EDUCAUSE Conference - November 2012
I had the opportunity to travel to Denver, Colorado for the EDUCAUSE 2012 Annual Conference. This also allowed me to take a a side-trip to Boulder to visit Christy, Charles, Benjamin, and Noah, I made sure capture the weekend in photos :)
Here my four major conference themes as well as a set of rambling notes from the conference.
Here my four major conference themes as well as a set of rambling notes from the conference.
1) BYOD (Bring your own devices)
From a
student perspective potentially it helps them to personalize their learning
through the use and customization of their own devices and potentially it
provides cost and space savings to higher education institutions (need for
fewer institutional computers, freeing up more computer labs for classroom
space). The Calgary Board of Education
is also providing K to 12 students with the option to bring their own devices
to schools and has put together an excellent policy website on this issue:
A discussion
about the results of the 2012 ECAR Annual Study of Students and IT suggests
that fewer students own desktop computers but that they expect to be able to
use them at higher education institutions for writing and research assignments.
BYOD
Educause Library
2012 ECAR
Annual Study of Students and IT
2) Google Apps
Many
American higher education institutions have adopted Google Apps (students
already using these applications and institutional cost savings). A fascinating session – a group of 20
something Google employees trying to deal with an angry group of IT and
Teaching & Learning Centre Directors in their 50s and 60s.
The issue –
how do you deal with a service provider (Google) that does not charge for their
services and has no versioning cycle for their applications (continual change
rather than version 1 moving to version 2)
The solution
– Google has created the following website to provide IT and Teaching &
Learning Centre Directors with updates and opportunities for feedback on their
applications:
3) Learning Analytics
American
foundations and the federal government are funding large scale projects where
they are trying to aggregate student data from multiple higher institutions to
identify trends and pathways related to student success and engagement.
Predictive Analytics
Reporting (PAR) Framework
Learning
Analytics Educause Library
4) Massive Online Open Courses (MOOCS)
This is a
trend that I have trouble understanding – from my perspective it appears to be
like a quarterback throwing a Hail Mary pass during the last play of the
game. On the one hand – I can see how
MOOCs provide free access to learning opportunities to anyone in the world but
on the other hand I don’t see what higher institutions (that are already
stressed to provide IT and faculty development support) are getting out of the
process? Also, it just looks like
massive content distribution to me – not real, meaningful learning
opportunities.
There
appears to be huge pressure from American higher institution Board of
Trustees/Governors to participate in this kind of online initiatives (a number
of institutions have even created new Vice Provost of Online Learning
positions).
What you
need to know about MOOCs – Chronicle of Higher Education
What campus
leaders need to know about MOOCS – EDUCAUSE Sept 2012
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