Archive for December, 2009

End-of-lifestream summary

What is a lifestream?

The lifestream functions as a diary of a student’s electronic life (Freeman and Gelernter, quoted in Wikipedia) and in this course it also demonstrated “engagement with the academic themes and content of the course” (Course Guide, p.8).

Categories of my lifestream
Looking back over my lifestream, my entries can be divided into several categories which I have ordered roughly according to the associated workload:

a)      Blog entries
The blog is probably the most reflexive part of the lifestream. For me this is an extremely valid category in terms of evaluation, as it demonstrates authentic writing which needs to be presented clearly. Some of my blog posts are notes and comments on the readings. The other blog posts are end-of-week summaries which describe my work and my thoughts.

b)      Own creations
The visual artefact and ethnography led to some anxiety on my part, but were very rewarding in terms of the learning process and of the discussion that resulted from them.

c)      Communications as comments
This feed encouraged students to communicate with one another. Compared to Twitter the advantage of the comment function was that there was no word limit and you could focus directly on other student’s work. The disadvantage was that the dialogue usually ended after one response. In this respect tweetdeck was better at stimulating discussion.

d)      Twitter contributions
Twitter contributions helped to give a fun impression of the other members. I’m glad I got a chance to try this medium out. I think it would have worked better if the word count was less restricted.

e)      Media contributions linked to the course content (Photos, videos, articles, useful websites from the internet)
As multimodality is closely linked to digital culture it makes sense to encourage students to draw in a wide range of media for the course. I have fed in interesting videos and pictures which I have found or which others have recommended, as well as useful tools for the artefact and ethnography.

f)        Media contributions linked to my work
As a language teacher I constantly use videos and images. They were uploaded automatically when I stored them in Diigo. I have left some of these as evidence of digital culture in the workspace. This maybe pushes the lifestream slightly into the chaos region (Ross, 2009), but for me it is all linked, as the course content has increased my confidence when using digital media for my work.

Limitations of the lifestream

I felt the lifestream was quite demanding on the students. Maybe the statement that there should be “evidence of new material every day or so” could be rephrased for part-time students. I sometimes felt frustrated about having to constantly prove that I am engaging with the contents. I personally need time away from the computer to gather my thoughts, and I didn’t want to produce feeds just for the sake of feeding the lifestream.
I can also imagine the lifestream is very time-consuming to assess.

Positive aspects of the lifestream

Despite the limitations, I do think the lifestream is a great tool to ensure consistency of engagement. Particularly when linked with feedback it motivates students to demonstrate a variety of engagement and gives a very full and retrievable picture of the student’s work.

Course Guide: E-Learning and Digital Culture (2009), MSc in E-Learning, The University of Edinburgh.

Ross, J. (2009). Lifestream: Curation or Chaos? (A conversation between Jen and Sian), http://digitalculture-ed.net/?paged=3, accessed on 11/12/2009.

Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifestream, accessed on 11/12/2009.

This is nearly the last week of the semester and I’ve been trying to find a topic and some idea of a structure for the final essay. I’ve been uploading some of pages from the websites I want to work with onto the lifestream and posted some thoughts on the essay. It’s a bit sad that interaction with the other students in the course always slows down when people are working on their final essays, but with the lifestream you can at least have a look into peoples blogs and lifestreams to get a bit more of an idea of what they are doing.

I need to start editing my lifestream and give some thought on the final summary, but I think I’m going to leave that til quite late and concentrate on getting a bit further with the final essay first. These weeks before Christmas are always so full of social activities – which I really enjoy – but it’s even harder than usual to find time for everything.

I’d like to do the final essay on “Online language courses in the digital age”

I’m drawn towards this topic because I’d like to investigate online courses a bit closer and I’d like to see how they fit in with the ideas of cyborg pedagogy and multimodality which we’ve been discussing in this course.

I’m thinking of using a wiki to present the essay, so I can link up to webpages or screenshots which I’m referring to. This would also make it easier to explain terms by hyperlinking.

I’d be focussing on two particular language courses and the central question I’d be asking would be “How do these online languages courses fit in with cyborg pedagogy and demands for multimodality?”

My structure could be as follows:

1. The digital age: What does this mean? (Notion of cyborgs, multimodality)

2. How has pedagogy changed? (Notion of cyborg pedagogy, increased multimodality in learning materials)

3. The cyborg pedagogy, multimodality and language learning.

4. Examples of two online language courses with particular focus on multimodality and cyborg pedagogy.
a) visual aids
b) audio aids
c) speaking cues
d) writing cues
e) presentation of grammar
f) building a community
g) the uncanny

5. Summary: Strengths and weaknesses of these two online language courses. How can they be utilized best?

I’d be really pleased to receive comments about these ideas.