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Using technology in fieldwork: practitioner’s perspectives and transformative experiences

Brian Whalley – Sheffield Derek France – Chester Julian Park – Reading Katharine Welsh – Chester Alice Mauchline – Reading. Using technology in fieldwork: practitioner’s perspectives and transformative experiences. Enhancement of Fieldwork Learning Project. Change.

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Using technology in fieldwork: practitioner’s perspectives and transformative experiences

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  1. Brian Whalley – Sheffield Derek France – Chester Julian Park – Reading Katharine Welsh – Chester Alice Mauchline – Reading Using technology in fieldwork: practitioner’s perspectives and transformative experiences Enhancement of Fieldwork Learning Project

  2. Change ........ In the last 40 years, what has changed? In aviation? In the way of the world? In people's behaviour? Internet, computing, ICT In an increasingly complicated, complex world Fieldwork can, and should, reflect this. Problem solving (PBL, IBL) is one way to integrate some aspects of this complexity into educaton

  3. In Education Use of ICT – Web and Web 2.0 • But how good are the ICT skills of graduates in the real world? Does the 70 – 30 'principle' still apply? • 70% of modules have assessment of: 70% exam and 30% CA/non-exam (usually a term paper or essays)

  4. (The Sage on the Page?) Learning experiences NOT: ‘pile ‘em high and lecture ‘em long’ • And then examine them! Sage on the stage from this; the lecture? Traveling scholar and student The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco (The Sage of Bologna?)

  5. Fieldwork is for: • Development of observational skills • Facilitation of experiential learning • Encouragement of student responsibility for learning • Development of analytical skills • Provision of a taste for real research • Kindling a respect for the environment • Developing personal skills • Lessening barriers between staff and students (Gold, et al, 1991, Teaching Geography in Higher Education, Chapter3)

  6. and yet, Fieldwork .......is too often • Look and tell • Look and see (and note) • Measure a few things and process data • Often with 19Cequipment • Give a presentation, write an essay, report • And challenged because it is 'costly' • And may not be as effective as it could be

  7. Towards Fieldwork 3.0 Emergence via Better Alignment Using • Portable hardware (sensors via USB) • Web 2 (hardware and 'apps') • Web 3 – the Semantic Web • Student needs and expectations • Delivering Real Learning Experiences • Appropriate assessment and feedback • Cognitive psychology and • Scholarship of Teaching and Learning

  8. How to avoid the panic? Trial and error - how can we provide good learning experiences? Trial and error - how we can provide good learning experiences. 'You know what a learning experience is? A learning experience is one of those things that says, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.’ (Douglas N Adams, 1992) Photo: Chris Ogle

  9. And, inevitably:Skills (and employability) What skills? Traditional typology 'Professor Snape's' perspective, 'in today's competitive job market, the pressure is on students to obtain a ‘good degree’ '. (Higgins, Hartley, and Skelton, 2001) This begs the question: ‘what makes a good degree?’ and thus, how might it be (best) delivered? What is a graduate in 'topic x' ?

  10. Enhancement of Fieldwork • By setting out better aligned programs • (ie student involved and ‘directed’) fieldwork • By using technology in various ways, especially ‘smartphones’ and tablets/iPads • By incorporating skills within these as well as academic attributes

  11. We can now do this as • Many/most students have smartphones than can use ‘apps’ • (although not all students can afford them yet, USA as well as UK; but iPads per group can be loaned) • Internet/3G connectivity (Web 2) helps • People and groups can be linked • Use of technology in the field hands learning to students

  12. 'Emergence' in fieldwork:designing better fieldwork experiencescovering: • Defending fieldwork & providing Value for Money • Techniques for problems solving (for students) • Producing Real Life Experiences (employability) • Dissertation(capstone) preparation and training • Assessment, Feedback, Criterion referencing • Feedback provision on learning experiences

  13. Defending Fieldwork(Jenkins 1997) • Rigorously review your department’s fieldwork programme • Clearly integrate fieldwork into the whole degree programme • Provide statements for peers on the value of fieldwork • Get students to articulate what they have learnt from fieldwork • Ensure there are demonstrable employability skills for students • Demonstrate through research/ evaluation studies the effectiveness of your programme

  14. Fieldwork • We take it as read that students benefit but (cost effective) fieldwork • Our project is to promote better student experiences with technology in fieldwork • And that they become more digitally literate in the process

  15. Ethics • Quality Education (Teaching) • Use of equipment (mobiles, smartphones) ethical or green policies? REEs in manufacture • Should we require students to use their own? • Air Miles and carbon footprints? • Dealing with people • (Value for Money)

  16. Howard Gardner • The Disciplinary Mind • The Synthesizing Mind • The Creating Mind • The Respectful Mind • The Ethical Mind Gardner, H. 2007, Five Minds for the Future

  17. 6 Competenciesstudents need to gain Competence – encouragement by challenge and remarks to achieve skills levels Confidence – promoting remarks to show themselves, and others, their achievements Critical thinking – which is what we have been wanting all along in 'Thinking skills’, used in problem solving Creativity – in what students do and how they do it Collaboration – bringing in team-working and ethics Commonality – of purpose, to achieve specified (and unspecified) objectives Curtiosity – being curious courteously (Kipling). Marcia Mentkowski Mihály Csíkszentmihályi

  18. Course revision to incorporate these aspects? In fact, we tend to say …. • ‘Yes, the students enjoyed it’ • ‘We enjoyed it too’ and, after a few months.. • ‘Same again for next year?’ • ‘It is arguable that in geography, …fieldwork is intrinsic to the discipline …., yet I know of no controlled study of [its] effectiveness’ Donald Bligh 1973 • (How) do we look at feedback from the field trip? • Thinking specifically here of First year – bonding, basic skills, report writing and communication • Second year using field trips for dissertation preparation, project planning, reporting

  19. Theory into practise • Using Maskall and Stokes (2008) • Designing Effective Fieldwork for the Environmental and Natural Sciences • Using ‘Preflights’ • (stuff done in advance; G. Novak,Whalley & Taylor 2008) • Using work on Troublesome Knowledge • Using employability skills and affordances • Trying to provide better experiences and feedback • Providing ‘value for money’ • Being ethical

  20. Fieldwork • Positives: • Students (mostly) tend to enjoy it • Tutors too (if they believe in it!) • Students should learn effectively from it (as well as) • Remembering it and what they did (affective) • Collaboration via teamwork • Negatives: • Can be costly (for whom? Institution, students) • Is it Value for Money? (and Time and Effort?) • Cost Utility Analysis : Cost Effectiveness Analysis

  21. Needs, motives, social and interpersonal skills, Preferred learning styles, disability, Prior experience of fieldwork Learners Influences on learning, after Maskall and Stokes, 2008 Learning styles or Thinking styles (Sternberg) Learning Activity Field Environment Intended Outcomes Physical nature, location and Features; cultural context; available resources, data Information, instrumentation Acquisition of knowledge; Academic and social skills; Increased motivation Attitudes; progression

  22. acquiring skills participating constructing knowledge and understanding developing values Learning(after Beetham 2002) • Student-centred • Constructivism • Activity based • Experiential • Communities of practice Using digital tools Using digital communications media Using digital resources Using digital etiquette

  23. Using Ron Oliver’s schema

  24. Project alignment Field ------ Lab GPS data analysis and section plotting Several groups (working independently) Comparison of between-group results and report writing River Discharge Study Calculate velocity data Lab. Analysis and Compilation River Velocity measurements River cross profile measurements Data analysis Combine data Download GPS data Pre-field trip preparation [ podcasts - digital reporting - vidcasts ] Sampling Beach Sampling Dunes Micrographs Photographs Size analysis Report Writing and Submission Beach and Dune Study Vegetation surveys (with key and photos on netbook) Combine with satellite images + Other reports etc Combine data Beach-dune profile surveys (GPS + Netbook) Download GPS data

  25. Linking technology (smartphones and tablets) to fieldwork Is now possible The limitation is now instructors’ imagination (Not ease of use, battery life, applications etc)

  26. Educational Spaces Personal space Other Personal space Team Space Trip space Field space In the field PLE Student information environment Rich Internet Applications Knowledge space Student + Computer (desktop, laptop, ‘netbook’) … lab, home, library ….

  27. Helen Beetham 2011

  28. Margueritte Koole's DLS, framework model

  29. Cloud Apps Apps Netbook/iPad etc WiFi/3G/Bluetooth

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