Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Captivate 9 – New Opportunities for Presenting Information

In today’s world, there are many ways to deliver information.  Take this blog, for example, I am providing information in a story format.  I am not necessarily delivering information in the traditional sense of education but nonetheless, I am connecting with my audience.  However, there are many methods for sharing information both in a traditional setting such as education to DIY projects presented in YouTube.  Through my participation in an online class, I am learning about different modalities and wanted to share a new system with you called Adobe Captivate 9.  Adobe Captivate 9 allows you to create professional looking and highly instructional using a single tool.  Captivate 9 allows you to add interactive elements to transform static content into content that is responsive and creative.  Let me tell you about one feature that I found resourceful and see if it would work for you in your job or even in a blog.

As I have started to explore, and when I say explore, I mean slowly creep through Adobe Captivate 9, there are many features that are quite overwhelming yet intriguing.  One of the features that I found as a valuable asset was knowledge check questions.  When working with clients or sharing information with my community, I do not necessarily need the feature of assessments such as quizzes or graded questions.  I would just like the ability to check in and gain some insight and feedback from my audience to ensure that I am communicating and delivering information in an understandable and meaningful way.   Captivate 9 offers the feature to insert knowledge check questions that are not graded but yet still gauge the learner’s understanding about a particular topic or subject.  When you are not working in an educational setting, this feature allows you to check-in with your audience without making them feel like they are back in school. 

The added bonus is that there are two ways to present feedback based on the answered provided by the learner.  First, you can trigger immediate feedback.  For example, the learner would answer the question and if the answer was incorrect, the feedback would pop up within the slide, which I consider immediate feedback.  This allows the learner to see that they did not select the right answer and you, the author to provide them insight about the answer without moving forward in the presentation. The second option, is that you can generate feedback that takes the learner to the original knowledge slide.  For instance, if the learner read information on slide A and slide B is a knowledge check point and the learner selected the wrong answer, the presentation would return the learner to slide A to review the information once again and proceed forward to the Slide B, where the learner can be re-assessed.


I hope you enjoyed hearing about just one of the many features that Adobe Captivate 9 has to offer and potentially explore how Captivate 9 would allow you to deliver in a fun, dynamic way.  Here is a great news, you can try Adobe Captivate 9 on a trail base for 30 days to see if it is something you would like to explore.  Click here to learn more and enjoy!

Friday, October 23, 2015

Certificates - A New Approach to Graduate Education




Many professionals want to update their professional profile, advance their career, broaden their knowledge, or continue their education but may not have the time to return to school full-time or even part-time to earn their graduate degree. So, universities are looking for ways to reach audiences that wish to develop new skills and build expertise in a specialized area. Colorado State University is now offering Graduate Certificates, which are short courses of study designed to meet the educational needs of professionals.  The certificates are offered completely online, so that it provides working professionals the flexibility to pursue their course of study that is convenient for them. The certificates are transcripted which provides professionals with the credentials and authenticity of CSU's stamp of academic rigor and quality.  This innovated way helps individuals continue their education without the time commitment of a full-time degree and yet provides students with the foundation to return to their graduate education when time and life allows.  Take a closer look...


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Am I Learning From You? – A Look at Analytics

In today’s society, everyone uses technology.  We use technology to shop, purchase cars, learn, and understand what is going on in today’s world.  We are connected to technology by our computers, through our phones, and even through our remote controls – it is a little crazy that we can talk to our remotes to search for shows or movies.  Living in this world means that everyone is tracking our moves, watching our Facebook feeds, stalking us with ads as we move around the web.  It can be a little scary if you think about too long but here is the upside, it means we are learning.  We are using the analytics to become better marketers, tailor information to who our audiences are, and serving our audience with what they want.  Most organizations are using analytics to have a stronger customer service model.

Let’s look at my blog, I want to know what you are interested in.  I could go about this in several ways: I could send you a survey with questions, I could ask for your feedback directly on my post, or I could use Google Analytics to see where the hot spots are.  My intention is not to bother you, so I don’t think it would be best to send you a survey or ask for your feedback – it should be natural for you.  This is where Google Analytics comes in handy.  I can view what pages have a high volume of visitors, I can see where visitors are lingering or jumping off the page and I can see where you are coming from.  This feedback is priceless.  So, does this mean I am learning from you.  Absolutely, I am always looking to learn from my visitors.  For example, let’s say I post an article about relationships and then an article about decorating for Halloween.  Depending on the analytics I may tailor my next post based on the responses, web page hits or how long individuals stayed on what posting. If my audience wants to learn more about decorating for the holidays, let's explore the areas together.  I want to provide you with what areas you are looking to learn about and how you engage with my site.  By using analytics, I am learning about your needs and passions. If I listen and learn, this will lead to you returning to my site, becoming a follower, and in the end allowing me to bring you into my Personal Learning Network so that we grow together as a family where strength is behind the fire boots.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Does mobile learning enhance your education? A review of Fulantelli, Taibi, and Arrigo’s “A framework to support educational decision making mobile learning.”

Fulantello, G., Taibi, D., & Arrigo, M. (2015). A framework to support education decision making mobile learning. Computers in Human Behavior, 47, 50-59.

In today’s society, more individuals are increasingly participating in informal learning settings, such as MOOCs, badged courses, Ted Talks, and from blog posts, such as mine. As a reader, you are exploring information channels expanding your personal learning networks, which I referenced last week (Blog post 9/25/15).  You may be engaging and interacting with other individuals on these sites, which naturally leads to deeper conversation and further participation.  You are increasing your knowledge about a particular topic or passion by participating in the online culture.  You are learning!  What a unique experience to be a part of, especially if you are from my era when digital learning was not available.  It is also exceptional is that this type of learning is reshaping the education landscape for students and teachers alike. For example, my 3rd Grader uses a mobile tablet almost every day in class.  I didn’t have my first computer class until I was in high school.  This makes me wonder, are students learning more than we did because they have access to more digital information?  Are we measuring the impacts of informal and formal online learning with these new technologies?  How can we see what is occurring when students may not be in the traditional classroom setting?  I was tasked to find articles that related to learning analytics and I could help but explore this topic more by finding a scholarly article that tied to my questions. My article review is about researchers who wanted to explore this topic to see how mobile learning supports or hinders educational decision making for both our educators and educational systems.

My article review

Over the past decade, mobile learning (learning from a mobile device such as an iPhone) has been increasingly used to support learning experiences both in the formal and informal settings.  In the formal setting, Learning Management Systems (LMS) have developed apps, so that a student can download the app and access their online course through their mobile device.  In the informal setting, students are using Facebook or other social sites to engage in learning through discussions.  According to the research about 67% of students surveyed believe their mobile devices are important to their academic success and use their devices for academic activities.  The use of mobile technology allows for educators to develop innovative methods of learnings and policies aimed at participation.  Now, administrators and educators must look at learning analytics to optimize the learning process and guide teachers on how to enrich the educational settings.

Learning analytics is “the measurement, collection, analysis, and reporting of data about learners and their contexts, for the purposes of understanding and optimizing learning and the environments in which it occurs” (SoLAR, 2012).  Through learning analytics, educators are able to respond by using educational applications which are grounded in learning theories and understand the interactions between the learning and the learning context.  This research paper focuses on using learning analytics techniques to support educational decision making in mobile learning settings.  The researchers use a task-interaction framework, which is aimed to support teachers in assessing and evaluating learners during a learning experiences from their mobile devices as well as an agent-based interaction classification to gain additional insight for how to predict learners’ achievement in an online course.  The framework considers three main steps: 1) a real learning environment in which a planned learning activities which occur on a mobile device, which is the pedagogical model; 2) the analysis of the experience of learning activity; and 3) the undertaking of specific actions to modify the learning activities according to learning analytics also known as evidence-based indicators. 

The task-interaction framework to support educational decision-making in mobile learning used for this paper is based on the relationship between the different types of interactions occurring in a mobile learning activity and the tasks associated with the activity.  The framework evaluates six specific scale values which include context, tools, control, communication, subject, and objective.  It is important to identify the activities performed by the students and how they are associated with the six categories described.  The researchers focus on student-context interactions, which they evaluate the student relative to other students and their environment in which the learning takes place and the physical path the student followed.  Next, they looked at the tools used in the mobile learning experience.  The tools allow for content delivery to be controlled through prepared learning materials that the student consumes or through content construction where the student must create new content to demonstrate their knowledge.  Subsequent, the researchers looked at control of the classroom. This ranges from the full instructor control, by which the instructor guides the students towards learning goals, to full learner control, whereas the student is independent and learns without support.  Following this is communication. The communication between learners is important to assess in order to improve personal knowledge through cooperation.  The range of communication is from an isolated learner, where students only access course material and do not interact with the instructor or other students to cooperation, where students work together to achieve learning goals.  Next, it is important to consider the subjects.  The researchers need to know who are the subjects, are they novice or experts, in order to maximize the learning process. Finally, the researchers must know the objective factors to understand the student’s self-evaluation of how the student engaged in the content and context of the learning materials. 

All of these elements lead to the case study conducted by the researchers.  For the case study, they conducted two mobile learning experiments, which were designed to meet the learning objectives and pedagogical models of two different curriculums.  One experiment the students studied in the traditional classroom activities by visiting attraction sites around town.  The teacher provided the materials in the mobile environment and students worked individually and provided comments about each point of interest. The second experiment aimed at students collecting information about attractions around town to create a tourist guidebook. This was a collective effort amongst the students.  For this study, the researchers used a learning management platform called Mobile Environment for learning with Linked Open Data (MeLOD).  MeLOD was used to provide the students with contextual learning materials and make connections between the students and their experience with the context, other students, teachers, and learning materials.  MeLOD has the capabilities to analyze the information and create a dashboard as a visual tool to help teacher monitor students’ participation.  Using the dashboards, teachers were able to identify students who were not participating or over-participating in the class, students who were at risk of dropping out, how well the learning community was doing based on the students engagement, and notice any change in behavior after the teacher intervened.  All of this leads to a more dynamic learning environment and student success and knowledge about the course learning objectives.


In conclusion, the research study defined the main capabilities of why it is important to adopt a framework in the mobile learning setting in order to support educational decision making.  The advantages of adopting the framework include determining the relationship between the learner’s interactions and tasks within the mobile learning setting, supports the teacher in the analysis of how well or poor a student is performing relevant to a specific learning setting and define possible interventions to the curriculum or task-at-hand and offers new learning analytics that are beyond the numerical data.  Of course, there is room for further investigation to identify other areas in which this framework will work in other areas of mobile learning settings and scenarios.