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  • Steven Warburton

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    July 2008

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    Key blogs

    • TwoFourLearning
      What it says on the tin. TwoFourLearning learning blog.
    • Brian Kelly
      Thoughts on Web developments, with an emphasis on best practices and areas of innovation.
    • Ulises Ali Mejias
      Currently a Research Consultant with Cornell University.
    • Graham Attwell
      Director of the Welsh independent research institute, Pontydysgu and a founder of the software research and development company, the Knownet.
    • Margarita Perez-Garcia
      Personal blog on digital self, ePortfolio, eLearning and education issues.
    • Lilia Efimova
      PhD researcher based in the Netherlands, with an interest in blog as a research tools and for knowledge work within corporations.
    • Scott Wilson
      Assistant director at CETIS, UK.
    • George Siemens
      Instructor, Red River College.
    • Barbara Ganley
      Barbara Ganley's reflections on teaching-with-technology.
    • James Farmer
      James Farmer is a Melbourne based education designer and social software consultant.
    • Sebastian Fiedler
      Doctoral student in Media Pedagogy at the University of Augsburg, Germany.
    • Stephen Downes
      Senior research officer with the National Research Council of Canada.
    • Josie Fraser
      UK based educational technologist.

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    Disruptive technologies in education

    My Slideshare

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    Evolution of a socio-technical activity tool for ICT in education

    The socio-technical activity tool was developed while traveling back and forth between various European destinations. It started as a partially sketched exploration into the factors that impact our decision-making processes when we come to choose, or indeed evaluate, what might consider as appropriate technologies for enhancing learning and teaching. At the beginning the aims were 'simple', asking myself straightforward questions regarding the major factors or dimensions that we should consider in these decision-making processes.

    Triangle4_2

     

    The tool has now developed beyond these initial doodlings to something far more concrete ... forming the centre piece in the first session of a double workshop at the October 2007 Open Classroom Conference hosted in Stockholm. It was held up for public scrutiny alongside a number of other tools (see Prism(lab) and esphères identitaires) that have been developed with Margarita for exploring  the relationships within educationally orientated socio-technological systems. The current version comprises three triangles representing the key dimensions of technology, literacy and pedagogical approach that converge on the central notion of a decision activity which could be, for example, assessing the appropriateness of a particular tool in a particular educational setting. Each triangle is surrounded by a neighbourhood of descriptive sub-factors or variables:

    1. Technology {Functionality, Cost, Infrastructure}
    2. Literacy {Knowledge, Skills and Competencies}
    3. Pedagogical approach {Context, Policy and Strategy, Purpose}

    What I like most about the diagram is that as a visualisation tool it seems to work. It must be conceded that there is no simple solution to describing all of the actors and interwoven nuances that converge on decision making processes for ICTs in education but the diagram leaves open multiple interpretations and I think holds enough flexibility to be read in several ways. The key though is activity and the critical central tenet is being able to move oneself towards a position of making reflexive decisions while at the same time providing a balance between pragmatism and the naturally ecological or organic framework within which these decisions exist. More often than not our technological choice-making processes are driven by the ideal of finding good 'fitness for purpose' and yet through a set of these often complex and sometimes unacknowledged factors we can find ourselves making choices that are skewed by instinctual understandings. Here then, the socio-technical activity tool provides a reflective device for interpreting our actions.

    Triangles sketch

    An occasional paper detailing this and other tools developed for the workshop will be published shortly on the Prism(lab) research site and include complementary work from Margarita Perez-Garcia. And just for the record I am also including a snapshot of those early doodlings.