantly. As of this moment, the highly protective owner of the copyright does not know of this violation. I do not believe that I am under any obligation to inform them. However, I am not sure of this and I am worried that my silence might put my employer in jeopardy. 

The student also violated the student code of conduct and the University’s computer usage policy. I believe that I am under an obligation to let the University know of these violations. Once I have done so it will be another chapter in my education in copyright or copy wrong.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Oh, the OERs I never knew...


This week's topic in ETEC 647e covering open educational resources (OER) and open courseware was quite possibly the most enjoyable and addictively time consuming one yet. While I had looked at iTunes U before, I had not really paid much attention to what I was seeing. Nor, had I realized its value. That all changed this week as my Team Tokyo teammates and I worked together to complete this week's project. I now realize what an awesome resources OER and open courseware can be.

Having said that, I also learned how hunting down these OERs can become a proverbial black hole which sucks in and devours hours of one's life in the seeming blink of an eye. The material offered at iTunes is just so extensive! And so interesting! 

Being naturally curious and a lover of learning, I was easily distracted by all the educational opportunities I found. Even after my teammates and I had decided upon a particular OER and had decided upon a particular program to learn about, I still searched for more ways to learn more about it. I just wanted to see what else I could find, what else I could learn. In so doing, I learned another lesson.

This lesson, however, was more of a cold blast of unpleasantness than it was an euphoric gush of joy. You see, I was reminded that sometimes technology just does not function as expected. I was reminded that sometimes things just do not work.

My teammates and I had decided to use a particular OER at iTunes U to learn how to use Evernote. The OER looked interesting and it seemed to offer us the means to answer all of the questions asked in the assignment. 

Unfortunately, when, after we had finished our cooperative Google Hangout, I started to utilize the material that we had selected, I discovered that it was not nearly as complete nor as useful as we had first thought. Oh well, in that we all learn a valuable lesson.

To try to make up for this perceived short coming, I began looking for other OERs to supplement the rather seemingly weak one my teammates and I had chosen. 

Low and behold, I found something that looked much better than the one we had selected. I could not help but ask myself "How had all three of us missed it?" Now, I think the answer is clear. We missed it thanks to divine providence. 

You see, the OER I found, while its description looked very good, was really just a frustrating tease. No matter how many times I "subscribed" to it, it never showed up in my iTunes U library. Every time I when back to see if perhaps that material was available where I subscribed, I discovered that my subscription request had not gone through. The button which had switched from "subscribe" to "subscribed" with my previous click, was back to displaying "subscribe." This wonderful seeming OER does not really seem to exist.

Looking at the contributions to our team's success made by my teammates, and looking at the better seeming but actually not functioning better option that I found, I came to realize that we had picked the best OER for our purposes. Judging by their work and by my own discoveries I believe that this experience taught each of us a lot about OERs.

I would also like to say something about Evernote, the program we tried to use the OER to learn. Honestly, I think that it is going to be one of those programs like Twitter. It will take me a while to both get the hang of it and to really understand its value. 

Learning about it through the OER and through the Evernote tutorial on its website was really fun. It too seemed to evaporate the time I had allotted for the project. It too seemed as if one could lose themselves and all their free time just trying to play with, learn, master, and then actually utilize it for its intended purpose. 

These new technologies, if they can get one's attention and spark one's interest with their possibilities they can really consume one's time. I almost have to wonder whether, on balance, some of these more addictive programs are really valuable or are just another way to whittle away the already too limited hours of our days. 

Or then again, maybe it is just me and my overzealousness to learn and master new things?

Lastly, I would like to touch upon my experience with my Team Tokyo teammates. In a word, it was awesome. All three of us are VERY busy. Yet, we managed to make time for both a very productive Google Hangout, create what I believe to be a fantastic presentation for the class, and overcome the difficulties that arose when our "best laid plans" went astray. Both of my teammates were excellent. I look forward to working with them again soon.



Saturday, February 2, 2013

Step 1: READ THE INSTRUCTIONS!!!!




Okay, I have a bone to pick. Unlike last semester, I am not going to hold my tongue, or in this case, my fingers. This semester I am going to take advantage of the reflective blog forum and express what I am really feeling. 

I am upset and, more importantly, I am disappointed. I feel that most, but not all, of my classmates let me down with their assignment proposals. 

Reading their proposals I found myself asking the following questions: 

1) Did they forget that this is an emerging educational technologies course? 

2) Did they even read the Assignment Specifications? 

If they did read them, 3) Did they purposefully or accidentally overlook the part that reads "Relevant to emerging technologies"?!?!? 

And 4) What about the part that clearly spells out the need for the proposal to (and again I quote from the assignment page) "Address[...] higher levels of cognitive learning (according to Bloom's Taxonomy) and utilize critical thinking skills"?!?!?

Seriously, READ THE INSTRUCTIONS!!!

Please do not get me wrong. No one is perfect. We all make mistakes. As I sit here writing this reflective blog entry and reading once again the instructions that I admonishingly request my classmates read, I noticed that my group's proposal could have been done better too. Our proposal could have been clearer on the sort of deliverable or learning object it will produce. 

But even having said that, at least my group remembered that we are taking a graduate level course in emerging educational technologies!



And speaking of groups, I want to take this opportunity to write about my group and the experience of working on this assignment proposal together. 

It was like Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. It was "the best of times and the worst of times." 

One of the members was totally on the ball. She took charge and ran things for our group. She caught the things that I and the other member missed. Her efforts clearly made our group more than the sum of its parts. Thanks to being able to work with her, I clearly saw for the first time the up side to working in groups. 

Last semester I worked with a number of good group members. However, none ever reached the positive, contributory, and motivating level of this one group member. It really was an honor and a positive learning experience to work with such a highly functioning and focused classmate.

In contrast, the other group member seemed the proverbial "yin" (the dark side) to the first member's "yang" (the sunny/light side). She was so focused and devoted to her own point of view that she seemingly would not or could not accept a different point of view. Nor would or could she work with us in our efforts to accomplish our 2/3 agreed upon course of action.

That is not to say that she did not try. Oh, she made a great effort. I just do not think that we were all on the same page. Heck, I do not think that we were even in the same forest. Other than being in the same group and at loggerheads with one another, there really was not much of an exchange of ideas or positive cooperative energy.

They say that experience is what you get when you do not get what you want. I believe that is a true statement. The group dynamic was not what I wanted. I do not believe that it was what any of us wanted. We all wanted to work together and to succeed as a team. We all did work hard. That was not the problem. The problem was that we could not come to a meeting of the minds. We were never united as a focused team.  At least we gained some more experience working in groups.

Despite the fact that our group's proposal received the lowest number of votes, and despite the fact that our group was not united in either its ideas or efforts, thanks to the colossal efforts of both myself and especially the "yang" member of our group, I believe that our group's proposal was one of the best generated by this assignment. It deserves to be selected. 

Of course, it will not be selected. If it were selected, in order to complete the proposal, we, the students of ETEC 647E would have to read the instructions. That, it seems, is just too much to ask!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Wow! The Daily Create was fun!


I just finished my third Daily Create project. Honestly, the whole experience was much better than I expected. It was fun! I plan to take the idea and use it in the intermediate level digital photography course I should be teaching next spring.

The first Daily Create project that I selected was a photography challenge. Obviously, that was right up my ally. The challenge was to photograph your favorite breakfast beverage. I prefer to drink soda for breakfast but, for the sake of the project I took artistic license and photographed my coffee pot. I had made the pot to help me study. I figured that made it more than okay. 

This is the image:

The Daily Create number for the project is tdc382.

The second Daily Create project that I selected was to describe the sky in one sentence without using any color words. That was fun too! Here is what I wrote:

With the Kona winds blowing, the sky has become cold, dark, threatening of destruction through torrential rain, and yet, at the same time, encouraging of closeness, the exchanging of bodily warmth, and a pleasant evening spent in intellectually intriguing conversation with one's partner and best friend.

The Daily Create number for the project is tdc383.

The third Daily Create project that I selected was another photography challenge wherein one had to create a silhouette. Of the three, this was my lease favorite. I wanted to use a light or a reflector to bounce some light back in on my subject. However, if I had done that it would not have been a pure silhouette as required by the project. It is okay. That that was part of the challenge and therefore also part of the fun!

This is the image:

The Daily Create number for the project is tdc384.

My Twitter Epiphany


Okay, I admit it. I was not very impressed with Twitter and the whole concept of tweeting when I was first introduced to it last semester in ETEC 622. Sure, I did my fair share of tweeting for the course. In fact, I think that I was the highest or second highest tweet poster in the course. I really enjoyed looking for information that was sometimes more, sometimes less, on point for the course. I enjoyed sharing that information via Twitter with my classmates. However, conceptually, I just did not get the point. Especially for one as verbose as I, 140 characters just did not seem sufficient! I wanted more space! It just seemed too limited. Despite all the information I read about its value, honestly, it seemed like a pointless, albeit a fun, waste of time.

When Dr. Bert informed us that we would use Twitter in this course and that we had a tweeting obligation I think that I rolled my proverbial eyes. Honestly, I did not want to do it. I thought that I had had enough of that experience last semester. Boy, was I wrong! 

One of the reasons that I am successful in life is that, when given a task, I always do my best to complete it. This is especially true when I am a student. I remember when I was an undergraduate taking a world literature course I had to read Faust. Within the first five minutes of cracking the cover, I was asleep. When I woke up, I tried to read it again and got the same result. After I repeated this pattern once again, I remembered Albert Einstein's quote defining insanity as "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." I decided to stop being "insane" and to try something different. I started to read the story out-loud. It came to life! I loved it. I could not put it down. The point is that I keep at my assigned tasks until they are done. 

Dr. Bert's Twitter assignments was just something that I had to do. Or, at least, that is how I perceived it until I had my Twitter Epiphany!

The epiphany hit me, as epiphanies are ought to do, like a sudden shock of clarity. I was in the sauna at the gym reading over my twitter feed. I was reading it not because I wanted to but rather because I felt I "had" to do so. It was, after all, part of the assignment. I started noticing interesting tweet after interesting tweet. I started following the links and reading the related stories. I started retweeting. But, I was not just retweeting to the class. I finally started to think about my other followers. I started thinking about my "audience" and what sort of persona I wanted to project through my tweets. It felt as if the blinders I had been unknowingly wearing upon my eyes had fallen away and I could suddenly see the value and the "point" of Twitter and tweeting. Finally seeing it fascinated me. I lost track of time and spent more time in the sauna than I had planned. The funny thing was that the time felt like it was my shortest time in the sauna ever!

With my eyes finally open to the value and the potential role of Twitter in communication I started to notice things that I had previously overlooked. I started to see the value the selective use of Twitter can bring. What is more, I started to benefit from that value. Following the links that interested me, I found information and links to even more information. I discovered that Twitter can serve as a wonderful starting point and even a travel companion on the modern information highway.

While looking for articles and information to post on Twitter for our course, I encountered three articles which really cemented my understanding of and appreciation for Twitter. The first story covered a suicide at a train station in Tokyo. While suicide is a terrible thing, the story was more focused on the powerful role that Twitter plays in keeping Japanese commuters informed. It also pointed out how photographs distributed through Twitter can help preserve events which many in Japan try to down play or otherwise minimize. The second story covered an English teaching Twitter user who, with correct but rather bizarre English expressions, is providing a very valuable educational tool through Twitter. The third story, which was just too far off the mark to share with the class, deals with a man seen riding the Yamanote train line in Tokyo dragging an ear of corn behind himself on a red doggy leash. While the story itself is not that important, the fact that Twitter is being used to post photographs and exchange information about this possibly insane person is interesting and on point in that it too shows the power of Twitter.

Now, I am a believer. I understand the value of Twitter. I want to Thank Dr. Bert for "making" me have this epiphany. I am still struggling with trying to process all the information coming at me through my Twitter feed. I am almost tempted to reduce the number of people and organizations I am following just so that I have a better chance of keeping up. But, I no longer question its value.

Before I end this blog entry I would like to bring up something that is still bothering me about Tweeting. With the limit of only 140 characters, when I tweet and especially when I retweet, I often have to erase information about my source. Granted, when my followers follow the link they will get the ultimate source but, I still feel a bit weird and wrong when I erase identifying information about a source just to make room for the #sp677e hashtag.

And speaking of questions, I know that we are kind of already working on this question in class but, I really wish I knew how many tweets I "have" to do on a weekly basis.

Friday, January 18, 2013

Great Expectations...


Great Expectations...

Some of my expectations for this online ETEC course have already been exceeded. Having just completed a different online ETEC course last semester with the same excellent Professor, I expected that we would be using Wikipages and Trello again. Instead, we are using Google sites and Google docs. 

I am not sure whether it is the technology or not but, this semester's course material seems very well laid out. It seems much better organized than last semester's material. Most importantly, because of this better seeming organization, the material seems easier to follow. This even higher than last time level of organization was beyond my expectations.

There also seems to be more information available and with that additional information, more guidance too. I particularly appreciate the availability of the very informative page entitled "Writing a reflective blog." I expect with the guidance it provides I will be able to do a much better job this semester than I did last semester in the blog writing department. This edge over last semester was also beyond my expectations.

Having just spoken about the course material's presentation it seems only natural to address the course content and to speak about my expectations regarding it. I expect that the material will challenge and amaze me. The tools (both mobile applications and web 2.0) that we will work with and learn about are sure to impress, amaze, and depress me! 

You should be able to guess why these tools will impress and amaze me. What might be more challenging to figure out is why they might also depress me. Well, I am going to tell you. When Dr. Bert's assignments and readings direct and expose me to what I like to think of as "new age" tools, I immediately start to think of ways that I can apply them to both my personal and my professional lives. That is where the rub, or rather the depression, starts.

I teach at a community college. I love teaching there. It is a very challenging and also a very rewarding way to make a living. However, when it comes to teaching course content it really seems that technology is not my friend. The more I try to incorporate technology, no matter how logical and simple it seems to me, the more precious  face-to-face time I have to direct away from course content and redirect towards teaching that technology.

No matter how wonderful and powerful the educational tools of the emerging trends are, if I cannot get my students to understand them and utilize them to their benefit, they are useless. The difficulty I face when introducing my students to not just new and emerging technology but even old school technology is depressing. 

Be that as it may, I am a stubborn person. I do not give up. While I do get depressed by the overwhelmingly bad odds, I do not give up. 

I expect that Dr. Bert, like he did last semester, is going to introduce me to new educational tools and is going to guide me through application and practice to a level of understanding that will allow me to not only break the chains of depression but also allow me the opportunity to figure out how to bring the best and most suitable emerging educational technologies into my classrooms.

In conclusion, I expect to be challenged again by the readings and the assignments that Dr. Bert is going to give us in this course. I also expect that the material will guide me as a learner to a new level of enlightenment. I only hope that I will be able to partake of enough of the proffered information and wisdom to be able to figure out how to successfully get the appropriate tools into the hands of my own students.