Methodology tutorial - conceptual frameworks
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Research Design for Educational Technologies - Conceptual frameworks
This is part of the methodology tutorial (see its table of contents).
Importance of conceptual frameworks, typologies and grids
Analytical frameworks
- Provide an overview of the phenomenon (elements and relations)
- Help to bridge the gap between theory and empirical research
- Direct analysis (e.g. what causalities to look at, what’s of interest, etc.)
Lists of dimensions
- Help to focus on all aspects of a concept
Analysis grids
- Help to organize data gathering and collection
- Will bridge the gap between general concepts at theory level, e.g. in your research
questions) and measurable indicators
(examples on the next slides)
Example frameworks
The inquiry circle in inquiry-based learning doctrine
- See: DESS mémoire de Stéphane Lattion (2004)
- clearly identifies 5 elements of inquiry
- claims/shows that inquiry is circular
Gonzalez 8-factor model for ICT usage in schools
A linear model of research
- Note: Even this course has a analytical organizing framework :)
File:Book-research-design-88.png
Implementation research model
Provides a certain "image" of the policy-making process:
- Actors intervene during the whole process (and not just in their "natural" stage"
- Problem perception, goals and other elements can be changed over time !
- i.e. sometimes the implementors may redefine the set goals !
File:Book-research-design-89.png
Possible relevance for educational technologies:
The fact that a government agency has been created to sponsor ICT-based pedagogical reform, does not entail that it will happen as they plan. Implementation "carriers" (e.g. schools) and addressees (e.g. teachers) may redefine goals and will have to establish operational practise.
Policy outcomes
Définition des prestations au sens de produits finaux de mise en oeuvre d’une politique publique [ Knoepfel, P. (1996) TQM et fédéralisme, Cahier de l’IDHEAP, 159, p 10]
- E.g. useful to provide a perspective on the analysis of educational reform policies
- There are three major kinds of "results" you can study according to the author
File:Book-research-design-90.png
Functions of a learning environment: Where do we focus ?
File:Book-research-design-91.png
- This model makes you think about functions that a learning environment should provide
and therefore about structure that will instantiate function
- It also allows to think about priorities in your design
- E.g. teacher role is central in activity-based designs
- E.g. Learning material is important in e-learning designs for mass-education
A simple picture defining key elements of an ICT design
File:Book-research-design-92.png
- This is not a great model, but it makes you think about the distinction between
pedagogical activities, informations (learning material), people involved......
- Roles and relations here can’t be filled in without some reference to pedagogical method
(so it’s not such a good model)
A "help desk model" for "on-the-spot" life-long learning
File:Book-research-design-93.png
- This model allows you to think at the same time about system components and actor’s
roles
- Technical infrastructure used: either C3MS portals, groupware, specialized help desk,
knowledge management software.
My favorite picture for introducing activity-based teaching
- Scenarios are sequences of activity phases within which group members do
tasks and play specific roles
- This orchestration implies organizing workflow loops
File:Book-research-design-94.png
- This framework clearly shows that students have to engage in activities, that activities
lead to products that can be discussed and reused.
Definition of a C3MS (community) portal (Schneider)
Function |
C3MS modules (tools of the portal) |
---|---|
Content management |
News engine (including a organization by topics and an annotation mechanism) - Content Management Systems (CMS)Collaborative hypertexts (Wikis) - Image albums (photos, drawings, etc.) - Glossary tool or similar - Individual weblogs (diaries) |
Knowledge exchange |
News syndication (headlines from other portals)File sharing(all CMS tools above) |
Exchange of arguments |
Forums and/or new engineChats, ...... |
Project support |
Project management modules,Calendars, ...... |
Knowledge management |
FAQ manager - Links Manager (“Yahoo-like”)Search by keywords for all contents“top 10” box, rating systems for comments“What’s new” (forum messages, downloads, etc.), ..... |
Community management |
Presence, profile and identification of membersShoutbox (mini-chat integrated into the portal page)Reputation systemActivity tracing for membersEvent calendarNews engine, ...... |
- This table makes association between a list of functions and structure (software
modules)
C3MS modules support for creativity and engagement variables
File:Book-research-design-95.png
- Also links structure (software elements) to functions (creativity and engagement
enhancing variables)
Visualization of formal procedures
File:Book-research-design-96.png
Lists of dimensions and typologies
Types of Learning (Kearsley’s http://tip.psychology.org/ )
- Attitudes :
- Disposition or tendency to respond positively or negatively ....
- Factual Information (memorization):
- Processing of factual information and remembering .....
- Concepts (discrimination):
- ... how to discriminate and categorize things. Concept mastery is not related to simple
recall and must be constructed.
- Reasoning (inference, deduction):
- thinking activities that involve making or testing inferences
- Procedure learning:
- .... being able to solve a certain task by applying a procedure.
- Problem solving :
- identification of subgoals, use of methods to satisfy subgoals.
- Learning strategies :
- can hardly be taught and only be learned through appropriate experience and to some
extent only !
Major pedagogical approaches (strategies)
( Baumgartner & Kalz , modifications by Schneider
Transfer |
Tutor |
Coach |
---|---|---|
Factual knowledge, |
Procedural knowledge, |
Social practise, |
Transfer of propositional knowledge |
Presentation of predetermined problems |
Action in (complex and social) situations |
to know, to remember |
to do, to practise |
to cope, to master |
Production of correct answers |
Selection of correct methods and its use |
Realization of adequate action strategies |
Verbal knowledge, Memorization |
Skill, Ability |
Social Responsibility |
to teach, to explain |
to observe, to help,to demonstrate |
to cooperate, to support |
Teaching I |
Teaching II |
Teaching III |
- E.g. helps to decide what sort of teaching and learning you want to study or favor with
an ICT-based environment
Khan’s (2000) list of pedagogical methods and strategies
Presentation |
Exhibits |
Demonstration |
Drill and Practice |
Tutorials |
Games |
Story Telling |
Simulations |
Role-playing |
Discussion |
Interaction |
Modeling |
Facilitation |
Collaboration |
Debate |
Field Trips |
Apprenticeship |
Case Studies |
Generative Development |
Motivation |
Makes you worry a bit:
- Which pedagogical strategies work better for what types of learning ?
Intrinsically motivating elements of gaming ...
(Frété 2002, Master thesis TECFA)
Element |
|
---|---|
fantasy |
|
challenge &curiosity |
|
feedback |
|
self-esteem |
|
control |
|
- What could we learn from gaming ?
- Why do kids spend many hours playing games without getting bored or tired ?
Typology and typical functions of virtual environments
File:Book-research-design-97.png
- What do you mean by a virtual environment ?
- Is is safe to use "virtual environment" when you talk about an e-learning platform ?
Pierre Dillenbourg on CSCL (Computer supported collaborative learning)
File:Book-research-design-98.png
- Collaborative learning can be very powerful because its properties engage students in
various meta-cognitive activities.
- Note: needs scenario-building (story-boarding)
Example analysis grids
- more grids (scales) are shown in quantitative design and analysis modules
Ergonomics criteria de Bastien
http://www.lergonome.org/pages/detail_articles.php?indice=22
1. Guidage 1.1 Incitation 1.2 Groupement/Distinction entre items 1.2.1 Groupement/Distinction par la localisation 1.2.2 Groupement/Distinction par le format 1.3 Feed-back immédiat 1.4 Lisibilité 2. Charge de travail 2.1 Brièveté2.1.1 Concision 2.1.2 Actions minimales 2.2 Densité informationnelle 3. Contrôle explicite 3.1 Actions explicites 3.2 Contrôle utilisateur |
4. Adaptabilité 4.1 Flexibilité 4.2 Prise en compte de l'expérience de l'utilisateur 5.Gestion des erreurs 5.1 Protection contre les erreurs 5.2 Qualité des messages d'erreur 5.3 Correction des erreurs 6. Homogénéité/Cohérence 7. Signifiance des codes et dénominations 8. Compatibilité |
Profil des compétences d’un manager (dimensions)
Emery, Y. (1997) Le centre d’évaluation pour managers publics, Cahier de l’IDHEAP 166, p9.
A. compétences personnelles:
- introspection et apprentissage permanent
- résistance aux tensions, énergie et ténacité
B. compétences intellectuelles:
- pensée systémique, capacité d’analyse et de synthèse
C. compétences relationnelles:
- leadership et de gestion de groupe
- capacité d’écoute et de communication
D. compétences managériales:
- attention à l’environnement et proactivité
- entrepreneurship et esprit de décision
- planification et controlling
Sur 4 pages l’auteur indique ensuite les sous-dimensions et ensuite comment les mesurer par des dispositifs expérimentaux variés....
COLLES Grid - socio-constructivist features of on-line teaching
(Taylor and Maor ) - Teacher education over the Internet
1. Relevance
- How relevant is on-line learning to students' professional practices?
2. Reflection
- Does on-line learning stimulate students' critical reflective thinking?
3. Interactivity
- To what extent do students engage on-line in rich educative dialogue?
4. Tutor Support
- How well do tutors enable students to participate in on-line learning?
5. Peer Support
- Is sensitive and encouraging support provided on-line by fellow students?
6. Interpretation
- Do students and tutors make good sense of each other's on-line communications?
Remarks:
- This grid clearly identifies 6 dimensions of socio-constructivism (there are many other
grids)
- We will see in the data gathering and analysis modules how to make it operational