


Visitor-Resident-Personal-Institutional

Feelings about Topic 1
Challenging to get started to connect. Meeting a PBL-group with friendly faces and respect. Finding my way with all the sites. Others helps and invites. Creating a blog on the net. My partner helped me get set. Sharing myself in the open. Others doing the same making my curiosity woken. Students using all kinds ofFortsätt läsa “Feelings about Topic 1”

Online learning: first week
First, I experience what is most important in my own learning process and that is what it is like to be a student. I experience ONL’s page for my course and reflected on it. There is a lot of material and after 5-10 visits to the site, the layout begins to clear. A great supportFortsätt läsa “Online learning: first week”

Getting started
Hi, fellow learners, this is my first attempt at creating a wordpress blog, so bear with me; I have to admit that it was a challenging task. My evaporated skills in InDesign might have been helpful today, but instead I finally capitulated, lowered my ambitions of something aesthetically brilliant, and took in a couple of … Continue reading “Getting started”

Getting started
Hi, fellow learners, this is my first attempt at creating a wordpress blog, so bear with me; I have to admit that it was a challenging task. My evaporated skills in InDesign might have been helpful today, but instead I finally capitulated, lowered my ambitions of something aesthetically brilliant, and took in a couple of … Continue reading “Getting started”

Topic 5 reflection at the end of ONL
The structure of the ONL-course itself will continue to influence my practice. The great benefit of PBL and group learning was an eye opener. Although I have worked a lot with group-based processes before in my teaching, it became clear to me all the benefits that anyone can achieve from collaborative learning. No matter whatContinue reading “Topic 5 reflection at the end of ONL”

Blended learning dynamics
My question to Marty Cleveland-Innes on the padlet wasn’t answered. Therefore, I take the opportunity to use the question as a starting point for this reflection for topic 4. The question rose in my mind during reading the course literature for this topic. After experiencing about 10 months of digital distance teaching, synchronous didactic interactionContinue reading “Blended learning dynamics”

Reflection on Topic 3
Coming from a social constructionist perspective on learning, collaborative work for students is given. Or at least group learning processes of different kinds. What does collaborative learning mean in the online context, that is not also true for collaborative learning processes in the face to face environment? Brindley et.al (2009) stresses the importance for teachersContinue reading “Reflection on Topic 3”

Reflections on Open networked Learning 2020-12-08 00:11:00
Topic 5: Reflections and lessons learnedPhoto by Drew Beamer on UnsplashIt is unbelievable that the course ONL202 has already come to an end…Our weekly meetings, twice a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 17.00 to 18.00, now no more…!!!No mor…

Learning is togetherness
In the Open Networked Learning course, I have learned to understand and appreciate the social aspects of learning, the need for building networks and communities around what people learn or teach. I have always been part of various groups, both online and IRL, for fun, for help with solving practical problems, for achieving tasks that no one can do on his own and sometimes for making the world a better place, but I haven’t connected it to so much to learning before. That also means that I got an understanding that just making the lectures on zoom or record them isn’t by far enough to make a proper online course. You have to facilitate networking and social interaction even more in an online context.
I already use a forum in one course and found it even more used and useful in an online context, but I will probably expand further on that, maybe make some exercises more group oriented.
Digital literacy
But from the beginning we were discussing digital literacy. Smashing the Natives – Immigrants dichotomy makes sense out of my experience. I myself met digital technology at an age of about 25. After that I have spent much of my working life and some of my spare time teaching and helping younger people handle digital stuff. During the course I have been more convinced that many “digital” skills are not so uniquely digital. Social skills, writing, drawing, explaining, talking, acting, storytelling in pictures or movies are ancient “analog” skills becoming even more important in a digital context.
Open Educational Resources
I have also learned that some teachers are sceptical to making their learning resources open. As an open-source advocate, I think this is sad. At least in Sweden the material is made with taxpayers’ money and should in a much higher degree be available to the taxpayers. Much of my stuff is available on the local Kaltura instance (play.lnu.se) for what I do at work and YouTube, Instagram etc for the private works.
To do list
In IRL contexts I will make more movies instead of lecturing and save the precious time together for more interactive discussions and also practical training.
In my IT-support role I already have begun recommending opening Zoom-rooms 15 min before the actual lecture or meeting begins and welcome all participants. That gives time for “sound check” and technical problem-solving and hopefully also for some social chat or some questions. The actual lecture or meeting can start at the scheduled time, sharp.
I will add to this list and maybe fail some more …

Topic 5. ONL lessons learnt – future practice and reflections on a very different year
A year has past since I experienced the few intense, and very interesting, months together with my PBL-group in ONL192. How little did we know as we met for the last time in December 2019, about the future and the how a lot of the things we hade worked on and discussed during the course, …