Part 3: How Personal Learning Environments Contribute to Success in Teaching and Learning
All post-secondary faculty and students use educational technology–
whether for classroom-based, blended or fully online learning and
teaching.
This three-part series, Three Pillars of Educational Technology: Learning Management Systems, Social Media, and Personal Learning Environments,
explores the learning management system (LMS), social media, and
personal learning environments – and how they might best be used for
enhanced teaching and learning.
- The first instalment, Getting the Most from Learning Management Systems, looks at the ubiquitous Learning Management System to undercover the many ways this multi-functional tool is used to support teaching and learning, as well as some of the challenges.
- In the second instalment, How Social Media Support and Expand Teaching and Learning, a variety of social media and networking applications are explored to highlight their strengths and limitations.
- This final instalment, How Personal Learning Environments Contribute to Success in Teaching and Learning, looks at the expanding uses of personal learning environments by students and faculty.
A personal learning environment (PLE) is the set of tools,
coupled with the competency to use them, used to navigate, teach, learn,
explore, communicate, and amuse ourselves in the online world. The
tools of the PLE include LMS systems and social media applications, but
they expand beyond these to a personalized collection of informational
retrieval, creation, and communication tools by which we both interact
in the digital world and develop and maintain our web presence.
Obviously, these tools are used in our formal roles as teachers and
students but, more importantly, they are foundational tools upon which
our personal network ecology is based. Given the growing importance of
digital activity and resources, each of us benefits from improving and
enhancing our personal learning environments as tools of lifelong
learning.
How Personal Learning Environments Are Different
Three attributes tend to differentiate PLEs from LMS and social network sites:
- PLEs are designed by individuals to establish and support their learning goals. Thus, for example, a central tool in almost everyone’s PLE is a word processor to create text documents; however, many users add graphics, photo, sound, slideshow tools and website authoring tools to allow for multi-media creation.
- PLEs are used to communicate with others, beyond those enrolled in a particular course. These begin with e-mail, but often expand to tools for video and audioconferencing, text chatting, blogging, and micro-blogging and many more tools to support one-to-one, one-to-many and many-to-many interactions.
- PLEs are used to store, organize, select, and retrieve the digital tools and the documents that are created. Increasingly, this storage and organization capacity is moving from the users’ hardware (always susceptible to loss or a crash) to the cloud – susceptible to only potential privacy invasion!
Not many years ago, one thought of a PLE as being the set of
software applications that runs on desktops or laptop computers. Today,
the PLE extends to a variety of mobile devices and tablets. Tomorrow, it
will extend to the Internet of things and a variety of digital devices
such as watches, health and activity monitors and remote sensors to
enhance the digital lifestyle we choose to create.
Finally, ever more sophisticated analytics and aggregation tools will
allow us to automatically monitor and assess our individual PLEs.
Personal Learning Environments for Faculty
Why should a busy faculty member bother creating and maintaining a
high quality personal learning environment? Obviously, this is a task
that takes time and, unfortunately, is never fully completed as new
technologies are introduced and digital needs and interests change.
The most compelling reason is the effective use of digital tools
allow faculty and instructors to be more effective and efficient in both
their professional and personal lives. The PLE may also enhance the
quality and enjoyment of both personal and professional life, but there
is a danger of over complication and a need to be able to switch off, as
well as turn on, our PLE.
Web Identity: A significant component of a PLE is
the digital resources used to develop and share a web presence. Each of
us has a digital identity which we can easily glimpse a small piece of
by doing a Google search on our own name. Most educators will quickly
find a link to their institutional web identity. These are sites
maintained by their employer and at least provide an e-mail address for
contact, but are more useful when they provide links to CVs, courses
taught, interests and areas of expertise.
Further digging in the search engine often finds data on personal
identity, including references to activities on community group sites,
in local newspapers, newsletters, profiles on social network sites, such
as Facebook or LinkedIn, and a host of other references and links.
There is very considerable evidence that this web identity is one of
the most important components of a person’s social capital. A
significant and positive web presence opens individuals to both planned
and serendipitous connections with others.
Connectivist Learning: Teaching from both
constructivist and connectivist learning theory implies teachers and
learners actively communicate, share, and demonstrate their learning.
PLEs thrive in connectivist contexts where the focus is on developing
learning networks consisting of both content (artifacts) and people. PLE
serves as the production engine through which content and learning
activities are selected and developed, communication with learners and
colleagues initiated and sustained, and archival records collected and
organized.
Choosing the Tools: The choice of PLE tools is based
on individual preferences and experiences as well as the course
content, learning objectives and the teaching philosophy of the teacher.
Student PLEs for Learning
In our role as teachers, we need not only to build and effectively
use our own PLEs, but we should also be helping students to create their
own PLEs. The speed of technological induced change makes it very
obvious that students need to be lifelong learners with the capacity and
confidence to search, learn, manage, and create their own digital
learning environments. By doing so, students take control and ownership
of their own learning and the tools that support it.
One useful strategy is to introduce at least one new digital tool in
each course. This can range ranged from blogs and wikis, to podcasts,
concept mapping, threaded voice discussions, bibliographic tools,
graphics and mapping tools, survey and analysis tools and many more.
The introduction of the tool begins with a demonstration of its
potential, but also with words of warning that the tool will not be
perfect, may require overcoming a frustrating learning curve, and may
eventually not produce the desired results. Even if the tool does not
find a place in each student’s PLE, the active investigation and
subsequent reflection on its attributes, defects, and the learning
experience of usage provide invaluable lifelong learning lessons.
PLEs develop and grow throughout one’s life and early exposure to
both successful mastery and critical rejection of the tools are
meaningful educational outcomes in any course of study.
User Control of PLEs
Both students and teachers are interested in the efficacy, ease of
use and access to tools they want, often moving beyond uses intended by
their developers. This capacity for users to evolve applications for
tools is perhaps the greatest potential benefit of their PLE.
The potential of the PLE to serve both current and future learning
and performance needs far exceeds that of the LMS. LMS tools are
designed with great attention to the existing work patterns of their
intended users – PLEs are designed by their owners to easily morph into
whatever task, challenge or opportunity arises.
Looking at the Three Pillars of Educational Technology
To summarize, the effective 21st century faculty member or instructor:
- Is able to skillfully use the secure and institutionally protected LMS system at their college or university to provide structured formal teaching and assessment.
- Is able and willing to augment their courses with appropriate social networking that expands the learning context to new places and new participants, as well as scales the temporal boundaries of a single term of study.
- Has a well-developed, yet continually changing, PLE by which they create high quality content, communicate effectively in multiple media and build their personal and professional social capital.
Teachers demonstrate this capacity through their own web
presence, in the effective production, selection and maintenance of
content and in the learning outcomes achieved by their students as they
create and utilize their own PLEs.
Reference
Anderson, T. (2016,
Oct. 24). Three Pillars of Educational Technology: Learning Management
Systems, Social Media, and Personal Learning Environments Part 3. Retrieved
Jan. 05, 2017, from http://teachonline.ca/tools-trends/how-use-technology-effectively/three-pillars-educational-technology/three-pillars-educational-technology-learning-management-systems-social-media-part3
available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International
License.
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