Journal of applied research in higher education

Posted by Celia Walter | 25 Feb, 2010

The Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education is an online peer-reviewed journal, the central aim of which is to promote improved practice by encouraging informed debate into pedagogic and related matters in higher education. Each issue comprises of an editorial, papers from all disciplines and subject areas covering higher education policy and management, and learning and teaching (including technology-enhanced learning); and developments, news and reviews. Individual papers are available as PDF downloads. http://jarhe.research.glam.ac.uk/

From Intute.ac.uk

Social Media: A Guide for College and University Libraries

Posted by Celia Walter | 5 Feb, 2010

an article by: Andy Burkhardt. Emerging Technology Librarian, Champlain College

From the Article:

Because of the ubiquity of social media use, academic libraries can leverage these communication tools to interact with faculty, staff, and students in new ways. It is often difficult in academic libraries to spread the word about different events or services that the library is offering. Social media provides another vein in which to market new library products or initiatives.

In addition to marketing, the simple act of having conversations and creating relationships with patrons is immensely useful. Through conversations on social media, libraries can gain insights into what their users want and need and ultimately understand their users better.

Many libraries are already experimenting with different social media services like Twitter or Facebook to interact and connect with their patrons, yet there are still a number of questions that come up as this is still fairly new territory. “How do I get started?” “What sorts of things should I post?” “How can I grow our social media presence and gain more fans or followers?”

Access the Complete Article

A Full Text PDF Version of the Article (4 Pages) is Also Available

Source: College and Research Library News

From : The Resourceshelf

10 Ways Universities Share Information Using Social Media

Posted by Celia Walter | 17 Jul, 2009

Vadim Lavrusik, new media student at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, blogs for Mashable about 10 Ways Universities Share Information Using Social Media. The article discusses different strategies university public affairs offices are using to connect with their communities such as:

  1. Gathering and Sharing Information
  2. Showcasing Student and Faculty Work
  3. Providing a Platform to Broadcast Events
  4. Emergency Notification
  5. Connecting People
  6. Producing, Not Just Promoting
  7. Creating a Dialogue and Communicating to Students
  8. Facebook Office Hours
  9. Coaching for the Spotlight
From iLibrarian blog

Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS)

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 Jun, 2009

"The Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS) aims to provide an authoritative 'sourcebook' on Open Access, covering the concept, principles, advantages, approaches and means to achieving it. The site highlights developments and initiatives from around the world, with links to diverse additional resources and case studies. As such, it is a community-building as much as a resource-building exercise. Users are encouraged to share and download the resources provided, and to modify and customize them for local use"

From Peter Scott's Library blog

Does higher education produce the knowledge...and people needed for SA's development?

Posted by Celia Walter | 11 Jun, 2009

Isandla Institute and the Open Society

Foundation for South Africa invite you

to a Development Dialogue on

 

 Does higher education

produce the knowledge,

skills, competencies and

people needed for South

Africa’s development?

 

 Thursday 18 June 2009, 16h35 - 18h00 

 (tea and coffee served beforehand, please be seated at 16h35)    


Venue: The Studio, Centre for the Book

62 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town
 

 

The recent ministerial report on transformation in higher education has highlighted serious transformation challenges, particularly as far as racism, sexism and diversity management are concerned. This raises important questions about the quality of life and of education experienced by students and how they are socialised in this context. Another pertinent issue the Development Dialogue will explore relates to the role of higher education in responding to labour market needs. Put differently, is the higher education system sufficiently aligned to the skills and expertise needed for South Africa’s economy and are graduates adequately prepared for future professional contexts?

 

Invited speakers: Dr Max Price (Vice Chancellor, University of Cape Town) and Prof Mary Metcalfe (Head of the Wits School of Education).

 

The Development Dialogue will be held on Thursday 18 June 2009 from 16h35-18h00. Tea and coffee are made available between 16h00-16h35. Kindly note that the event will start at 16h35. Afterwards, there will be an opportunity for informal interaction over drinks and snacks. 


If you are interested in attending this event, please r.s.v.p. on admin@isandla.org.za. You will receive confirmation of your attendance.

 
We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Using Twitter in the classroom at the University of Texas, Dallas

Posted by Celia Walter | 3 Jun, 2009

Marshall Kirkpatrick at ReadWriteWeb writes about how University of Texas at Dallas History Professor, Monica Rankin is using Twitter in her classroom. This video discusses how Rankin is using hashtags to engage students in discussions. Be sure to check out the full post for links to other educational Twitter efforts, and please list any you’ve heard about in the comments!

Link to Youtube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WPVWDkF7U8

 Via iLibrarian blog

Higher Education in a Web 2.0 World. JISC, UK

Posted by Celia Walter | 13 May, 2009

...an independent inquiry into the strategic and policy implications for higher education of the experience and expectations of learners in the light of their increasing use of the newest technologies.

Essentially, these are Web 2.0 or Social Web technologies, technologies that enable communication, collaboration, participation and sharing.

Web 2.0 – the Social Web: Software that supports group interaction’
Shirky C, 2003

As we began our work, the online lifestyle of young people going into higher education was inescapable, and those working in it had sensed a clear change in their students’ pre-entry experience. The time was ripe for an informed, impartial assessment of this and what it might herald for higher education policy and strategy. This was our remit. Since they represent the future, we took young learners as our baseline. We have, however, been concerned with learners of all ages.

We reviewed the findings of completed and, where they were available, ongoing studies related to our remit; took oral evidence from a range of practising academics and researchers; and commissioned briefings and studies, including one substantial piece of work on current and developing international practice in the use of Web 2.0 in higher education. We met six times in full session and held one event dedicated to hearing evidence.

We structured our Inquiry into a consideration of the prior experience of higher education learners, their expectations, and international practice in the use of Web 2.0 in higher education. From our findings in these three areas, we identified a number of critical issues, the exploration of which then informed our conclusions and recommendations.

Key findings

Prior experience of higher education learners

Today’s learners exist in a digital age. This implies access to, and use of, a range of Social Web tools and software that provide gateways to a multiplicity of interactive resources for information, entertainment and, not least, communication. We looked at access to digital technologies and their use from the point of view of level and pattern, purpose, approach and consequences. Our key findings were that:

  • The digital divide, the division between the digital ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’, has not been entirely overcome and persists in several dimensions: in access to, and engagement with, technology; the capability of the technology; and in individual competence
  • Use of Web 2.0 technologies is nevertheless high and pervasive across all age groups from 11 to 15 upwards
  • Using Web 2.0 technologies leads to development of a new sense of communities of interest and networks, and also of a clear notion of boundaries in web space – for example personal space (messages), group space (social networking sites such as Facebook) and publishing space (blogs and social media sites such as
    YouTube1)
  • There is an area within the boundaries of the so-called group space that could be developed to support learning and teaching
  • The processes of engaging with Web 2.0 technologies develop a skill set that matches both to views on 21st-century learning skills and to those on 21st-century employability skills – communication, collaboration, creativity, leadership and technology proficiency
  • Information literacies, including searching, retrieving, critically evaluating information from a range of appropriate sources and also attributing it – represent a significant and growing deficit area
Learner expectation

We looked at expectation from the perspectives of nature and level prior to entry to higher education and then response to the actuality on course. Our key findings were that:

  • Present-day students are heavily influenced by school methods of delivery so that shifts in educational practice there can be expected to impact on expectations of approaches in higher education
  • Face to face contact with staff – the personal element in study – matters to students
  • Imagining technology used for social purposes in a study context presents conceptual difficulties to learners as well as a challenge to their notions of space. They need demonstration, persuasion and room to experiment in this context
  • Staff capability with ICT is a further dimension of the digital divide, and effective use of technology, ie to enhance learning, is as much of an issue as practical operation, ie getting it to work
  • Students’ practical skills with ICT can be harnessed by staff to good effect in both domains – operation and effective use in delivery
Web 2.0 use in higher education now

We looked at the nature and extent of current deployment of Web 2.0 technologies in higher education and sought, in the process, to gauge the UK’s position relative to that of other countries. Here we found that institutions of higher education in the UK are presently as advanced as any internationally in their developing adoption of Web
2.0, and that the UK is generally well served at present in the infrastructure – specifically broadband width – that is necessary to support Web 2.0 technologies. Other key findings were:

  • Web 2.0 technologies are being deployed across a broad spectrum of university activities and in similar ways in the UK and overseas
  • Deployment is in no way systematic and the drive is principally bottom up, coming from the professional interest and enthusiasm of individual members of staff
  • In learning and teaching, usage is patchy but a considerable working base exists, as it does in other areas of university business, including administration, student support and advertising and marketing
  • On the basis of the strength and reach of its broadband infrastructure at least, the UK is presently well placed to be at the forefront of future development
  • Advice and guidance is available to institutions, but there is no blueprint for implementation of Web 2.0 technologies, and each is currently deciding its own path

Critical issues

The critical issues we have identified fall into three groups: immediate and fundamental; ongoing drivers to change; and fundamental over time. We believe addressing those in the first group to be key to capitalising on the momentum that exists in those in the second and realising the significant opportunity that lies in that in the third.

Immediate and fundamental

The issues here concern the digital divide and information literacies, and they are relevant to both staff and students.

The digital divide

Addressing the digital divide from the student perspective means ensuring access to technology for all and the development of practical skills in its use. This is a basic entitlement. For staff it means ensuring technical proficiency, reflection on approaches to learning and teaching, and the development of practice, and skills in practice, of e-pedagogy – learning with and/or through technology – so that when they choose to use technology, they can do so effectively.

Information literacies

Tackling information literacies from the student point of view means ensuring they possess the skills and understanding to search, authenticate and critically evaluate material from the range of appropriate sources, and attribute it as necessary. Allied to this is providing for the development of web-awareness so that students operate as informed users of web-based services, able to avoid unintended consequences. For staff, the requirement is to maintain the currency of skills in the face of the development of web-based information sources.

Ongoing drivers to change

This group comprises issues with ongoing momentum.

Tradition

Students are looking for traditional approaches, notably personal contact, in a modern setting, ie web-supported. The bridge between Web 2.0 in social use and in learning is as yet only dimly perceived by students, and only a little more clearly by staff. The fact that it is perceived, however, is likely to act as a spur to its construction.

Environmental factors

These are digitisation of learning materials, a receptive audience of learners and a cadre of teaching staff connecting the two through their interest in experimentation and innovation in approaches to learning and teaching.

Diversity in the learner population

e-Learning incorporating Web 2.0 offers the sense of being a contributing member of a learning community, which is one of the hallmarks of higher education. For learners unable to participate in an actual community for some, or even all, of the time – notably part-time, distance and, increasingly, work-based – Web 2.0 may be a reasonable
proxy.

A richer educational experience

Learning that is active – by doing – undertaken within a community and based on individual’s interests, is widely considered to be the most effective. Driven by process rather than content, such an approach helps students become self-directed and independent learners. Web 2.0 is well suited to serving and supporting this type of learning.

Practice in schools

Practice is variable, but the type of approach to learning outlined above – project- and group-based supported by technology – appears to be in the ascendancy and so likely to condition expectation in higher education.

Open source materials and online universities

The growth in both open source materials and online universities increases the choice available to students of all ages and in all locations. Adoption of approaches to learning and teaching that take account of the disposition and attitudes of the student population are more likely to ensure UK higher education remains an attractive choice.

Skills development

There is a match between what are seen as 21st-century learning skills, 21st-century employability skills and those engendered by engagement with Web 2.0 – communication, participation, networking, sharing. Employability skills, already high on higher education’s agenda, are also being pursued vigorously through the changes to the 14 to 19 curriculum underway in all parts of the country.

Fundamental over time

The single issue here is the role of the tutor. Tutors are central to development of approaches to learning and teaching in higher education. They have much to keep up with, their subject for example, and developments in their craft – learning and teaching or pedagogy. To practise effectively, they have also to stay attuned to the disposition of their students. This is being changed demonstrably by the nature of the experience of growing up in a digital world. The time would seem to be right seriously and systematically to begin the process of renegotiating the relationship between tutor and student to bring about a situation where each recognises and values the other’s expertise and capability and works together to capitalise on it. This implies drawing students into the development of approaches to teaching and learning.

Conclusions

Web 2.0, the Social Web, has had a profound effect on behaviours, particularly those of young people whose medium and metier it is. They inhabit it with ease and it has led them to a strong sense of communities of interest linked in their own web spaces, and to a disposition to share and participate. It has also led them to impatience – a
preference for quick answers – and to a casual approach to evaluating information and attributing it and also to copyright and legal constraints.

The world they encounter in higher education has been constructed on a wholly different set of norms. Characterised broadly, it is hierarchical, substantially introvert, guarded, careful, precise and measured. The two worlds are currently co-existing, with present-day students effectively occupying a position on the cusp of change. They aren’t demanding different approaches; rather they are making such adaptations as are necessary for the time it takes to gain their qualifications. Effectively, they are managing a disjuncture, and the situation is feeding the natural inertia of any established system. It is, however, unlikely to be sustainable in the long term. The next generation is unlikely to be so accommodating and some rapprochement will be necessary if higher education is to continue to provide a learning experience that is recognised as stimulating, challenging and relevant.

The impetus for change will come from students themselves as the behaviours and approaches apparent now become more deeply embedded in subsequent cohorts of entrants and the most positive of them – the experimentation, networking and collaboration, for example – are encouraged and reinforced through a school system seeking, in a reformed curriculum, to place greater emphasis on such dispositions. It will also come from policy imperatives in relation to skills development, specifically development of employability skills. These are backed by employer demands and include a range of ‘soft skills’ such as networking, teamwork, collaboration and self-direction, which are among those fostered by students’ engagement with Social Web technologies.

Higher education has a key role in helping students refine, extend and articulate the diverse range of skills they have developed through their experience of Web 2.0 technologies. It not only can, but should, fulfil this role, and it should do so through a partnership with students to develop approaches to learning and teaching. This does not necessarily mean wholesale incorporation of ICT into teaching and learning. Rather it means adapting to and capitalising on evolving and intensifying behaviours that are being shaped by the experience of the newest technologies. In practice it means building on and steering the positive aspects of those behaviours such as experimentation, collaboration and teamwork, while addressing the negatives such as a casual and insufficiently critical attitude to information. The means to these ends should be the best tools for the job, whatever they may be. The role of institutions of higher education is to enable informed choice in the matter of those tools, and to support them and their effective deployment.

Recommendations

We are making recommendations in four main areas: learner skills; staff skills; infrastructure; and inter-sectoral relationships. We look to each HEI individually to give consideration to the recommendations, especially those in the areas of learner and staff skills, and to act locally in others that have a wider dimension and are directed to national bodies. Paragraph references are to the main body of the text.

We recommend that:

Area 1: Learner skills
  • HEIs take steps to keep abreast of the prior experience and expectations of their student body (paragraphs 48–49; 69; 83)
  • HEIs ensure access to appropriate technology for all students and continue to provide for the development of their technical skills (paragraphs 34–35; 69)
  • HEIs, colleges and schools treat information literacies as a priority area and support all students so that they are able, amongst other things, to identify, search, locate, retrieve and, especially, critically evaluate information from the range of appropriate sources – web-based and other – and organise and use it effectively, attributed as necessary, in an appropriate medium (paragraphs 39–40; 42; 73)
  • HEIs, colleges and schools also treat web awareness as a priority area and support all students so that they are able to participate in web-based activities and use web-based services on an informed basis (paragraphs 73; 75)
  • JISC develops an ongoing research and support programme for institutions in best practice in developing information literacies and web awareness (paragraphs 73; 75)
  • Becta increases its support for colleges and schools in developing all aspects of information literacy and web awareness (paragraphs 73; 75)
Area 2: Staff skills
  • HEIs support staff to continue to reflect on research into learning so that they are able to make fully informed choices about their teaching and assessment methods (paragraphs 86; 88; 98)
  • HEIs support staff to become proficient users of an appropriate range of technologies and skilled practitioners of e-pedagogy, incorporating both into initial staff training and CPD programmes (paragraphs 51–53; 70–71)
  • HEIs explore ways in which the tutor/student relationship might be developed based on the Web 2.0 skills and attitudes of students (paragraphs 52; 89)
  • HEIs provide ongoing support for staff to maintain the currency of their information literacies (paragraph 74)
  • JISC uses its Regional Support Centres2 to assist colleges in the development of staff in the use of Web 2.0 technologies (paragraphs 51–53; 70–71)
  • HEA develops a targeted staff support and CPD programme, cross-cutting its subject centres, aimed at identifying and spreading best practice in the use of Web 2.0 tools in pedagogy (paragraphs 51–53; 70–71)
  • The Leadership Foundation3 considers the best way to include awareness of the full range of new technologies in their senior management development programmes(paragraphs 86; 98)
  • JISC and Becta4 continue to support research into teaching and learning using Web 2.0 tools (paragraphs 86; 88; 98)
  • TDA5 and LLUK6 consider ways in which Web 2.0 technologies are embedded into training programmes for new staff (paragraphs 51–53; 70–71)
  • HEA works with Universities UK7, Guild HE8 and the HE funding bodies to review the UK Professional Standards Framework for Teaching and Supporting Learning in Higher Education to ensure that it pays due regard to awareness of new and developing technologies, their capacities and impact on students and learning and teaching (paragraphs 51–53; 70–71;74; 80–81; 86; 98)
Area 3: Infrastructure
  • JISC continues to ensure the availability of advice and guidance on the legal and regulatory and other considerations involved in engagement with Web 2.0 is widely publicised, including, and especially, to senior management in institutions (paragraph 66)
  • JISC continues to develop a research and support programme into the use of Web 2.0 for all aspects of university business (paragraphs 56; 59; 62–65)
  • HEA9 and JISC establish and maintain forums to provide for the sharing and development of ideas and practice in Web 2.0 technology in all spheres of university business (paragraphs 56; 59; 62–65)
  • JISC works with the HE funding bodies and Universities UK to explore issues and practice in the development of new business models that exploit Web 2.0 technologies (paragraph 79)
  • The HE funding bodies ensure that funding for investment in physical infrastructure and research at the national level is maintained and strengthened with a particular view to enabling and embedding the flexible use of technology and supporting the research and development programmes recommended in this report (paragraph 91)
Area 4: Inter-sectoral relationships
  • JISC and Becta take the lead in establishing, with other sectoral bodies, forums for discussion and embedding of close working relationships between the schools, colleges and university sectors (paragraphs 48; 69; 83)
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/documents/heweb2.aspx

Full report : Higher Education in a Web 2.0 World

YouTube EDU

Posted by Celia Walter | 2 Apr, 2009

YouTube EDU is a special page which only includes material submitted by colleges and universities

From Peter Scott's Library blog

Yale Courses: YouTube

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Mar, 2009
Yale Courses: YouTube
This YouTube Channel is maintained by Yale University. It provides free acess to an online collection of film clips and videos of lectures and courses courses taught by staff at Yale University. These cover a range of subject areas including literature, philosophy, politics, psychology and religious studies. Most courses are at an introductory undergraduate level. The video materials are in many cases linked to online course available via the Open Yale OpenCourseWare website, a link to which is provided. Users should consult the latter for information on the course objectives, plus transcripts and reading lists. Copyright and technical information is displayed. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.youtube.com/yalecourses

More on AcademicEarth: Academic Earth Aggregates Video Lectures

Posted by Celia Walter | 6 Mar, 2009

A new online portal called Academic Earth has aggregated the video lectures available from universities such as MIT, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, and Berkeley. According to The Bivings Report they plan to roll out many social features for users over the next couple of months. Another good place to look for open courseware and lecture materials is the Open Courseware Consortium where you can browse or Google across the collections of the 200 international universities who provide OCW.

From iLibrarian blog

e-Revolution and Post-Compulsory Education, A JISC e-book

Posted by Celia Walter | 2 Mar, 2009

 

"JISC has just launched its first e-book. The e-Revolution and Post-Compulsory Education: Using e-business models to deliver quality education offers senior managers in further and higher education best-practice guidance for applying e-business approaches to their institutions.

From Peter Scott's Library blog

Twenty-Nine Reports About the Future of Academic Libraries

Posted by Celia Walter | 26 Feb, 2009

John Dupuis, Head of the Steacie Science & Engineering Library at York University in Toronto has compiled a list of Twenty-nine reports about the future of academic libraries. All of the reports are freely available. Here are just a few, be sure and check out the full post for more:

via Stephen’s Lighthouse

From iLibrarian blog

Wikiversity

Posted by Celia Walter | 16 Feb, 2009

Wikiversity is a Wikimedia Foundation project devoted to learning resources, learning projects, and research for use in all levels, types, and styles of education from pre-school to university, including professional training and informal learning. We invite teachers, students, and researchers to join us in creating open educational resources and collaborative learning communities. To learn more, try a guided tour or start editing now.

http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Main_Page

Video lectures from the world's top scholars

Posted by Celia Walter | 5 Feb, 2009

Academic Earth: thousands of video lectures from the world's top scholars
Academic Earth is an organisation founded by Richard Ludlow which seeks to provide free Internet access to online videos from academic institutions and scholars worldwide. They include contributions from classes/ lectures held at Princeton, Stanford, Yale, MIT universities. Plus lecture materials made available via openCourseware online learning intitiatives. A full range of subjects from the sciences, social sciences and humanities are available including politics, economics, history, psychology, entrepreneurship, philosophy and law. Copyright and technical information is displayed on the website. From Intute.ac.uk
http://academicearth.org/

Most Popular EDUCAUSE Review Articles of 2008

Posted by Celia Walter | 30 Jan, 2009

The ten most widely read articles from last year’s online edition of EDUCAUSE Review focused on open education, Web 2.0, virtual worlds, e-books, digital libraries, analytics, and the top issues facing higher education IT:

  1. Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0
    John Seely Brown and Richard P. Adler
  2. Top-Ten IT Issues, 2008
    Debra H. Allison, Peter B. DeBlois, and the 2008 EDUCAUSE Current Issues Committee
  3. Web 2.0 Storytelling: Emergence of a New Genre
    Bryan Alexander and Alan Levine
  4. Virtual Worlds? "Outlook Good"
    AJ Kelton ("AJ Brooks")
  5. E-Books in Higher Education: Nearing the End of the Era of Hype?
    Mark R. Nelson
  6. Architectures for Collaboration: Roles and Expectations for Digital Libraries
    Peter Brantley
  7. A Seismic Shift in Epistemology
    Chris Dede
  8. Action Analytics: Measuring and Improving Performance That Matters in Higher Education Donald Norris, Linda Baer, Joan Leonard, Louis Pugliese, and Paul Lefrere
  9. Facebook 2.0
    Tracy Mitrano
  10. Higher Education as Virtual Conversation
    Sarah Robbins-Bell ("Intellagirl Tully")
Educause permalink
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