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JISC e-learning programme. Sarah Porter Programme Director JISC Executive. e-learning Programme. The JISC Committee for Learning and Teaching (JCLT) is funding a new e-learning Programme to run until August 2007.
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JISC e-learning programme Sarah Porter Programme Director JISC Executive
e-learning Programme • The JISC Committee for Learning and Teaching (JCLT) is funding a new e-learning Programme to run until August 2007. • The overarching aim of the e-learning Programme is to identify how e-learning approaches might be used to facilitate learning and to advise on how these approaches might be effectively implemented. • The Programme focuses on three areas: e-learning and Pedagogy; Technical Frameworks for e-learning; and Innovation.
Teacher sets up activities after discussion with learner(s) Learning activity Learning activity Learning activity Learning activity Learning activity assessment portfolio profile Learning resources Accredits learner Model to inform e-learning programme E-learning programme E-learning and pedagogy Sequence of learning activities (learning design) MLEs for LLL X4L Organisation may be local, regional or national Learner
Why a new programme? • JISC Learning and Teaching began to plan new programme 18 months ago • Identified areas of activity through: • Recommendations from evaluations of current JISC programmes at the time such as MLEs • Identified need for more focus on the learner and learning process rather than the organisation; • Some gaps in knowledge of e-learning that the JISC might be able to help fill; • More detailed development work needed on technical standards, specifications and interfaces; • Clear messages about pedagogy needed to drive forward new technologies; • Concrete outcomes and outputs required.
Analysis of identified priorities in strategic documents such as ‘Success for All’ (DfES); Get on with IT (LSC); etc etc. • Compared these priorities with members’ own experiences and priorities in FE and HE • Identified 3 priority areas: • Using e-learning for effective L&T practice; • Technical, standards-based frameworks to underpin e-learning; • Innovation in practice and technology.
NOT the usual model • Common JISC process is to identify an area of interest • release a Call for Proposals for a large sum of money. • Set projects running on a 2 or 3 year ‘unstoppable’ trajectory. • Projects are fairly autonomous and deliver outputs at the end of 2 or 3 yrs (many of dubious benefit to anyone outside their project team). • Not this time!
Last 18 months • Identifying priorities • Commissioned research • Community consultation • Agreeing partnerships • National e.g. Academy, Becta • International e.g. IMS; DEST (Australia) • Programme design • More activities over shorter timescales with very specific outcomes and outputs • Includes annual review and planning cycle • Emphasis on involvement of real people (!) • Working through established CsoP
3 Monthly e.g.Committees, Programme SG Monthly e.g.Directors Meetings, Team meetings Daily/weekly Activity e.g. projects, programme manager Embedded Development Cycles Plan Annual Review, 3 year strategy Review Do Evaluate
Communication and consultation • Consultation strategy focused on existing networks and champions • Programme web site will provide focus of consultation and feedback • Open for comment and discussion by everyone • Closed areas for projects, study leaders to share resources • Resources feed straight into process based ‘stories’ or toolkits • First story: ‘designing for learning’
e-learning and Pedagogy • Overall aim: to ensure that e-learning as practised in UK Further Education (FE) and Higher Education (HE) is ‘pedagogically sound, learner-focused and accessible’. • What this means in practice: • To provide the post-16 and HE community with accurate, up-to-date, evidence- and research-based information about effective practice in the use of e-learning tools. • To promote the application and development of e-learning tools and standards to better support effective practice. • Practical outcomes which are relevant to practitioners, researchers and developers.
Study: e-learning models • Explore how different approaches to (e)learning can be represented and shared. • Develop a general framework within which approaches can be evaluated and compared. • Model/represent a limited number of approaches within this framework • Provide tools to evaluate these approaches in specific learning contexts • Communicate outcomes to practitioners.
… potential outcomes • lesson plans/learning designs for different environments • representations (e.g. video) of different approaches in use • a toolkit or planning tool • a database of activities indexed to specific learning outcomes, contexts, or needs • re-usable ‘activity sequences’ e.g. for use in a LAMS-type environment, reflecting different approaches • an online ‘knowledge garden’ in which participants contribute, refineand link e-learning concepts • materials for use in staff development and/or reflection, e.g. integrated into FPP modules • …
Study: supporting practitioners • Explore how practitioners make effective choices about e-learning • Develop a typology of different resources to support practitioners, e.g. • Case studies, examples, ‘stories’, video-clips • Guidelines, staff development materials • Tools (e.g. LAMS) and toolkits/planners • Practices e.g. mentoring, workshops • Investigate which are effective in practice: • Broad (e.g. survey, review of existing materials) • Deep (e.g. interviews, personal case histories) • Make recommendations wrt programme deliverables
Case studies: e-learning in practice • Describeand evaluate a range of different approaches to e-learning: • in a range of organisational contexts: • 14-19, FE, ACL and HE • Blended, face to face and virtual • using a range of technical environments: • specific uses ofVirtual Learning Environments • use of Learning Design tools (e.g LAMS, ReLOAD) • use of modular tools (e.g. simulations, scenarios, activities, discipline-specific tools…) • Publication ‘Innovative Practice in e-learning’ with supporting video clips • for September 2004.
Other elements… • Identify the range of taxonomies, frameworks and modelling languages used for describing educational (including e-learning) practice • Review current ICT technologies that support effective learning design • Input to developing standards and tools • Overall synthesis, analysis and interpretation of programme outcomes • Coordination with ‘frameworks’ and ‘innovation’ strands • Communication to practitioners, with ongoing consultation
Further information • Further information about the e-learning Programme is available from: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/mle/ • Email s.porter@jisc.ac.uk