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Pedagogy(ical) interoperability

The concept of interoperability is generally applied to moving between technologies or the ability to shift data between datasets because of understandings about how the data is structured.

But how about if we think about interoperability in relation to pedagogy?

One of our education challenges is pedagogy-driven usage of ICT.  In conversations with Rob Fitzgerald at the University of Canberra, over a few cups of coffee we decided that pedagogy needed to be interoperable - that is, there needed to be fluidity between modes of delivery: face-to-face, multi-model, computer-based, online only, and anything in between. That is, we might think about the underpinning pedagogy enabling students to move between the different modes seamlessly in the same way way we  move across the internet without thinking about http, data packets, routers or the like. Students moving between modes without thinking or noticing (that is, for example, they are not doing their computer class). They are just using the appropriate mode and tool for that component of their learning experience. We liked the idea for having a language/term that removed distinctions between delivery methods and focused just on the teaching and learning.

One Comment

  1. Posted 15 April, 2008 at 4:26 pm | Permalink

    Hi Jen,

    While there are many dimensions to your observation here, one aspect of it is Learning Design - the attempt to create a framework/language to describe different types of learning activity sequences. In formal education contexts, these activity sequences can represent different pedagogical approaches (ie, they are representations of the educator’s “teaching plan”).

    While much of the initial work on IMS Learning Design was about technology-enabled teaching and learning, I agree with your point about focusing less on the delivery mode - there are many ways to teach and learn, some with computers, some without. It would be great if educators could describe pedagogical structures in a “delivery-neutral” way, and then be able to decide later whether any given task is implemented online or face to face.

    We’ve done some initial work on this in the new version of LAMS (V2) where any activity can be designated to run online or offline - so if you wanted to have a discussion of a topic at a particular point, you could run this online (in which case LAMS will set up a chat room for the relevant students with the relevant topic) or offline, in which case there is no online activity for the students, but the system can provide the teacher with handouts for students to conduct the task face to face, and also advice for facilitators on how to run the chat. In other words, the Learning Design (or “sequence”) describes the pedagogical structure independent of whether any given activity (or all of them) are delivered online.

    For further discussion, see the article at:
    http://lamscommunity.org/dotlrn/clubs/educationalcommunity/lamsresearchdevelopment/forums/attach/go-to-attachment?object_id=524228&attachment_id=524230

    James

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