Response
to the government consultation by Alpha Learning[1]
Q1.
What are your views on our description of e-learning and its benefits?
Paragraph 19
gives a good account of
·
the ability of e-learning to offer individualised learning
(points 1, 2, 6)
·
to aid collaboration and
communication between students and teachers
(points 3, 4, 5, 7, 8)
No satisfactory
account is given of the importance of the computer’s interactivity.
This is its chief benefit as a teaching tool. We learn by doing.
In particular, we learn when what we do receives timely and appropriate
feedback, engaging us in an educational conversation. Computers
can dramatically increase the interactivity experienced by students
during their school day. See Increasing Interactivity in
answer to Q15.
The value ascribed
to individualised learning and improved communication is debatable:
1. Isolation
of the learner is an issue for adults (to whom, significantly, both
examples in this chapter apply); but, in normal circumstances, not
for school children. Projects in the Highlands and Islands and Ultralab’s NotSchool projects are exceptions which prove the rule.
2. Individualised
learning models may be useful, particularly in managing differentiation
automatically and ensuring that work is correctly pitched. But it
should not be assumed that a further fragmentation of the school-aged
curriculum would necessarily be beneficial. Recent statements by
the new Head of QCA suggest that the British Education System already
suffers from a proliferation of qualifications, and that we should
seek to focus more tightly on the core curriculum.
The key purpose
of e-learning for school children is to improve learning
·
in
the core curriculum
·
for
children who are in school.
It will achieve
this through its use of interactive learning materials and by managing
differentiation automatically, not principally by setting up virtual
classrooms or remote tutoring.
Q2. Do you think
we have identified the main weaknesses and barriers to the use of
e-learning?
A lack of personal
access to technology is not the major cause identified by
recent OFSTED reports for our failure to make more rapid progress
with e-learning: rather it is unclear thinking about e-learning
pedagogy. ICT in schools (April 2001) is particularly critical
of the widespread use of internet research in schools and also comments that much of the NOF-funded training
was ineffective because of the lack of good pedagogy.
The perceived
importance of internet access provided the conceptual basis of the
National Grid for Learning – which, according to the ImpaCT2 report,
has failed to deliver significant learning gains in schools. The
correlation between internet access and adult participation in learning,
identified by the NIACE report, does not provide evidence of a causal
link: indeed, the fact that adult participation in learning has
reduced at a time when access to the internet has increased suggests
otherwise. Access to the internet is certainly useful for adult
learners but, given the progress already made in this area under
the NGfL, it should not be regarded as a priority in schools.
Blaming inappropriate
assessment methods smacks of ‘shooting the messenger’. See further
comments in response to Q10.
The
argument in paragraph 29 that ‘our main barrier to successful e-learning
is low uptake and usage rather than infrastructure’, depends on
a narrow definition of infrastructure to mean hardware.
There is also less tangible infrastructure (learning management
software, open standards, training) for which government has an
important role to play but for which progress has been much less
impressive. The problem with e-learning programmes over the last
six years is that they have been hardware-led, with government failing
to put in place a clear vision of how the hardware was to be used.
Care should
be taken with offering incentives such as promotion and bonuses,
as these incentives often encourage teachers to use technology unproductively
as a good in itself, leading to the implementation of inadequate
pedagogies, as has happened so often before. The incentive for e-learning
should be that it works, saves the teacher time and achieves better
results. New posts should be created because they are required,
not as rewards.
Care should
be taken in launching expensive training programmes, when it is
unclear what it is that teachers are being trained to do. Training
teachers to send emails to each other may increase their confidence
with computers, but it will not deliver e-learning in the classroom.
This was an entirely predictable weakness of the NOF programme,
identified by OFSTED’s ICT in Schools report. Training is a key piece of this jigsaw, but the quality
of training is vital. The government should offer much clearer leadership
in setting the objectives of training programmes.
It is said (paragraph
31.2) that there is ‘too little attention to exploring the new forms
of pedagogy made possible by e-learning’, continuing that ‘teachers
and researchers need more time and support if they are to keep pace’.
This is a non-sequitur: the problem identified in the first
half of the sentence is not that the teachers are having trouble
keeping up, but that there are not enough people going out in front
doing the exploring. Hard-pressed teachers may, but should
not be expected to become explorers and innovators; rather,
that they should implement already proven pedagogies. The General
should not blame the troops for failing to provide leadership.
Innovation is
often encapsulated in the design of software. The ‘under-developed
digital teaching and learning resources market’ is a key point in
this respect. The eLearning Credit scheme may provide a useful stimulus – though
there must be doubts about the effectiveness with which this scheme
has been administered. Insufficient measures have been taken to
ensure that credits are spent as intended and the government has
not been sufficiently prominent in promoting the scheme and ensuring
good take-up.
While a market-driven
approach is clearly the right way forward, it may not deliver the
levels of innovation required, when the majority of teachers are
shy, even sceptical, of the technology and on the whole poorly informed
about its potential. When I asked a manager at RM why the company
had not done more to provide more innovative learning management
solutions, he replied that it was because there was very little
demand for them. No-one should be surprised that
a large public service is essentially conservative nor that commercial
companies follow the lead given by their market.
The government
has failed to use its considerable position of authority to provide
leadership and to challenge this culture. In my own sphere of Learning
Platforms, an excellent report, produced by SimulacraMedia
for the Curriculum Online department, underlined the need for ‘stabilised
specifications that ensure interoperability’. As ‘the benefits of
a packaged learning object approach are not widely understood or
appreciated’, the report recommended setting up research into a
number of use cases and conducting a series of user workshops. The
report was shelved; no trials were set up; and progress on producing
stabilised specifications to ensure interoperability has been extremely
cautious, civil servants repeatedly arguing that the department
must not ‘get ahead of the market’.
An important
barrier to implementing e-learning is the failure to launch successful
learning management systems. Interactive content normally has the
capacity to generate results data, which, given runtime interoperability,
can be picked up by an LMS. The ability of LMSs to track student
performance and competency, manage differentiation and progression
automatically, and to allow teachers to control the assignment of
work, allows e-leaning to be brought under the control of teachers
and integrated with traditional classroom teaching. This is an essential
prerequisite for the implementation of e-learning is schools. See
The Need for Learning Management in answer to Q11.
LMSs, insofar
as they are available, have achieved poor penetration in the market.
This is partly due to low levels of teacher understanding, partly
to a the corresponding rarity of learning
content which supports runtime interoperability. This leads to a
chicken-and-egg problem: LMSs require the content and the content
requires the LMSs. There are several things that the government
could be doing to try and break this impasse (see answer to Q14).
Nothing has been done so far, apparently because the DfES tends
to see ‘management’ as something that happens in the school office,
rather than as a crucial function of the teacher’s job in the classroom.
See further comments on the confusion of e-administration and e-learning
in answer to Q6.
Q3. Is a unified
strategy appropriate?
This is a difficult
question to answer as it is not explained in chapter 2 what is meant
by a ‘unified’ strategy. It is therefore unclear whether the title
of this report is anything more than a tautology, any strategy being
by definition unified to some degree. A coherent strategy which
unifies and gives direction to the actions of the DfES is long overdue.
It is a matter of concern that, seven years after the launch of
the NGfL and one year after the Secretary
of State took personal responsibility for this area, the department
is still working ‘towards’ the definition of a strategy for implementing
e-learning.
‘Top-down’
solutions
A unified strategy
may not be appropriate if it means that ‘We have to work towards
reducing variation’ (paragraph 35). Innovation, already identified
as a key requirement, is the child of diversity. Clearly inadequate
provision needs to be challenged; but at the top end, the government
must not impose a straight-jacket on schools who wish to experiment;
nor should it use its authority to spread ‘good practice’ without
clear evidence that this is genuinely productive practice and not
just fashionable practice. See answer to question 5, concerning
the need for standards and Raising
Quality of Learning Content in answer to Q11.
The ‘grand
projet’
Nor should a
unified strategy lead to the planting grapes in Yorkshire on the grounds that they grow well in the south of France. There is a danger that e-learning models that work
well in tertiary education will be transferred to secondary and
primary education in the name of ‘lifelong learning’; or that initiatives
for ‘joined-up government’ will impose a host of priorities on education
which have much to do with tidy administration but very little to
do with education. To follow the writing analogy, ‘joined up government’
should only become an issue after each individual letter can be
well-formed. Nor should the long list of partners included in this
report be allowed to introduce further delays in the department’s
ability to devise and implement its own strategy. See answer to
Q9.
Q4
Do you agree with our vision for e-learning?
The vision concentrates
on fringe benefits: sharing best practice, allowing effective institutions
to expand, sharing scarce expertise, providing better access to
adult learners. This vision does not address the chief goal, which
is to improve learning in core subjects in school.
The vision sees
the computer as a communications tool rather than as a teaching
tool. Learning may depend on collaboration, but self-reliance and
individual study are also important. In the school environment,
collaboration can be more easily and cheaply achieved using traditional
methods. While ‘virtual classrooms’ may be important for adult learners
who are often isolated, school-aged children normally have access
to real classrooms. The role of the computer as a communications
tools is therefore much less pressing in schools and the ability
of younger children to participated in
collaborative learning through an electronic medium is also much
less developed.
The vision fails
to cover the managed, interactive use of the computer to address
core learning in schools. See The Need for Learning Management
in answer to Q11 and the alternative vision described in answer
to Q15.
Q5
Will the proposed action areas enable the vision to be realised?
In general,
teachers do not have the time, resources or expertise to lead innovation
in this field – though they should clearly be involved in advisory
capacities in research and development programmes. New pedagogies
have not entered the classroom because of the lack of software to
support them. It is the software developer, in partnership with
teachers, to whom one must look for innovation.
Care should
be taken that training should not disseminate discredited pedagogical
models (see comments on internet research in answer to Q2, and to
collaborative learning in answer to Q4). On the other hand, if the
government were to do more to define the scope and objectives of
training, this could be used to support government policy. The launch
of the eLCs should have been accompanied
by a training programme to show teachers how to use the portal and
to encourage teachers to submit content reviews.
The need to
deliver smooth transitions between schools and colleges is a secondary
consideration and should not be allowed to dictate the way in which
e-learning is implemented in different sectors. Methods appropriate
for FE or HE will often not be appropriate for younger learners,
and must not be transferred on the grounds of a ‘unified’ strategy.
See The ‘grand projet’ in answer to Q3.
The assessment
system is not a significant barrier to e-learning. See comments
on new e-learning skills in the answer to Q10.
Technical standards to ensure interoperability are essential;
but quality standards are a blunt instrument which do not
encourage, but rather suppress innovation. See comments on Raising
Quality of Learning Content in answer to Q11.
Q6
Are the proposed actions for leading sustainable development
feasible and appropriate?
There appears
to be some confusion in this chapter between e-learning and e-administration.
Good links between Learning Management Systems (LMS) and Management
Information Systems (MIS or IMS) have the ability to improve school
management. But these e-administration improvements are a spin-off
from, not essential to, e-learning. Too often, SMTs
and LEAs think that by implementing e-administration, they are implementing
e-learning. JISC’s definition of the difference
between and MLE and a VLE is unhelpful in this respect, suggesting that ‘management’ is something that goes
on exclusively in the MIS / school office, when in fact it is an
essential function of the classroom teacher, and needs to be embedded
in the VLE / LMS which is responsible for delivering learning content
to the student. This unhelpful model is exacerbated by the general
currency of the term ‘VLE’, which, having been widely implemented
in tertiary education, generally focuses
on collaborative learning rather than teacher-management of e-learning. See The Need for Learning Management in answer
to Q 11.
The best e-administration
system may be of little use if it relies on manual data entry by
teachers – see Improving the Quality of Management Data in the
answer to Q 15.
Sustainability
is primarily about effectiveness: it will not be difficult to find
funding for e-learning models which deliver real productivity gains.
E-learning will stand or fall by what happens at the student interface.
E-administration should grow out of proven e-learning solutions,
not the other way around.
Q7
Are the proposed action areas for supporting innovation in
teaching and learning feasible and appropriate?
Not creators
but adapters
Paragraph 56
reiterates the expectation that teachers will become primary innovators,
blaming the lack of tools to enable this to happen. The tools for
creating learning content already exist (Toolbook,
Flash, Authorware etc.), but they require
considerable time and expertise to use effectively. Teachers should
not continue to be encouraged to reinvent the wheel, producing resources
which, by and large, will not be of a sufficiently high standard
to be widely reused.
Given this caveat,
teachers need to be given control over the way e-learning is used
in their own classrooms. They have always been given this flexibility
by the traditional text-book. Few teachers use text-books cover-to-cover,
but select certain pages and certain questions, which they fit to
their own classroom teaching.
Following this
analogy, teachers should not be creators and designers of learning
content, but adapters. Effective implementations of ‘learning objects’
should allow teachers to reuse objects, fitting them to a particular
context by the setting of assignment parameters, and re-sequencing
objects to create customised workplans. The DfES appears to have
had a brief moment of enthusiasm for ‘learning objects’, running
a seminar for content publishers at BETT 2003; but the initiative
appears to have lacked follow-through or to have had any impact
on the co-ordination of policy.
Unrealistic
expectations of school children
Paragraph 57
envisages a more active and self-motivated kind of learner who takes
responsibility for their learning. There may be a certain degree
of naďve optimism in this model. While it is always possible to
find children who will fulfil this expectation, and while the model
may sometimes work well with adult learning, it would be safer to
assume that school children will continue to require a high degree
of supervision and direction.
Tendency
to concentrate on marginal problems and special interests
The report is
correct to suggest that e-learning can remove barriers to learning;
but it should be remembered that excluded learners, for example,
form a small minority of the school population. The vast majority
of school children are not isolated and the principle benefit that
they can derive from e-learning lies in improving pedagogy for the
mainstream, not in improving access for excluded minority.
Point
20: ‘Include within development funding on e-learning a focus on
learners with special needs, to ensure greatest impact.’ There are good reasons to focus on learners with special needs, but achieving
greatest impact is not one of them. Greatest impact will be achieved
by addressing the requirements of the mainstream.
Point
21: ‘Use existing project funding to develop and disseminate more
interactive diagnostic tests and remediation for learners with disabilities
in literacy, numeracy, and communication.’
It is unclear why further direct funding is justified on special
needs, an area which is already comparatively well served,
when the government is so keen to avoid direct funding in
other areas.
Remote tutoring
Virtual classrooms
may play a useful role in allowing very good teachers in specialist
subjects to increase the range of their teaching. But real-time
interaction is time consuming. Ever since the inception of universal
education, there has been a shortage of teachers. It is unlikely
that exceptional teachers would have time to tutor significant numbers
of students, unless supported by pedagogies which reduce demand
on teacher time in other areas. See Increasing Interactivity
in answer to Q15.
Practice-based
research environments
The proposal
for practice-based research environments, bringing together teachers,
educationalists, and commercial suppliers, is an important way in
which government can stimulate innovation. It must amount to much
more than a ‘dating agency’: it must be linked to proper funding
and evaluation. Results should be given wide publicity in order
to demonstrate to teachers how e-learning can improve the quality
of their teaching and working conditions.
Other points
Point
15: ‘Unify shareable e-learning resources and digital assets, through
a national online databank, linking all sectors and publicly-funded
organisations through intelligent search mechanisms’. This is a second- or third-order priority (though undoubtedly one ranked
more highly by the long list of organisations on the look-out for
public funding). There is a shortage not of information but of structured
learning activities. These will be created by professional content
publishers and not, by and large, by teachers, most of whom do not have the time
to trawl through the archives of the nation’s museums and libraries.
Points
17–19: ‘Establish the appropriate evaluation methodologies’. Evaluation methodologies must be objective and carry
authority. This section raises the suspicion that the evaluation
will be chosen to give the correct result. A ‘Focus on intensive
evaluation of learning experiences’ – presumably meaning qualitative
research, may help identify useful avenues for further research
and development; but evidence from small scale, qualitative studies
should not be used to attempt to challenge the authoritative, quantitative
data from large-scale studies.
Q8
Are the proposed action areas for developing the education
workforce feasible and appropriate?
The proposed
action areas are well chosen, but the effectiveness of implementation
will depend on timing and sequencing.
As already discussed,
the NOF funded training programme was marred by the failure to specify
what it was that teachers were to be trained in. The ImpaCT2 report
has produced little evidence to suggest that many
currently fashionable e-learning pedagogies are effective.
The production of further guidance and training programmes should
be triggered by the production of authoritative evaluations from
the research environment proposed in paragraphs 64–67.
Q9
Are the proposed action areas for unifying learner support
feasible and appropriate?
While the concept
of ‘lifelong learning’, providing smooth progression from schoolchild
to adult learner, is desirable, it is also important to recognise
that the needs of the school-aged child are very different to the
needs of the adult learner. For adult learners, access is more difficult;
but the need for teacher control and management is much less pressing.
The government ought to be cautious about transferring methods used
successfully in tertiary education to secondary.
E-learning solutions
must not be imposed on particular sectors in order to comply with
the grand projet for lifelong learning. Rather, e-learning solutions
must be developed which can be shown to deliver real benefit at
each level. How to provide smooth progression between possibly quite
different models, is a second-order priority.
Profiles
and portfolios
Paragraph
82. Tracking student
competency has the potential to make a significant contribution
to effective differentiation – one of the big issues in improving
education provision. However, it is open to doubt whether allowing
‘both summative assessment and information about personal aspirations
and interests to be owned by the learner’, essentially a ‘feel-good’
argument, is sufficient justification for the complex administration
involved.
Action area
33 (‘Establish the principle that all education and training organisations
have the responsibility to contribute to a learner’s e-portfolio
for lifelong learning’) ought therefore to be approached with caution.
Electronic data is very easy to generate: quality information much
more difficult. Government should not only adopt technical standards
but also develop good practice guides for portfolios. Authoritative,
codified information (e.g. Levels of Attainment) will generally
be of much more use than large collections of work. To avoid imposing
significant extra burdens on teachers, it should be possible for
Learning Management Systems to generate data automatically from
students’ online activities.
Action
35. Unique learner
numbers ought to be straightforward to provide and will be useful.
This is an example of the kind of simple but impalpable infrastructure
which ought to have been put in place seven years ago.
Q10
Are the proposed action areas for aligning assessment feasible and
appropriate?
The
concept of ‘e-learning skills for life’ (paragraphs 93 and 94) blurs
the distinction between ICT as a subject, an end of education;
and ICT as a means of education.
As ICT as a subject is already well-established and is generally
the major consumer of hardware resources within schools, it would
be more helpful if the term ‘e-learning’ were reserved for the use
of ICT as a means of education; ‘ICT’ for the subject which
includes the new skill-sets.
Blaming inappropriate
assessment methods smacks of ‘shooting the messenger’. If e-learning
is to convince people of its effectiveness, it must deliver improved
results, measured by traditional assessment techniques.
The case that
a completely new set of skills is required in the information age
has been grossly over-stated in some quarters: internet and email
are textual media which require traditional, transferable, literary
and analytical skills to use properly.
Paragraph 95
demands that ‘whatever form of unitisation or credit framework may
be developed, this has synergy with the potential of online assessment’.
The aims of education should not be determined on the basis of what
skills are easiest or cheapest to measure. Computers will have difficulty
in marking serious analytical essays for a long time to come: this
does not mean that essays should not be included as assessment methods
for serious academic courses. Considerations of ‘unitisation’ may
be appropriate, if this means grouping learning objectives into
units suitable for e-assessment and units not suitable for e-assessment;
but the means of assessment should not be a consideration in determining,
in absolute terms, the requirements for credit. If
it is allowed to be so, then e-learning will be attacked correctly
as a further step in the erosion of educational standards.
The ‘online
administration of public examinations’ (paragraph 44) is a useful
long-term objective. It is unlikely to be achievable, however, until
considerable experience has been gained with low-stakes, formative
assessment; and it is in this area that efforts should initially
be concentrated.
Q11 Are the proposed action
areas for building a better e-learning market feasible and appropriate?
Paragraph 100
states that the vision of the report is to allow ‘teachers and learners
to access, use, create, and share high-quality learning materials’.
This list misses an important middle ground which could be summed
up with the words ‘re-use’ and ‘adapt’.
See Adapters not creators in answer to Q7.
The need
for learning management
The potential
for introducing ‘formative assessment’ will be an extremely important
benefit of e-learning. The word ‘assessment’ is so closely identified
with summative testing that it might be better to look for a different
phrase, such as ‘formative interactivity’, or ‘tracking’. The false
dichotomy between learning and testing should be challenged. Everyone
– and particularly children – learn by engaging in activity, not
by passively absorbing large quantities of ‘expositive’ content.
We should be moving towards an assumption that all learning materials
should provide integrated tracking as standard. This allows:
·
Teachers, managers
and parents to monitor student progress (allowing informed intervention
as well as increasing student motivation)
·
Students to
receive immediate feedback
·
Learning Management
Systems to handle differentiation automatically
·
Competency-based
profiles to be generated automatically.
Producing performance
data is of little use if learning content is not integrated into
a Learning Management System. Much more progress needs to be made
in raising standards of interoperability between LMSs and learning
content: progress on the Learning Platform Conformance Regime has
been slow; there is still no possibility for learning content to
advertise its support for open standards on the Curriculum Online
portal; and neither Becta nor Curriculum Online have yet taken any
action to publicise these issues.
While it is
true that ‘the pervasive ‘multiple-choice question’ format’ is limited,
the bigger problem at present is not so much the predominance
of multiple-choice questions, but the predominance of ‘expositive’
learning content which offers no interaction at all. Early efforts
should be directed towards championing the causes of interoperability
and interactivity – even if this might include the humble multiple-choice
question. Later efforts can concentrate on driving up the quality
of interaction. As well as the sophistication of interactive elements,
it is also important that interaction should be closely integrated
with exposition. Expositive material can be presented before interaction
(as reference), during (as hints) and after (as feedback). Intelligent
sequencing can also route students to extension or remedial units
depending on performance. Even multiple choice questions can play
a useful part if embedded in a sophisticated teaching system – and
should not be demonised.
Paragraph 102
identifies the crucial problem of how to create an environment in
which innovation is demanded by the market and welcomed when it
appears. The cause of the problem, however, is not that the true
wishes of teachers and learners are ignored by a long list of intermediaries,
but that teachers themselves are ignorant and often sceptical about
the potential of e-learning. This scepticism is perfectly understandable
in view of poor quality of much learning content which they have
been sold, and the large number of ill-considered and ineffective
ICT initiatives which have been imposed on them over the years.
It is exacerbated by the ideological reservations of many opinion-forming
journalists and academics regarding ‘instructionalism’.
There are widely held (if misplaced) fears that e-learning will
undermine the human element of teaching. Teachers will learn about
e-learning quickly enough when it can be demonstrated to work, and
particularly when it can be demonstrated to improve their own working
conditions, e.g. by saving much routine marking.
It would be
wrong (and certainly too soon) to dismiss the demand-led model implemented
by eLearning Credits. The statement (paragraph 102) that ‘We
cannot rely on the consumer market mechanism to improve quality’
ignores the fact that, as a general principle, vigorous consumer
markets have been shown to be incomparably more effective in driving
up standards than regulation. There is much that the department
could do to improve the administration of the eLC scheme to ensure that credits are spent, and spent as
intended. The principle problem however, is not the market mechanism,
but the fact that teaching profession has not yet been convinced
of the value of e-learning.
The government’s
role should be to take a more prominent part in leading opinion
amongst the profession. It is essential, however, that government
publicity in this area should be based on high-quality information
and authoritative evidence and that it is subject to lively debate.
The profession must be led to e-learning by a process of persuasion,
not by a process of regulation.
Raising Quality
of Learning Content
Paragraph 102
states that ‘We have no ‘kitemarking’
system and this makes it difficult for parents, teachers and advisers
to make appropriate judgments of quality.’ Kitemarking
is an exercise in sweeping at the rear: when what is needed is path-finding
at the front. Unless positively dangerous, stragglers are better
ignored. Innovation can only be harmed by the imposition of top-down
solutions. The wording of the strategy document here is surprising
given the recent statement by the Secretary of State that ‘I am
very wary of going down the kite-marking route, because I think
that if there were to be some state form of approval of certain
types of software rather than other types of software, I think we
would be in quite dangerous territory for all kinds of reasons.’ There is a pressing need for technical standards to
ensure interoperability; but the issue of quality should be handled
more informally.
TEEM (Teachers
Evaluating Multimedia) is a worthy but uninspired attempt to provide
effective reviews of learning content. Reviews are generally anodyne.
TEEM should be integrated with the Curriculum Online portal and,
learning from sites such as Amazon, reviews should be invited from
any user, should not pre-censored and should encourage participation
by using devices such as star-ratings, awards, comparative evaluations,
‘top ten’ rankings and discussion forums. Training programmes could
be used to get the ball rolling.
One of the most
significant contributions that the government could make towards
encouraging the production of more advanced learning content is
to raise awareness of the potential for managed learning and make
more rapid progress on standards for interoperability. See comments
on The Need for Managed Learning in answer to Q11.
Q12
Are the proposed action areas for assuring technical and quality
standards feasible and appropriate?
See above.
Q13
Have we identified the correct partners for the actions?
It appears to
be a comprehensive list. A cynic might suggest fewer partners and
more action.
Q14
Which actions do you see as the priorities?
1.
Encouraging innovation through the practice based research
environments. These must provide match-making (teachers, university
departments, industry and spending authorities), funding, evaluation
and publicity. Results should inform guidance and training programmes
(point 5).
2.
Raising standards of interoperability by:
·
Ensuring that there is a thorough review of the Learning Platform
Conformance Regime, scheduled for this April 2004.
·
Ensuring that rapid progress is made towards allowing content
providers to advertise SCORM compliance on the Curriculum Online
portal.
·
Ensuring that rapid progress is made in upgrading the Common
Basic Data Set (CBDS) to satisfy the requirements of LMS/VLE-MIS
interoperability.
·
Setting up use-case studies, as recommended by the report by
SimulacraMedia, to demonstrate the technical
feasibility and pedagogical value of interoperability between LMSs
and learning content.
·
Ensuring the Curriculum Online’s Content Advisory Board imposes
a clear requirement that the BBC should produce content that supports
both content packaging and runtime interoperability, and follows
a packaging model which allows disaggregation.
3
Foster higher quality, more accessible, more engaging and more participative
evaluations of learning content with the aim of educating the market
and encouraging more discriminating, better informed purchasing.
4
Tightening up the administration of the eLC
scheme, to ensure that credits are spent as intended.
5.
The DfES should take a more proactive stance to lead teacher opinion,
using information campaigns and training programmes.
Q15
In your experience, what are the most significant achievements
of e-learning?
1
Increasing the amount of interactivity in students’ learning
experience. I am not aware of any research that has measured the
amount of time a student spends in educationally significant conversation
with a human teacher, but it would probably average at seconds,
or at most a minute or two per day. Given that we ‘learn by doing’,
particularly when our actions give us ‘knowledge of results’, this
lack of interactivity during the school day leaves a huge potential
for improving the effectiveness of education. No-one would claim
that interacting with a computer is comparable to interacting with
a teacher (though the government’s report is correct to stress the
need to improve the quality of interaction offered by learning content).
But given the greater availability of computers, perhaps their greater
patience; and given that much preparatory learning concerns straight-forward
factual material, rather than advanced insight, there is a valuable
place for computer-based interaction, to complement teacher-based
interaction, which is a very scarce resource. Computers can often
perform a ‘baby-sitting’ function. In my experience, this allows
the teacher more time to engage in one-to-one tutoring, standing
on its head the argument that computers ‘depersonalise’ teaching.
2
Improving the efficiency of differentiation. The incorrect
pitching of work is a major source of inefficiency in schools. The
ability of the student to absorb a particular learning point is
often determined by the extent to which that student has mastered
the prerequisite skills and knowledge. Exposing students to teaching
which is incorrectly pitched is not only a waste of time, but is
a major source of alienation. Since the government has placed more
emphasis on examination results, many schools have reintroduced
streaming and setting. But while these systems may well be more
efficient than mixed ability methods, they have their disadvantages
in terms of the complexity of timetabling and the stigmatisation
of some children and are inevitably crude. The computer can manage
differentiation automatically, leading to a significant reduction
in administration for teachers and timetablers,
while improving student learning and motivation.
3
Improving the quality of management data. Given integration
of learning content with an LMS, performance and competency data
can be made available immediately to senior management, whole teaching
teams, parents, and other support agencies. I worked at a sixth
form college which introduced a system
for electronic registration; but the system, which cost tens of
thousands of pounds, was withdrawn within a few months because the
staff could not be induced to enter data reliably. Performance and
competency data are essential management tools, yet any system which
relies on manual data entry has feet of clay. Learning Management
Systems ensure that performance data is tracked from source, with
the same potential significance in schools as the barcode has had
in the supermarket.
4
Saving teacher time by reducing routine marking and improving
the preparation of students for lessons. Teacher shortages are endemic
in a system offering universal education. The time of good graduate
teachers is a precious resource that should not be wasted on routine
marking of factual answers, or on taking lessons in which students
read around the class or in which basic factual information is presented.
I taught an A level history course which was heavily based on a
demanding set of documents. Much lesson time was spent laboriously
working through these documents, which students were generally unable
to understand on their own. In a trial of a prototype of Alpha LMS,
I wrote an extensive bank of multiple choice questions, complete
with hints and feedback, which guided the students through the documents
and pointed out the most salient points. Student preparation for
lessons could be checked automatically. With the students properly
prepared, lessons could adopt the style of discussion seminars,
where the time of the graduate teacher could be much better employed.
The A level results for that year were the best on record for the
college concerned.
5
Deploying visual resources to illustrate abstract points.
An abstract point, described orally, is often difficult to comprehend
without a concrete example or diagram to illustrate it. Many subjects
deal with processes, which the animation is ideally suited to demonstrate.
While video has long been available to schools, it has by itself
had a limited impact (1) because it is a very passive medium, and
unless students are actively engaged with the content, their attention
span is limited, and (2) the video tape is clumsy and inaccessible.
The effect of computer-based ‘multimedia’ has also been limited.
But playing its part alongside other key components of an e-learning
system, such as good teacher management tools and rich interactivity,
multimedia elements have an important contribution to make.
Q16
What do you think should be the respective roles of education leaders,
Government and its agencies and the ICT industry in taking the strategy
forward?
Government
1
To set the general framework within which industry should operate.
This should include the requirements to provide accurate and objective
information about their products, including the extent to which
they support open standards. In this regard, I believe the government
has been insufficiently robust. The regulatory framework should
be very cautious about making judgements on quality or appropriate
pedagogy. This judgement ought to be left to the teacher.
2.
To continue to implement a substantially demand-led funding model,
as exemplified by eLearning Credits. Comparatively small amounts of funding
should also be provided to support innovative projects, including
those initiated by commercial companies, to set up evaluations and
proof-of-concept trials.
3.
To use its leadership position to raise the level of interest in
this field and to encourage a more discriminating approach to learning
content by purchasers. This will include the publication of results
from practice based research environments, ensuring that teachers
have access to effective evaluations and can participate in a lively
debate about e-learning.
4.
Set clear and detailed objectives for training programmes.
Industry
Will
take the primary responsibility for innovation and providing high
quality learning content, software and services.
Education
leaders
Education leaders
should be cautious about imposing top-down solutions, which often
turn into exercises in administration, rather than in learning.
1
They should also take a leading role in engaging teachers in a vigorous
debate about e-learning strategies.
2
They should try as far as possible to devolve spending decisions
to front-line teachers.
3
They should act as ‘talent-scouts’ for the practice-based research
environments, identifying opportunities for trials, which may often
arise as a result of small-scale, innovative practices amongst front-line
teachers.
Crispin Weston
Alpha Learning
www.alphalearning.co.uk
01308 485054
28 January 2004
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Back
to briefings
Note. The word ‘Pedagogue’ is used incorrectly in place of
‘pedagogy’ throughout the report. It is a little disquieting that
the Department for Education should be so keen to publicise the
‘wide range of pedagogues’ in the education service, or to be seen
to be ‘Embracing the new pedagogues’.
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