Excellent article on a different approach to getting teachers engaged with elearning (and any pedagogical innovation). I think we've already bed this overall idea i.e. that we need teachers to participate in the design of their courses but this provides structure around it and also theoretical underpinning.
"Let's now take a closer look at each of the key components that comprise the [Community of Inquiry] COI and then explore the use of audio feedback to promote teaching presence."
Iinterweaving three approaches - Research-led Teaching, Inquiry-based Learning, and Research on Teaching and Learning - into one distinctive model called Research-led Learning & Teaching (RLT).
Supported by the principal bodies and agencies in UK post-compulsory education, the Committee was set up in February 2008 to conduct an independent inquiry into the strategic and policy implications for higher education of the experience and expectations of learners in the light of their increasing use of the newest technologies.
"This paper defines and examines three generations of distance education pedagogy. Unlike earlier classifications of distance education based on the technology used..."
This paper defines and examines three generations of distance education pedagogy. Unlike earlier classifications of distance education based on the technology used, this analysis focuses on the pedagogy that defines the learning experiences encapsulated in the learning design. The three generations of cognitive-behaviourist, social constructivist, and connectivist pedagogy are examined, using the familiar community of inquiry model (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000) with its focus on social, cognitive, and teaching presences. Although this typology of pedagogies could also be usefully applied to campus-based education, the need for and practice of openness and explicitness in distance education content and process makes the work especially relevant to distance education designers, teachers, and developers. The article concludes that high-quality distance education exploits all three generations as determined by the learning content, context, and learning expectations.
Contents
1 Context
2 Improving data and research to create an evidence base
3 21st century school buildings and learning hubs
4 Training and professional development
5 Improving access to New Zealand content online
6 Development of 21st century skills
7 Equity issues
8 Improving device access
9 Ultra-Fast Broadband and the School Network Upgrade Programme
10 Network for Learning
11 Institutional arrangements for ICT and 21st century learning
12 Changes to legislation, regulation, and government agency operations
13 Minority views