New Tools for a New Age: Evolution or Revolution?
Abstract
The massive change in communication and information technology in the past ten years raises questions about how, or even should, we harness this to teach our students. Lectures did not disappear after the invention of the printing press, but they did evolve. As a teaching and research academics in a research-intensive university we are keen to engage students in discipline knowledge but what is an appropriate way to do that? We teach a large course in scientific practice and communication that is compulsory for all science students studying at our Melbourne and Malaysian campuses, or by distance education. Work is structured around the learning management system making it a teaching space, rather than a filing system. To ensure focus, topics are clustered into themes with a 'question of the week'. Collaboration tools are used to promote peer-2-peer learning, knowledge building and communication. For one assignment, students analyse a media article and compare it to the original scientific paper. On-campus students do this collaboratively using electron whiteboards while Distance Education students create blog. All online activity is monitored and inappropriate behaviour dealt with quickly. The ranking of the unit by students has increased significantly with the incorporation of the new approaches. While there is inherent value in exposing students to the latest digital tools, technologies come and go. The fundamentals, however, remain the same: find out where the students are at, have specific learning objectives, provide some structure, be clear how they will be assessed, and above all inspire!
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2015
- Bibcode:
- 2015AGUFMED31C0915G
- Keywords:
-
- 0805 Elementary and secondary education;
- EDUCATION;
- 0810 Post-secondary education;
- EDUCATION;
- 0815 Informal education;
- EDUCATION;
- 0850 Geoscience education research;
- EDUCATION