digital pedagogy for non-traditional students

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Photo by flickr user jenny downing Digital Pedagogy for non-traditional students

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The goal of this presentation is to spark conversation, debate, and collaboration around digital, hybrid, and critical pedagogies. Discussions of online learning are crucial to non-traditional students, adult students, and lifelong learners. Rather than simply transplanting the Lego castle of education from one platform to another, from on-ground to online, we need to start dismantling it piece by piece, all the while examining the pieces and how they fit together. Only then can we reassemble the pieces thoughtfully inside the digital environment. The text of the presentation can be found at bit.ly/UWdigped

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Photo by flickr user jenny downing

Digital Pedagogyfor non-traditional students

Page 2: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Jesse Stommel@Jessifer

You can also follow Mary the Dog @MLAdog

Page 5: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Digital pedagogy is not a path through the woods. It’s a compass (one that often takes several people working in concert to use).

Photo by flickr user seier+seier

Page 6: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

PraxisPedagogy is the place where philosophy and practice meet.

Photo by flickr user henry grey

Page 7: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

“Unless the mass of workers are to be blind cogs and pinions in the apparatus they employ, they must have some understanding of the

physical and social facts behind and ahead of the material and appliances with which they are dealing.”

John Dewey, Schools of To-Morrow

Photo by flickr user Thomas Hawk

Page 8: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

We need to handle our technologies roughly -- to think critically about our tools, how we use them, and who has access to them.

Page 9: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Confusing technological tools with digital pedagogy is like sitting down to write an essay with pencil and paper

and becoming distracted by ruminations about the nature of No. 2 pencils and looseleaf paper.

Photo by flickr user mugfaker

Page 10: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

“Everything we do is multitasking.”~ Cathy N. Davidson

Photo by flickr user JD Hancock

Page 11: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Photo by flickr user Lotus Carroll

the glue that holds education together

Page 12: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Rather than simply transplanting the Lego castle of education from one platform to another, from on-ground to online, we

need to start dismantling it piece by piece, all the while examining the pieces and how they fit together.

Photo by flickr user kennymatic

Page 13: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

all learning is necessarily hybrid

Page 14: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Hybrid pedagogy does not just describe an easy mixing of on-ground and online learning, but is about bringing the sorts of learning that

happen in a physical place and the sorts of learning that happen in a virtual place into a more engaged and dynamic conversation.

Photo by flickr user orangeacid

Page 15: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

When we teach online, we have to build both the course and the classroom.

Photo by flickr user anieto2k

Page 16: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

“In the world of digitally networked publics, online participation -- if you know how to do it -- can translate into real power. Participation,

however, is a kind of power that only works if you share it with others”~ Howard Rheingold, Net Smart

Photo by flickr user Ghetu Daniel

Page 18: Digital Pedagogy for Non-traditional Students

Photo by flickr user jared

Additional Resources

A Bill of Rights and Principles for Learning in the Digital Age

Cathy Davidson, Now You See It

Kenneth Goldsmith, Uncreative Writing: Managing Language in the Digital Age

Sean Michael Morris and Jesse Stommel, “The Discussion Forum is Dead; Long Live the Discussion Forum”

Pete Rorabaugh, “Occupy the Digital: Critical Pedagogy and New Media”

Jesse Stommel, “How to Build an Ethical Online Course”

Jesse Stommel, “Online Learning: a Manifesto”

Jesse Stommel, “The Twitter Essay”

A Vision of Students Today