250 likes | 332 Views
App Development Course Using Tournament Style Approach. OM 865 - IdeaLab. Presented by: Jeanne Myers Curriculum and Technology Manager Course Taught by: Nitin Joglekar Associate Professor/Dean's Research Fellow Operations and Technology Management. 1. Description of the Course.
E N D
App Development Course Using Tournament Style Approach OM 865 - IdeaLab Presented by: Jeanne Myers Curriculum and Technology Manager Course Taught by:Nitin Joglekar Associate Professor/Dean's Research Fellow Operations and Technology Management 1
Description of the Course OM865 – 5-Day MBA Course taught at SMG Professor Nitin Joglekar August 2011 Supported by SMG IT Team Members: Jeanne Myers Bill Dupee Sean Flattery (student) 2
Description of the Course Based on Innovation Tournaments Fried and Hansson (2010) Terwiesch and Ulrich (2009) 3
Course Objectives • Idea generation and problem solving: Deployment of internal and external inputs, and recombination of observed ideas • Idea visualization and representation • Idea processing/Analytics: Management of variation; perceptual maps and screens; tagging; idea interdependence, information architecture, task sequencing for enhancing usability 4
Course Objectives • Idea testing / Behavioral Response through rapid consumer feedback • Idea sharing and collaboration in a tournament setting (using digital tools) • Technology integration exhibited by student created web-sites, presentations and self-reflection
What do we know about learning? • "Students have to be active in developing their knowledge," says Hestenes. "They can't passively assimilate it.“ (Hanford, 2012) • The idea that people learn better when they're actively engaged is one of the central findings from an explosion of cognitive research conducted over the last several decades. • Ability to monitor and check your own thinking (an expert characteristic, not a novice characteristic) (Weiman, MIT) 6
This was not a lecture course.. • "Science Education in the 21st Century: Using the Tools of Science to Teach Science." • Rethinking the Way College Students are Taught • The Problem with Lecturing Are you using the last 40-50 years of cognitive research about how people learn or to inform the way you teach? 7
How can we do things different? Peer Instruction & Peer Competition Making Connections Guides thinking, affects what we notice, helps interpret and organize Experts or Novices? Help learners become experts rather than novices. Lecturing is generally passive, reinforces novice-like behavior. Doesn’t exercise the brain. 8
Making Connections Connections to big ideas are important. It’s the difference between novices and experts. • What psychologists have learned is that people who are learning a subject tend to see the content of that subject as isolated pieces of information. • We learn by remembering small chunks of information at a time. • Making connections exercises our brains. • We used EverNote as the first phase of developing connections between the many ideas initially generating (image here) 9
How did we use the technology? • Innovative group, peer and collaborative learning techniques using the technology as the 'glue' to bring us all back together. • Took the many ideas (over 200) and allowed students to sort, categorize, prioritize, compete, refine and present • Each group a chance to be the experts by pushing ideas up front and center (see recordings) 10
Using the Technology • Team competitive approach • Uses Project-Based Learning approaches and real-life issues (Example from PBL Clearinghouse; also see Getting Started) • Used the technology to connect out to the world and local community (videoconferencing with experts, agencies, businesses, government, other schools)
What technology did we use? Penultimate Excel EverNote 12
EverNote – Idea Generation, and Gathering, Tagging, Analysis
Darwinator What is the Darwinator? A web-based tool that let’s you create and select exceptional opportunities. Great for idea management, recruitment and many other challenges.
- App Idea Sharing • Used for teams to present their ideas • Links were sent to various experts and others outside the class for voting (via Facebook, Twitter)
Some of the benefits of integrating technology • Motivation – students learn by doing, they apply skills and gain confidence. • Student Choice – they become designers of their own learning, picking technology tools they are comfortable with is empowering • Critical and higher order thinking skills – explore concepts in depth, technology frees and speeds up the processes • Develop individual leadership and team collaboration behaviors • Use of technology similar to use in future careers, business environments • Take advantage of global base of knowledge, experts, alumni • Multiple learning styles and differentiating instruction comes more naturally with audio and visual media 16
Students used their technology of choice, it wasn't forced on them. • Clear expectations were scripted for each of the 5 days. They new what was expected, how to get there and what to use was left to them (link to Design Assignment pdf) • Integrated key innovation tournament concepts into the actual activities of the class. • Technology used not just to use it, it had a purpose in each activity. • Students found their own apps and sites we had never heard of such as a PowerPoint mock app interface. That would not have happened had we not allowed for freedom of choice. 17
Student Apps, WordPress Sites & Video Projects WordPress Sites Group 1: http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab1/ Group 2: http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab2/ Group 3: http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab3/ Group 4: http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab4/ Student Reflections Videos Jason Dijakhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfpU66OZHeY Joseph DeLisehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoDKVg0Ri0M Course Video Montage and Final App Presentations http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8IaBo7Z2Xk App Videos and Websites Toasted Zombies App http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn3Npe22l_I http://toastedzombies.com/ Cloud Circular App http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qGhrLqwAlA http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab3 Take This Spot App http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Lr6LL6IXac http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab4 Bean Smart Commute App http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zr7VgYkItp8http://blogs.bu.edu/idealab2
Results Formal Informal Growth from new approach Relationships and cooperation between tech dept. and faculty Student appreciation, interest, and enthusiasm Networking between students and guest speakers • WordPress sites with student apps • EverNote notebooks with tags • Final student projects • Instructional Video project • QualtricsSurvey results But, there were a lot of added bonuses we didn’t predict!
Survey Results • 10 out of 14 said the iPad was directly beneficial for learning the material I believe that using the iPad in class encourages me to interact more than I normally would with my classmates.
Survey How well did you learn to use each of these applications or tools and their features?
You can do this! • The tools we used are mostly free: WordPress, EverNote, Penultimate, Excel, Darwinator • Planning is important but informal collaborative learning also has its advantages. • Plan for the spontaneous! Set up for free-flowing movement and student choice of tools. Structure the requirements and assessments instead. • Observe where students gravitate to and why for your next class. • Students love to design their own spaces and ways to work, allow opportunities for this in your planning. 22
Plans for the Future • Approval tocontinue offering OM865 at SMG • Summer 2012 course will be in newly designed “Innovation Lab” - SMG 326 • Projects to focus on the other sectors in SMG’s Strategic Plan: Medicine and Digital Technology
Sources • http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/560/ • Terwiesch and Ulrich (2009). Innovation Tournaments- Creating and Selecting Exceptional Opportunities. HBS Press. • Fried, J. & Heinemeir Hansson, D. (2010). Rework. New York: CrownBusiness.
Thank you for coming! Jeanne M. Myers Boston University Manager of Curriculum & Technology Jmyers22@bu.edu (617) 353-9412