Club Admiralty

v7.2 - moving along, a point increase at a time

Multilitteratus Incognitus

Pondering what to learn next 🤔

Post-it found! the low-tech side of eLearning 3.0 ;-)

Greetings fellow three-point-oh'ers
(or is it just fellow eLearners?)

This past week in eLearning 3.0 (Week 2, aka 'the cloud'). This week's guest was Tony Hirsch, and what was discussed was the cloud, and specifically Docker.  Before I get into my (riveting) thoughts on the cloud, let me go back  to Week 0 (two weeks ago) and reflect a little on the thoughts I jotted down on my retrieved post-it note.

So, in the live session a couple of weeks ago (it's recorded if you want to go back and see it), Siemens said something along the lines of "what information abundance consumes is attention". This really struck me as both a big "aha!" as well as a "well, d'uh! why hadn't it occurred to me already? D'oh!". There has been a lot said over the past few years about how people don't read anymore (they skim), and how bad that is.  This ties into "what learners want" (a phrase I've heard countless times on-campus and off), and that tends to be bite-sized info, which leads us to the micro-learning craze.  While micro-learning, or bite-sized learning, has its place, it can't be the end-all-be-all of approaches to learning. When the RSS feed is bursting with around 1700 unread posts (my average day if I don't check it), the effort to really give 100% attention to each item is too much; and part of it is that full articles no longer come over RSS - it's just the title and perhaps the first 250 characters of the article if you're lucky, so the 'click to go to article' is a necessity if you want to read the full thing. Back in the day (ca. 2005) I could actually read most things because my unread count wasn't all that big.  So, as the abundance of data has become a reality, attention deficit seems like a natural connection to that.

Another thing that Siemens said was that before the "messiness of learning was viewed as a distraction from learning, whereas now the making sense part is the learning"  (paraphrased). This got me thinking about messiness and not-yet-ness. I agree that messy learning is what college (BA all the way to PhD) should be what learning is about, but how does that square with the mandates for learning outcomes and the measurability of those outcomes?  This is particularly pointed at the moment as this year one department I am affiliated with went through their 'academic quality' review, and my home department is going through ours in early 2019.  Messy works, but how do you sell it to the upper level admins? Also, how do you sell it to learners who have been enculturated into a transactional model of education?  I don't have the answers, but interesting points to ponder and discuss.

Now, on a more geeky or technical side:  Docker and the cloud.  As Stephen and Tony were discussing the cloud. This made me think of tinkering as learning, authentic learning, and the aforementioned messiness in learning.   We now have the technology that allows us to spin off fresh instances of a virtual machine that has specific configurations.  I've been able to do this on Virtual PC (back before microsoft bought them) on my mac for ages.  It was actually a lot of fun to find old versions of Windows, OS/2, NEXTSTEP, and other operating systems and play around with them on my Mac.  It was a great learning opportunity.  But, but wasn't scalable. As a tinkerer I could do this on my own machines, but I couldn't distribute easily.  Now, if I were teaching a course on (insert software), I could conceivably create the 'perfect' environment and have students be able to spin-up instances of that to be able to try things out without the need to install something locally; not sure what licensing looks like in this field, but let's assume it's 'easy' to deal with. Whereas in prior eLearning (elearning 2.0?) the best that we could do is limited simulations with Articulate, we can actually afford to let the learners loose on a real live running instance of what they are learning.  When they are done, they can just scrap the instance.  Even if you needed to run the instance for an entire semester non-stop (15 weeks), that would still only cost the learner around $80.  Not bad!  The best thing about this?  You can freely mess around, and if you break something (irreparably), start from scratch!

Anyway, those are my thoughts on this week on eLearning 3.0 - what are your AHA moments?
 Comments
Stacks Image 20

Archive

 Apr 2025 (1)
 Mar 2025 (1)
 Feb 2025 (1)
 Jan 2025 (1)
 Dec 2024 (2)
 Oct 2024 (2)
 Sep 2024 (1)
 Aug 2024 (5)
 Nov 2023 (1)
 Aug 2023 (1)
 Jul 2023 (1)
 May 2023 (1)
 Apr 2023 (4)
 Mar 2023 (5)
 Feb 2023 (2)
 Dec 2022 (6)
 Nov 2022 (1)
 Sep 2022 (1)
 Aug 2022 (2)
 Jul 2022 (3)
 Jun 2022 (1)
 May 2022 (1)
 Apr 2022 (2)
 Feb 2022 (2)
 Nov 2021 (2)
 Sep 2021 (1)
 Aug 2021 (1)
 Jul 2021 (2)
 Jun 2021 (1)
 May 2021 (1)
 Oct 2020 (1)
 Sep 2020 (1)
 Aug 2020 (1)
 May 2020 (2)
 Apr 2020 (2)
 Feb 2020 (1)
 Dec 2019 (3)
 Oct 2019 (2)
 Aug 2019 (1)
 Jul 2019 (1)
 May 2019 (1)
 Apr 2019 (1)
 Mar 2019 (1)
 Dec 2018 (5)
 Nov 2018 (1)
 Oct 2018 (2)
 Sep 2018 (2)
 Jun 2018 (1)
 Apr 2018 (1)
 Mar 2018 (2)
 Feb 2018 (2)
 Jan 2018 (1)
 Dec 2017 (1)
 Nov 2017 (2)
 Oct 2017 (1)
 Sep 2017 (2)
 Aug 2017 (2)
 Jul 2017 (2)
 Jun 2017 (4)
 May 2017 (7)
 Apr 2017 (3)
 Feb 2017 (4)
 Jan 2017 (5)
 Dec 2016 (5)
 Nov 2016 (9)
 Oct 2016 (1)
 Sep 2016 (6)
 Aug 2016 (4)
 Jul 2016 (7)
 Jun 2016 (8)
 May 2016 (9)
 Apr 2016 (10)
 Mar 2016 (12)
 Feb 2016 (13)
 Jan 2016 (7)
 Dec 2015 (11)
 Nov 2015 (10)
 Oct 2015 (7)
 Sep 2015 (5)
 Aug 2015 (8)
 Jul 2015 (9)
 Jun 2015 (7)
 May 2015 (7)
 Apr 2015 (15)
 Mar 2015 (2)
 Feb 2015 (10)
 Jan 2015 (4)
 Dec 2014 (7)
 Nov 2014 (5)
 Oct 2014 (13)
 Sep 2014 (10)
 Aug 2014 (8)
 Jul 2014 (8)
 Jun 2014 (5)
 May 2014 (5)
 Apr 2014 (3)
 Mar 2014 (4)
 Feb 2014 (8)
 Jan 2014 (10)
 Dec 2013 (10)
 Nov 2013 (4)
 Oct 2013 (8)
 Sep 2013 (6)
 Aug 2013 (10)
 Jul 2013 (6)
 Jun 2013 (4)
 May 2013 (3)
 Apr 2013 (2)
 Mar 2013 (8)
 Feb 2013 (4)
 Jan 2013 (10)
 Dec 2012 (11)
 Nov 2012 (3)
 Oct 2012 (8)
 Sep 2012 (17)
 Aug 2012 (15)
 Jul 2012 (16)
 Jun 2012 (19)
 May 2012 (12)
 Apr 2012 (12)
 Mar 2012 (12)
 Feb 2012 (12)
 Jan 2012 (13)
 Dec 2011 (14)
 Nov 2011 (19)
 Oct 2011 (21)
 Sep 2011 (31)
 Aug 2011 (12)
 Jul 2011 (8)
 Jun 2011 (7)
 May 2011 (3)
 Apr 2011 (2)
 Mar 2011 (8)
 Feb 2011 (5)
 Jan 2011 (6)
 Dec 2010 (6)
 Nov 2010 (3)
 Oct 2010 (2)
 Sep 2010 (2)
 Aug 2010 (4)
 Jul 2010 (9)
 Jun 2010 (8)
 May 2010 (5)
 Apr 2010 (4)
 Mar 2010 (2)
 Feb 2010 (3)
 Jan 2010 (7)
 Dec 2009 (9)
 Nov 2009 (5)
 Oct 2009 (9)
 Sep 2009 (13)
 Aug 2009 (13)
 Jul 2009 (13)
 Jun 2009 (13)
 May 2009 (15)
 Apr 2009 (15)
 Mar 2009 (14)
 Feb 2009 (13)
 Jan 2009 (10)
 Dec 2008 (12)
 Nov 2008 (6)
 Oct 2008 (8)
 Sep 2008 (2)
 Jun 2008 (1)
 May 2008 (6)
 Apr 2008 (1)
Stacks Image 18