virtual and distance experiments: pedagogical alternatives, not logistical alternatives

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Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives Dr Euan Lindsay Dept Mechanical Engineering Curtin University of Technology

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Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives. Dr Euan Lindsay Dept Mechanical Engineering Curtin University of Technology. Three Themes in Remote Labs. Technical Political Pedagogical. The Purpose of Laboratory Classes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical

Alternatives

Dr Euan LindsayDept Mechanical Engineering

Curtin University of Technology

Page 2: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Three Themes in Remote Labs

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 3: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

The Purpose of Laboratory Classes

• Some analysis in the literature– Fiesel & Rosa 2005– Scanlon et al 2002– Antsaklis et al 1999

• Many good reasons– Why do *you* have laboratory

classes?

Page 4: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Why do *you* have labs?

Page 5: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Four underlying themes

• Illustrating and validating analytical concepts

• Introducing students to professional practice, and to the uncertainties involved in non-ideal situations

• Developing skills with instrumentation

• Developing social and teamwork skills in a technical environment

Page 6: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

There are some downsides:

• Expensive to run• Difficult to schedule• Safety issues• Space requirements – need a

laboratory• Require physical attendance

Page 7: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Alternative Modes for Laboratories

• Remote Access– Hardware can be anywhere– Safety issues are reduced– Don’t need room around the

equipment– Asynchronous access

• Simulation Access– No hardware at all

Page 8: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Which Motivates the Technical

• From the logistical

• Can we control this equipment remotely?

• Can we teach our students online?

Page 9: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Three Themes in Remote Labs

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 10: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

The Answer is yes

• Standard industrial practice these days– Nobody manually moves valves in a

Siberian Oil Refinery

• First reported in Academia in 1996 – Aktan et al– “Second Best to Being There”

Page 11: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Types of Technical Approaches

• Remote Desktop - Commercial Software• Thick Client - Server • Web Services - Browser-based with

Plug-ins• Hybrid - UTS - control via remote

desktop, output viewer via browser

Page 12: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Capacity Planning• When are experiments done?

2PM: 6.012 exercise out

(75 students)

4PM: 6.720J/3.43J exercise out (25 students)

2PM: 6.012 exercise due

4PM: 6.720J/3.43J exercise due

[Oct. 13-20, 2000]

Page 13: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Access control

• The big difference between the industrial and the academic context– Who can access the equipment?– For how long?– Do you queue for access, or book a

time in advance?

Page 14: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

So we have …

• Systems built for peak use– Most of the capacity is never used

• Systems for controlling and scheduling access

• A need to validate the investment in the equipment

• Colleagues excited by what we’ve achieved

LET’S SHARE LABS

Page 15: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Three Themes in Remote Labs

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 16: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Political

• At the first glance, sharing remote labs is a great idea– Provides access to new equipment– Provides wider visibility for what we

have done– Inter/Multi/Trans-whatever

collaboration

Page 17: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

But it’s not that simple

• Penalizing the Altruist– You’re willing to share your lab, but not your

time!

• Reputation– Can we be seen to be using their

equipment?

Page 18: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

And of course…

• Who pays for it?– Access costs– Maintenance

Costs– Repair Costs

• Up front costs as a project are often ok, but it’s the ongoing costs that are difficult

$$

Page 19: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

But Back to our List:

• Where does any of this fit with why we actually have labs?

Page 20: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Three Themes in Remote Labs

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 21: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Pedagogical Issues

• We’re designing and building a learning experience for our students

• Why a laboratory? Why a remote laboratory?

Page 22: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Proximal labs

Page 23: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Remote Labs

Page 24: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Virtual Labs

Page 25: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Two Necessary Ingredients:

• Separation– Physical separation in remote labs– Psychological separation in virtual

labs

• Technology-Mediated Interface– Usually some kind of computer GUI

Page 26: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Equivalency?

=

+

=

+

Page 27: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Literature from elsewhere suggests perhaps no

• Distance Education literature says separation causes changes

• Technology in Education literature says interfaces cause changes

Page 28: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

The Value of Laboratory Classes…

…is that they’re different

• Different objectives• Different methods• Different experiences

Now We Have A Different Kind of Different

Page 29: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

So What Kind of Differences?

• Student happiness• Student assessment outcomes• Student learning outcomes• Students’ perceptions of learning

outcomes

Page 30: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Student Happiness

• Everyone reports that the students really like it

“whenever I tell someone that I can control cylinders in Sydney from my couch in Perth, people are

amazed”

Page 31: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

But why are they happy?

• Novelty?• Hawthorne Effect?• Relaxed Scheduling Constraints?

– Flexible start time or flexible end time?

• Increased access?– Personal access rather than

“passenger” in a group

Page 32: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Student Assessment Outcomes

• The marks stay much the same– But they are different marks

Effect Sizes

-0.80

-0.60

-0.40

-0.20

0.00

0.20

0.40

0.60

0.80

1.00

Eff

ec

t S

ize

(std

de

vs

)

S - P

R - P

S - P -0.26 -0.10 -0.20 -0.42 0.80 0.13 -0.64 -0.10

R - P 0.08 0.04 0.25 -0.04 0.88 0.50 0.09 0.26

out_A out_B out_C out_D out_E out_F out_G out_H

Page 33: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Student Learning Outcomes

• Students are more reflective in the remote mode– Amplification / filtering?

• Better able to handle unexpected data– And the consequences of that data

• Still understand physical meanings of their data– Something that gets lost in simulations

Page 34: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Perceptions of Learning outcomes

• Students have different expectations of the different access modes– Sometime explicit, sometimes implicit

• Students engage differently in the different modes

• Very similar experiences can lead to very different perceptions

Page 35: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Perceptions of Objectives

Page 36: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Perceptions of Outcomes

Mostly the sameNo significant differences

Page 37: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Objectives vs Outcomes

Page 38: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

One cross-theme topic:

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 39: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Transparency is Important

• Students must focus upon the equipment, not on the interface

• All the gains from remote labs go away if the interface is opaque

• The laboratory must still be real

• How real is real enough?

Page 40: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Establishment reality vs maintenance reality

• Different levels of reality are needed for different users– Novices need to establish reality– Regular users need to maintain reality– Expert users need neither

Page 41: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Three Themes in Remote Labs

•Technical

•Political

•Pedagogical

Page 42: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

So What Does It All Mean?

• The different access modes are significantly different learning experiences, and the students construct significantly different outcomes – outcomes that will be the prior knowledge for their future learning.

• The modes are not simply interchangeable

Page 43: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Not Equivalent

≠+

≠+

Page 44: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Two Consequences

• If the mode is fixed, then compensate for the deficiencies– Reconcile objectives with outcomes,

remote need transparency, simulation need reminders of reality

• If the mode is free, choose the mode that emphasises the desired outcomes– Non-proximal promote exception

handling, simulations will promote focus on theory

Page 45: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

YOU STILL NEED

REAL LABS

Page 46: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Where Next?

Page 47: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

www.labshare.edu.au

Page 48: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Where next? - Research Directions

• The Nature of Interactions– Student-Equipment, Student-

Demonstrator, Student-Student– Seeking information, seeking

confirmation– What it is about the supervision that

makes the supervision valuable? About the group context?

• Intelligent tutoring systems

Page 49: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Research Directions (contd)

• Establishment Reality vs Maintenance Reality

• Using Game Engines– eg 2nd Life

• Hybrid Laboratories– Why stick to one mode when they

achieve different things?• Use the right laboratory for the

right outcomes

Page 50: Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical Alternatives

Virtual and Distance Experiments: Pedagogical Alternatives, not Logistical

Alternatives