Archive for February, 2006

Student engagement

Monday, February 13th, 2006

So after one week of blogging, we have two reactions to an article entitled: Student Engagement in Courses from …um, I’m not sure which publication it’s from. I have read the two responses here and here and I am facing the same problem I have faced in many a course. I just don’t care about this topic. The article is too limited, and though I certainly care about student engagement, like Bob, I want to know WHY students engage, not just break apart their types of engagement. Further, a one page research article does not provide me with enough depth to even determine whether I find their methods valid.

This article touches on the holy grail of education. How do we engage students and encourage their motivation so that they can be successful in our courses. And lately, a lot of the blame for lack of student persistence seems to fall on higher education. Our courses aren’t entertaining enough, flexible enough, and we’re not “keeping up with the times.” We should be designing edutainment to appeal to the fragile minds of the Internet generation who have been brought up on a steady diet of cable TV, internet, and video games.

However, there is a deeper reality for students. Many students are not in school for the education part of it. They are in school, particularly community college, for the training and skills that will help them get a better job—and it is our duty as designers to sneak in the education while they’re looking for training. And I do think, as Joan mentions, that the rules for online student engagement will be different than for classroom instruction. In online learning is is imperative that the instructor be even more responsive to students. Faculty need to build opportunities for student interaction. After all, isn’t interaction closely tied with the second and third factors of engagement: emotional engagement and interaction engagement? However, what we see in online courses ALL the time is a lot of emphasis on skills engagement, some on performance engagement, and a whole lot of ignoring the emotional and interactive (Interactive being between people, not human-computer).

I’m not sure I agree with Bob’s interpretation that:

The measure seems to have about a 25-30% correlation with achievement.

The article is poorly worded. It sets up the four factors of engagement and then describes a second study which did find the correlation between engagment and achievement being explained in this percentage. HOWEVER, it does not indicate whether the second study was looking at all of these different types of engagement and how they were measuring engagement (I assume a survery). Thus, without knowing their instrument, there is no way of knowing if it is one or two of the aforementioned types of engagement or a totality of all of them, that is contributing to this analysis.

Missed Call 0000123456

Friday, February 3rd, 2006

A ridiculous number of people arrive at this site searching for what on earth it means when their caller ID says that the last number to call was 0000123456. I reference it in a post last year, but it might be helpful to explain more explicitly. When that number appears in your caller ID, it means someone is calling you from their computer using Skype. Do them a favor: get yourself a headset, download skype and send them your skype ID and you can talk to them for free.

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FeedBlitz

Thursday, February 2nd, 2006

I’m out there looking for ways to streamline aggregator use for non-Firefox users who find it a nuisance to go to web-based aggregators. I, personally, find web-based aggregators annoying, except for the ability to seamlessly synchronize subscriptions between multiple computers (because, in essence, there’s nothing to synchronize).

Why anyone would not be a Firefox user is a whole other discussion. I can’t bother myself by thinking about it too deeply at the present time. The sheer lack of logic is just too much…

In looking for alternatives, it does not seem that there are any useful RSS readers that integrate with Internet Explorer, or for that matter that are FREE and integrate with Outlook. This doesn’t surprise me, but it does annoy me.

FeedBlitz is not any of those things, but I ran into while searching, and am intrigued by the idea as another possibility to organize blog reading for a class, by having only the class blog entries emailed to the participants. I’m not entirely sure about how it works in comparison with reading a blog via an aggregator. I suppose, what it does, is completely eliminate the “going there” for a user. So I set this blog up in FeedBlitz, so I can experiment with its usefulness. However, you cannot have blogs emailed to you that the owner has not set up in FeedBlitz, which is a bit annoying…