Monday, October 22, 2007

Call for papers for themed issue of CWIS on e-learning in China

"Let the day begin ..." - The Call

Dr. Qiyun Wang, Prof. Zhiting Zhu, Dr. Li Chen, and Dr. Hanbing Yan have offered to edit a themed issue of Campus-wide Information Systems on E-Learning in China. The issue will be managed on behalf of the journal by the associate editor Dr Simon Shurville (s.shurville@bcs.org). The call for papers is now available from the journal web site.

This themed issue will reflect upon progress in Chinese e-learning and will address topics including, but not limited to, the following:
  • Case studies of Chinese teachers’ professional development in e-learning
  • Discussion of issues, challenges and future trends of e-learning in China
  • Evaluations of the effectiveness of e-learning courses in China
  • Experiences of web-based course development and evaluation in China
  • In-depth analysis of e-learning technology standards in the Chinese context
  • Issue- or results-focused case studies of e-learning for Chinese primary, secondary schools and tertiary education
  • Research articles illustrating and critiquing educational technologies and new uses of technology in Chinese education
  • Perceptions and views on e-learning from various Chinese stakeholders

Academics with experience of e-learning in the Chinese context are invited to contribute case studies, conceptual papers, research papers, technical papers and viewpoint papers on the above topics for peer review.

The envisaged timeline is as follows:
  • Authors should submit abstracts in English (about 300 words) and Chinese (about 150 words) to the editors by 15 Dec 2007
  • Notification of acceptance will be sent by 31 Dec 2007
  • Authors must submit the first drafts of their full papers in English by 31 March 2008. To speed up the process, authors with English as a second language are advised to have these proof-read by an English speaker prior to submission. These full papers must include structured abstracts as specified in the guidelines for authors. The full paper including its abstract should be 4000 words or less
  • Authors will receive final reviewers’ comments by 31 May 2008
  • The final manuscript must be submitted to the editors by 31 July 2008

Authors need to send a copy of their manuscripts in the form of an MS Word file attached to an email to the following:

Dr. Qiyun Wang
Learning Sciences and Technologies Academic Group
National Institute of Education
Nanyang Technological University
1 Nanyang Walk
Singapore 637616
Tel: 65-67903267
Fax: 65-68968038
E-mail: qiyun.wang@nie.edu.sg

And cc to:

Prof. Zhiting Zhu
Distance Education College
East China Normal University
3663 North Zhongshan Road,
Shanghai, China
Email: mailto:ztzhu@dec.ecnu.edu.cn


Friday, October 19, 2007

Action Learning / Research, Mode Two and Web 2.0

"This is the time ... the time for action" - Secret Affair


I think that action learning and action research are natural partners to web 2.0. I have also found action learning/research to be really useful for mode two knowledge production in higher education. So here is a small introduction for people who have not come across the terms.

Action learning is a radical style of collaborative learning defined by The International Foundation for Action Learning as follows:

“Action learning involves working on real problems, focusing on learning and actually implementing solutions. It is a form of learning by doing that provides a well-tried method of accelerating learning to enable people to handle difficult situations more effectively.”[http://www.ifal.org.uk/nutshell.html.]

While that definition describes the technical side of action learning, its inventor Professor Revans interwove philosophical/religious threads into the practice. The following quote from an interview with Revans illustrates some of these threads:

“Though it runs against conventional educational wisdom, action learning's ancestry is ancient. Revans peppers his papers and conversation with an array of inspirations - from Buddhism to the bible. He can trace his advocacy of action learning to the sinking of the Titanic when he was nearing his fifth birthday. His father was a navel architect who was on the enquiry into disaster. ‘He said to me years later that what the enquiry proved was that we must train people in such a way that they understand the difference between cleverness and wisdom’[http://www.tafe.sa.edu.au/institutes/para/ftf/facnet/Article%202.doc]”.

The group or the society rather than the individual, one can argue, is the appropriate yardstick for wisdom. Hence a social practice like action learning encourages the individual to accommodate and respond to the group’s wisdom. And vice versa.

Wadsworth has a nice definition of Participatory Action Research, which can be found on Wikipedia: "Essentially Participatory Action Research (PAR) is research which involves all relevant parties in actively examining together current action (which they experience as problematic) in order to change and improve it. They do this by critically reflecting on the historical, political, cultural, economic, geographic and other contexts which make sense of it. … Participatory action research is not just research which is hoped will be followed by action. It is action which is researched, changed and re-researched, within the research process by participants. Nor is it simply an exotic variant of consultation. Instead, it aims to be active co-research, by and for those to be helped. Nor can it be used by one group of people to get another group of people to do what is thought best for them - whether that is to implement a central policy or an organisational or service change. Instead it tries to be a genuinely democratic or non-coercive process whereby those to be helped, determine the purposes and outcomes of their own inquiry." (Wadsworth, 1998).


Gibbons et al (1995) have described a new way in which research is being conducted in the global economy and dubbed this ‘mode two’. Mode two research carries the following hallmarks: “it is trans-disciplinary, problem-oriented, application-based, team-driven, multi-site, partnership-based, socially useful, heterogeneous, quality controlled, reflective and responsive, and less hierarchical than disciplinary knowledge of the kind produced in universities” (Jansen, 2000 p113). Mode two can be contrasted to mode one, which is the traditional approach that universities—and other academies—have taken to research.

In mode one, problems are set and solved in a context governed by the interests of a largely academic community. The primary customers are the researcher herself and her community of practice. Other customers may come to use the research for their own purposes e.g. industry, government or society generally.

In mode two, research is carried out within the wider community. It is intended to be useful to someone other than the practitioner and his or her community of practice. Likely customers include industry, government or society in general.

Mode two knowledge production has been widely embraced as a burning issue for academic debate and an ingredient for policy makers (c.f. Clark 1998, Kraak 2000, Starkey 2001). Some major foreseeable consequences of this dash for mode two should include:

  • The set of venues where ‘kosher’ research can be conducted should change and expand e.g. science parks
  • The ‘kosher’ ways that research results can be disseminated should also change and expand e.g. internet-mediated corporate white papers
  • The multidisciplinary approach characterized mode two should blur the boundaries between disciplines and institutions. This will likely have profound consequences for the power and constitution of what Beacher and Trowler (2001) call ‘academic tribes and territories’
  • New reward and recognition structures for academics and researchers should emerge e.g. well-paid industrial sabbaticals.

I am impressed by the Australian government's attitude that research needs to be meaningful to the community and disseminated in formats other than academic journals. Of course some research must remain ‘pure’ and mode one and should be published in refereed journals. I just like the idea of a bit of biodiversity in what constitutes research.

Asher Rospigliosi and I used action learning and action research in a blended mode 2 environment when we taught courses in 'digital entrepreneurship' at City University (Shurville, Rospigliosi and Scott, 2005). These courses applied action learning and research to authentic work-based e-business projects. They were accredited by and delivered from City University’s Department of Continuing Professional Development and built upon previous undergraduate level courses developed and externally examined by the authors. Bernard Scott was the external examiner.

To compete in increasingly hostile climates, entrepreneurs need to implement innovative yet realistic solutions that maximize productivity, broaden reach, manage customer relationships and control costs. In larger firms such competitive advantage is often won by incorporating Information Systems (IS) for Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) or Knowledge Management (KM). Our recent experience of intervening with entrepreneurs in SMEs indicates that, given appropriate support and training, implementing such technologies is becoming feasible for SMEs. For example, one learner recently use the course to upgraded a Chamber of Law’s web site from an information source to an IS with full CRM capability. Another transformed an office leasing company into a provider of virtual office services by introducing call centre services using voice over IP integrated with an online KM system.

Personal development was core curriculum throughout the courses. The curriculum also included a range of businesses topics, such as change and innovation management, as well as traditional IT related topics, such as rapid prototyping and project management. Formative assessment was via a sequence of mini-project reports, presentations and peer critiquing. Summative assessment was via a substantial report on a work-based project where evidence of critical thinking and reflection were key assessment criteria.

During each module, work-based reflective learning was assured because the learners authored personal development plans, learning journals, project plans and other artifacts. These were peer-critiqued by members of the action learning sets and checked by the tutors to provide business-focused reality-checks. The assessment was a mixture of radical ‘critique and be critiqued’ and traditional ‘submit and mark’. Learners first delivered a presentation on their progress for each module. Next they placed this presentation online where it was peer critiqued.

Passing a module required writing a minimum of two substantial peer critiques. Each assessment had broad guidelines about appropriateness and format with the details being negotiated between tutor and learner. Learners received formative feedback on each assignment before the assignments were resubmitted together in the form of a plan or research report. In the summative assessment the tutors utilized academic and business expertise to formally accredit the learners’ construction of knowledge and their personal development.

The Certificate and Diploma have provided around a hundred entrepreneurs with access to education and training in both ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ skills associated with embedding IS in SMEs. The outcomes indicate that taking work experience into account to provide relatively open access to blended learning supported M-level courses is rewarded by ample evidence of critical thinking, personal reflection and business transformation. In our experience, entrepreneurs can be highly motivated by an M-level qualification and will often produce reports of genuine work-based projects that surpass our assessment criteria.

When we taught these courses we were 'faking' web 2.0 using an institutional virtual learning environment. I think we might have engaged the learners more with social networking software like Elgg. Asher is busy editing a special issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems on long term use of Elgg at the University of Brighton. Always more to do and more to be done ...

References

Henk Eijkman added the following, which I agree with completely (so much so that I expanded the original post):

I really like the Action Learning dimension but in the extension to our ICICTE 2007 paper (Eijkman & Clarke) I'm proposing what is in effect an extension of this idea as well as another dimension linked to the pedagogy 2.0 concept. First, in keeping with the participatory ideal of Web 2.0 I use a Participatory Action Research (PAR) approach. I have in fact used this to teach a unit in UNE's Grad Cert. in Higher Education last semester. PAR predates action learning (in fact one could apply nearly the same definition) is widely used in a range of community and educational settings. it takes action learning further by specifically focusing on the participative dimension - a key design feature of Web 2.0.

Personally I think PAR is Mode Two knowledge production per excellence.Also, and again following the ICICTE 2007 paper (Eijkman & Clarke) I would argue that Web 2.0 invites a social constructionist reframing of learning in which academics are no longer the guardians of second order (abstracted) knowledges.

Web 2.0 takes us irrevocably into transcultural learning because it enables individuals anywhere to easily form rich and decentralised social networks based on common interests and to collaboratively create, distribute, share and recreate content from multiple sources. While this does not mean that we ignore psychological theories of learning, it does mean that we are invited to come to grips with a decidely social theory of learning to challenge the hegemony of eurocentric psychologism in educational thinking and practice.

To fully utilize the educational potential of Web 2.0 we need a new paradigm one that takes us beyond individual atomistic theories of learning and even beyond social constructivism. The key point is that social constructionism is based on a non-foundational epistemology which enables us to recognise and negotiate more equitably with multiple knowledge systems. The latter are ignored or overwhelmed by the dominant Western take in international higher education while our student base, and others using Web 2.0 increasingly come from culturally and linguistically diverse social groups. For instance it questions the traditional notion that academics are the arbiters of true and tested (usually meaning Western, urbanised white, middle/upper class) knowledges.

See Bruffee, K.A. (1999) Collaborative Learning. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press for an interesting introduction to social constructionism, or my PhD thesis University of Canberra (but I wouldn't inflict that lengthy tome on anyone). {co-incidentally this one of my all time favorite books - Simon}

Our Man in Canberra: Henk Eijkman

"Move on up ..." - Curtis Mayfield

Dr Henk Eijkman, all round good guy, ICICTE fellow traveler and non-foundationalist epistemologist supreme, has just moved to be Academic Learning and Teaching Fellow (Senior Lecturer level) at the University of NSW at the Australian Defence Force Academy. So Henk is officially now Our Man in Canberra. Henk is also one of the authors for the upcoming special issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems on Australasian E-Learning. Congratulations Henk and good luck in the new job!

Second-order cybernetics, learning design and design theory

"She was lovelier from learning ... And from living, loving more" - Gene Clark
I am interested in the relationship between second-order cybernetics, learning design and design theory/methods. In the future I would like to see more programs to support reflective learning design and for these to be based on sound design theory and ethical practice (see below). LAMS is a great beginning and I would like to see further programs with repositories and technologies such as case-based reasoning to help educators make best use of existing resources. The following paragraphs are an adapted extract from a paper by Bernard Scott, Simon Shurville, Piers Maclean and Chunyu Cong, which is due for publication in Kybernates.

In the discourse of second-order cybernetics, von Foerster coined the term ‘metaphysical’ to describe domains whose navigation requires participant observers to perform value judgements in selecting a problem-setting framework and a set of guiding principles (von Foerster, 1991). Such metaphysical domains contrast to more trivial domains where apparently objective agents can navigate via deterministic problem-solving methodologies (von Foerster, 1991). This distinction has a parallel in design research, where Rittel and Webber (Rittel and Webber, 1973) drew a distinction between ‘tame’ and ‘wicked’ domains. In tame domains, problems come pre-framed such that an apparently objective agent can apply deterministic procedures to solve them. In wicked domains, the framing of a problem by participant observers is a fundamental part of addressing it. Further, a genuinely wicked problem contains irreducible moral, political and professional dimensions which participant observers must take into account. This distinction between tame and wicked problems was re-invented by others working in adjacent domains, such as the systems thinkers Ackoff (1974) and Checkland (1981).

Design researchers such as Archer (1979), Broadbent and Ward (1969) and Jones (1977) appreciated the distinction between tame and wicked problems. They also recognized that the majority of design methods that had been developed during a well-funded period of research following the Second World War were aimed at tame domains (Cross, 1984). These researchers rose above these highly procedural first-generation design methods and began to develop second-generation design methods, which were structured yet acknowledged the personal values and histories of socially situated designers (for further history, see Cross, 1984). Hence, we suggest that there are many design-domains, which can, depending on the observer’s context, equally well be described as metaphysical or wicked. This is useful because it provides a cross-disciplinary bridge and enables research and praxis to be ported to and fro between cybernetics and design.

In a forthcoming paper Bernard Scott, Piers Maclean, Chunyu Cong and I argue that learning design for TEL constitutes a metaphysical domain which yields wicked problems that require second-order sensibilities and second generation design methods. We have two reasons to make this claim. First, learning design for TEL is extremely complicated. It requires “interdisciplinary collaboration across the disciplines of learning, cognition, information and communication technologies (ICT) and education, and the broader social sciences” (TLRP, 2006) and hence requires diligent professionalism (MacLean and Scott, 2006). Second, since learning design ultimately involves the education of real people, its moral, political and professional dimensions cannot be eliminated. So addressing problems in learning design for TEL in an ethical fashion (c.f. von Foerster, 1991) requires learning designers to recognise that they are socially situated, participant observers who need to tame problems with well-founded and appropriately structured methodologies.

I explored design theory and artificial intelligence in depth in my thesis (Shurville, 1998) and would like to return to the area in the context of information systems to support learning design.


References


  • Ackoff, R. (1974). Re-defining the Future. London: John Wiley and Sons.

  • Archer, B. (1979) Whatever Became of Design Methodology, Design Studies, Volume 1. Number 1, pp 17-18.

  • Broadbent and Ward (1969) Design Methods in Architecture, London: Lund Humpheries Publishers Ltd.

  • Checkland, P. (1981). Systems Thinking, Systems Practice. Chichester Sussex: John Wiley and Sons.

  • Cross, N. (ed.) (1984) Developments in Design Methodology, New York, John Wiley and Sons.

  • Jones, J.C. (1977) How My Thoughts About Design Methods have Changed During the Years. Design Methods and Theories, Volume 11, number 1, pp 50-62.

  • MacLean, P.J., and Scott, B.C.E. (2006) Learning Design: Requirements, Practice and Prospects. In: K. Fernstrom and K. Tsolakidis, eds. Readings in Technology in Education: Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Communications Technologies in Education 2006, 6-8 July 2006 Rhodes. Abbotsford, BC: UCFV Press, 152-156.


  • Shurville, S. (1998) Method Oriented Design Environments in Knowledge-Aided Design. Unpublished PhD Thesis. University of Brighton.

  • Teaching and Learning Research Programme, (2006) Announcement of Forthcoming ESRC/EPSRC Call for Research on Technology Enhanced Learning: Understanding, creating, and exploiting digital technologies for learning. Retrieved January 19, 2007 from: http://www.tlrp.org/tel/.

  • von Foerster, H. (1991) Ethics and Second-Order Cybernetics. In Rey, Y. and Prieur, B. (eds) Systemes, ethiques: Perspectives en therapie familiale (Paris: ESF Editeur, 1991) 41-54.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Themed issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems on Australasian E-learning

"I'm happy just to sit here round a table with old friends ... and see which one of us can tell the biggest lies" - Flame Trees by Cold Chisel


Mike is still flying back from ICICTE 2006Ken Fernstrom, Barry O’Grady, Michael Henderson (who now seems able to fly) and I are editing a special issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems on Australasian E-learning including expanded versions of papers from ICICTE 2007. We hope to publish five papers form Australia and one from New Zealand.

Flax the WolfA special issue that Ken and I edited based upon last year's conference entitled 'Rhodes to Global Educational Networks for the Common Good' is now available. It is a good idea to stay on the right side of Ken as he seems to be toteing a wolf these days. Flax the husky who is Ken's new room mate can be seen on the right. Bring some fresh Moose.

Hope to see you all at ICICTE 2008!

The Green World

"It's the end of the summer ... You can spin the light to gold" - Dar Williams

In addition to its provocative content, Cradle to Cradle, is printed on a polymer film instead of paper. While current materials and systems are incomplete, this book's materials suggest ways 'technical nutrients' might be used in the future, cycling safely and prosperously in the 'technical metabolism' of plastics recycling.In this somewhat preachy post I want to make a case for considering the environmental impact of e-learning and other university systems and for including the environment as a stakeholder in our projects. In the past year or so I have watched the environment move from a left wing / green trope to become a mainstream topic of political debate in Australia. For example, The Green Building Council of Australia has released a new rating tool for schools and universities across Australia (see: http://www.gbcaus.org/). So I admit that I'm a latecomer and I hope that some readers will be able to offer more radical views and actions. If you read nothing else on this topic then please try and find a copy of McDonough and Braungart's Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things, which really changed my way of thinking.

We are already reasonably certain that human environmental impact will be an economic imperative throughout the 21st centaury (Stern, 2006). McDonough and Braungart (2002) argue that our current economic paradigm is unsustainable as our systems of manufacture are relentlessly harming our collective health and that of our eco-system. They show that an ecologically effective paradigm, founded on systems that aim beyond zero waste, appears feasible. They also accept that significant research and cultural change will be required. In the longer term, the HE sector is well-situated to research, develop and transfer ecologically efficient processes and technologies. For now, despite current economic pressures, HE still enjoys a modest license to put critique into action and could therefore implement cultural change as a precursor to effecting modest ecological transformations.

Naively, we might expect a dash for e-learning to significantly reduce HE’s environmental footprint. Unfortunately, while paper-based distance learning seems to offer significant reductions, current e-learning practice offers scant improvements over commuting to campus. A recent report for the UK Open University by Roy et al highlighted that “on average, the production and provision of the distance learning courses consumed nearly 90% less energy and produced 85% fewer CO2 emissions (per student per 10 CAT points) than the conventional campus-based university courses.” … however … “e-learning courses appear to offer only a small reduction in energy consumption and CO2 emissions (20% and 12% respectively) when compared to mainly print-based distance learning courses. This is due to high student use of computing, consumption of paper for printing off Web-based material, and additional home heating.” (Roy et al 2005: 4). So an ethical HE sector might perform an ecological audit on its e-learning programs and incorporate environmentally effective learning materials printed on substances such as polypropylene, which can be easily recycled (McDonough, 2007). Such a cultural change could be seeded by adding environmental auditing to the curricula of staff development courses hosted by learning and teaching departments.

In the case of blended and traditional learning, a well intentioned institution might want to reduce the carbon footprint of its campus. Indeed, a recent survey, reported in the UK Guardian (Lipsett, 2007), showed that some HE institutions are making good progress with transforming their campuses into energy efficient systems. For example “Leeds Met gets 85% of its energy from renewable sources and recycles 36% of its waste” (op cite). Unfortunately the survey also revealed that the majority of UK campuses have yet to respond to the ecological imperative. We think that needs to change. The Higher Education Funding Council for England, think so too. They are funding the Higher Education Environmental Performance Initiative (HEEPI) (HEEPI, 2007) whose web site explains the relevance of the International Standards Organisation's standard, ISO 14001 scheme and the Eco-Management and Audit (EMAS) scheme of the European Union to HE institutions. The HEEPI web site represents a good entry point to learn about these standards and the roles they could play in HE transformations.

Problematically, the ubiquity of ICT on campus is contributing heavily to HE’s energy usage and emissions. In the United States, green campus initiatives are starting to raise consciousness on this issue. For example, Harvard University maintains a green campus web site which warns staff and students that “one desktop computer left on all day for one year can result in more than 1500 pounds of CO2 being released into the atmosphere. It would take 100 to 500 trees to offset that amount of extra CO2.” (Harvard, 2007). The web site also contains a purchasing guide which offers useful information such as “laptops use 1/4 the energy of desktops” (Harvard, 2007) phrased in straightforward language. Accessing such information could easily be included as an activity in staff and student inductions performed by information technology services and libraries.

ICT can be applied to support environmentally effective practices including as video conferencing and online billing (Pamlin and Szomolányi , 2006). Conference travel can be regarded as a pleasant aspect of academic life and it might be painful to give up. However, various organizations such as the UK Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), have realised that academic conferences incur a high carbon footprint and have started to organize online events (JISC, 2007). Pamlin and Szomolányi (2006) estimate that replacing paper telephone bills for 100 million EU citizens would save 109,100 tonnes of CO2 per annum. I recently managed implementation of an online registration project for the University of Sussex as part of the Sussex Direct project. The sub-project was straightforward and cost effective. Moreover, the requirement for organizational change was minimal. However, although ecological concerns were an explicit driver, it is regrettable that an ecological audit was not performed at any point in the project. It would require a very minor organizational transformation for HE institutions to establish cross-functional teams to routinely address such issues. I advocate that an ecological audit should be included within the due diligence and evaluation for all transformational projects and especially those requiring significant new ICT platforms. If HE is to avoid inflicting ‘remote ecological tyranny’ upon future generations (c.f. McDonough and Braungart 2003), then HE needs to make the environment a driver and stake holder in its transformations.

References

  • Lipsett, A. (2007), Leeds Met tops Green University League Table. The Guardian Friday June 15, 2007. http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/news/story/0,,2104028,00.html. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • Higher Education Environmental Performance Initiative (2007), Higher Education Environmental Performance Initiative. http://www.heepi.org.uk/. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • Joint Information Systems Committee (2007), Innovating E-Learning Online Conference 2007: FAQ. http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning_pedagogy/elp_conference07/faq.aspx. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • McDonough and Braungart (2002), Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. New York, NY: North Point Press.


  • McDonough, W. (2007), Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way we Make Things. http://www.mcdonough.com/cradle_to_cradle.htm. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • Pamlin, D. and Szomolányi, K. (2006), Saving the Climate @ the Speed of Light: First Roadmap for Reduced CO2 Emissions in the EU and Beyond. A joint initiative of ETNO and WWF. http://www.etno.be/Portals/34/ETNO%20Documents/Sustainability/Climate%20Change%20Road%20Map.pdf. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • Roy, R., Potter, S., Yarrow, K. and Smith, M. (2005), Towards Sustainable Higher Education: Environmental Impacts of Campus-Based and Distance Higher Education Systems. Milton Keynes: The Open University. http://www3.open.ac.uk/events/3/2005331_47403_o1.pdf. Accessed 22 June 2007.


  • Stern, N. (2006), Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change. HM Teasury. Available at: http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/independent_reviews/stern_review_economics_climate_change/stern_review_report.cfm. Accessed 22 June 2007.

Themed issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems: Community @ Brighton: a year in the life of Web 2.0 at Brighton

"An' when some punk comes a looking for sound ... Rastaferi goes to ground" - The Clash

I am working with well-known Brighton Business School yardie Asher Rospigliosi who is editing a themed issue of Campus-Wide Information Systems on 'Community @ Brighton: A Year in the Life of Web 2.0 at Brighton'. During the academic year 2006/7 the University of Brighton made the Elgg Social Networking platform available to all 33,000 staff and students as an institutional platform. So Brighton now brings a year’s experience of ubiquitous social networking, which has generated technical data and grounded pedagogic reflection. The proposed issue will draw together a range of pedagogic, social and technical perspectives, to explore the opportunities and problems of nurturing and supporting campus wide social networks.

  • Community@Brighton – implementing a institution-wide social network by Stan Stanier

  • See what I’m saying by Patrick Letchska and Jill Seddon

  • Who spoke first by Asher Rospigliosi, Simon Shurville and Sue Greener

  • Supporting alternate reality games with Elgg by Katie Piatt

  • Using C@B for PDP by Deshinder Gill & Stan Stanier

  • Defining the Field by Glenn Longden-Thurgood & Stan Stanier

  • Reflections on a year of Community by Sue Greener

The issue should be hot off the press in 2008.

Themed issue of Campus-wide Information Systems on E-Learning in China

"On the continent of dreams you'd be with me ..." - T'Pau

Dr. Qiyun Wang, Prof. Zhiting Zhu, Dr. Li Chen, and Dr. Hanbing Yan have offered to edit a themed issue of Campus-wide Information Systems on E-Learning in China. A call for papers will be issued soon and will be available from the journal web site.

Campus-Wide Information Systems publishes cutting-edge research and case studies relating to administrative, academic and library computing, as well as other educational technologies (sample papers can be found at http://www.emeraldinsight.com/info/journals/cwis/sample.jsp.). The journal analyses the latest theories, applications and services relating to planning, developing, managing, using and evaluating information technologies in higher education. Campus-Wide Information Systems is increasingly focussing upon international and transnational approaches to educational information systems and e-learning. We are therefore proud to announce our first themed issue on e-learning in China.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

The wALTer project and the Online Learning Knowledge Garden

"While preachers preach of evil fates ... Teachers teach that knowledge waits " - Bob


Piers MacLean and Bernard Scott from Cranfield University have started the new JISC funded wALTer project. Apparently "wALTer is designed to produce a single web service to support e-learning professionals in practice and in achieving professional recognition. The creation and maintenance of a repository to support e-learning professionals is coincidentally an objective of each partner organisation. The On-line Learning Knowledge Garden at Cranfield University, OLKG, (http://olkg.rmcs.cranfield.ac.uk/) and ALT-J pre-prints and post-prints' will be incorporated, developed and extended in this resource. I have to admit I am fond of the OLKG as I was involved in its first incarnation a fair few years ago.

wALTer will also investigate how Web2 technologies can be in-built to support professional communities and to build knowledge resources as the sector adopts new ways of working with network technologies." Others involved are Gayle Calverley and Jim Petch of the University of Manchester, Rhonda Riachi and Seb Schmoller, The Association for Learning Technology, Oxford Brookes University.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Excellent change management text book by Mark Hughes

"... please tell me you all - why does good change take so long?" - Greg Brown

Projects are synonymous with change. Hence the project management community has learnt that managing a significant project entails managing concomitant change on behalf of the project team and the stakeholders. Problematically, however, the rational and teleological approaches that dominate project management (Pollack, 2007) are more suited to directing technical processes and logistics than to the subtleties of wrangling complex emotions and politics. Worse, the change dimension of significant projects is inherently ‘wicked’ (Rittel and Webber, 1973). This means that identifying and characterising the potential change issues, selecting approaches to ameliorate them and identifying metrics to evaluate progress are irreducible parts of each particular project. Consequently project managers must accept the lack of steadfast algorithms for planning, implementing or evaluating change. Hence, when managing change hard nosed, logical positivist project managers need to learn how to interweave softer, less deterministic mindsets into their professional practice. Realising this, as a working project manager, I decided to update my skills and sought a course that would address the non-algorithmic people side of projects and change.


So I recently completed a two year part time M.A. in Change Management at the University of Brighton taught by Mark Hughes and Steve Reeve. The course was great as it used action learning/research to share experiances between experianced managers. A perfect learning design for the target group. Mark has now published the excellent text book 'Change Management: a Critical Perspective'. Mark's text is a blessing to educators because it presents rigorous arguments against reifying positivist approaches to change, together with sober alternatives, and contextualizes these arguments within a first rate evidence-base. This approach sets a radical agenda squarely within the workplace while opening the floodgates for critical and reflective debate in the classroom. I am currently reviewing the book and hope to publish the review in the journal Project Management in Business.

Mark also recently published ‘When Faculties Merge: Communicating Change’ in the recent special issue of Organizational Transformation and Social Change that Tom Browne and I edited. In the paper he brought his extensive subject knowledge of change management to bear in the context of his personal experience of a radical change to his faculty. Mark suggested that ‘the storytelling approach may be regarded as an antidote to the often prescriptive/normative nature of the change literature’. This provided a worked example to back up the assertions in this book. Anyone interested in change management in higher education would be advised to read the paper and the book.

Mark is also interested in 'Encouraging and Supporting Postgraduates Who Wish to Publish Work from Their Studies'. I think his approach works well with enquiry based learning, mode 2 and could be adapted to web 2.0.

References

  • Pollack, J. (2007). The Changing Paradigms of Project Management. International Journal of Project Management. Volume 25, Issue 3 pp 266-274.
  • Rittel, H.W.J. and Webber, M.M. (1973). Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning, Policy Sciences, Vol. 4, pp. 155-69.