共同创造未来

Sasha Stubbs, Binh Nguyen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在 COVID-19 大流行期间,在越南的一家澳大利亚境外机构建立一个新的学习设计团队面临着独特的挑战。在越南传统的、以教师为中心的教育环境中(Pham & Ho, 2020; Yao & Collins, 2019),对紧急远程教学(主要涉及将面对面教学转移到在线网络研讨会)的不满持续存在(Turnbull, Chugh, & Luck, 2021),以及对有意采用混合式教学方法的有限接触(Maheshwari, 2021; Le, Allen, & Johnson, 2022; Pham, Lai, & Nguyen, 2021),使得这项任务极具挑战性。本报告记录了我们在这一充满挑战的环境中建立学习设计团队和实施混合式学习方法的经验。 面对激发兴趣和改变实践的挑战,我们从 2021 年开始,与一位新招聘的学习设计师和三位早期采用的教师一起,采用迭代式共同设计模式,支持参与式协作方法,以增强整体学习体验(Huber & Jacka 2022;Wilson, Huber, & Bryant, 2021)。这种方法使我们能够支持教师的专业发展,建立设计模式,实施新的异步、互动、社交工具,并积累有关混合式和在线方法的知识,使教师摆脱现有的依赖教师的模式(Pham、Lai 和 Nguyen,2021 年),将 LMS 作为资源库(Pham 和 Ho,2020 年;Washington,2019 年),转而设计主动的、有目的的学习序列,将异步和同步学习联系起来。 这三门初始课程被用来向高级利益相关者展示我们的方法,并获得他们的支持。一年之内,随着口碑的传播,对我们服务的需求成倍增长,混合式课程已超过 70 门。受欢迎的直接结果是,要满足每所学校的需求,就必须提供量身定制的支持,以扩大规模,并将我们的团队从 1 人扩大到 8 人。然而,有限的本地专业知识在指数级的需求中造成了障碍,需要广泛的在职培训和创造性的资源配置(Heggart & Dickson-Deane, 2022)。 虽然早期旨在解决规模问题的通用研讨会引起了人们的兴趣,但它们缺乏实际意义。开发量身定制的支持产品可满足学校和项目的具体需求,并有助于满足日益增长的需求。我们与学术界持续保持的代码设计关系,对于学术界转向更加以学生为中心的混合模式,让学生掌握更多的学习自主权至关重要(Davis & Fill,2007 年)。 作为补充和关键点,我们创建了一个多功能 Canvas 网站,展示我们的设计原则、工具和示范课程的样本模块。这种自定进度的资源可以让利益相关者根据自己的条件参与进来,在激发兴趣的同时,还能教育新的学习设计者和学者。我们利用该网站开展展示会、咨询和活动,并定期更新,以突出团队确定的需要额外支持和关注的方法和设计原则。 通过代码设计关系、展示价值的范例和量身定制的支持,学习设计团队成功地提高了人们的意识和热情,推动了机构变革(McInnes, Aitchison, & Sloot, 2020, Taylor & Newton, 2013),朝着积极的、以学习者为中心的混合式方法迈进。在本演讲中,我们将分享具体的策略、工具和经验教训,这些策略、工具和经验教训使我们的团队能够促进利益相关者的认同,并有效地扩大规模。通过记录我们在障碍中建立意识的历程中的重要经验和见解,我们旨在启发创新解决方案,使其他人能够在具有挑战性的条件下在他们的机构中成功实施以学习者为中心的教学法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Co-Creating the Future
Establishing a new learning design team at an offshore Australian institution in Vietnam midst the COVID-19 pandemic presented unique challenges. Lingering dissatisfaction with emergency remote teaching which primarily involved moving face to face teaching to online webinars (Turnbull, Chugh, & Luck, 2021) and limited exposure to intentional blended approaches (Maheshwari 2021; Le, Allen, & Johnson, 2022; Pham, Lai, & Nguyen, 2021) within the traditional, teacher-centered educational landscape of Vietnam (Pham & Ho, 2020; Yao & Collins, 2019) made this an extremely challenging task. This pecha-kucha documents our experiences establishing a learning design team and implementing a blended learning approach within this challenging context.    Facing the challenge of generating interest and changing practice, we began in 2021, with one newly recruited learning designer and three early adopter faculty by using an iterative co-design model to support a participatory, collaborative approach to enhancing the overall learning experience (Huber & Jacka 2022; Wilson, Huber, & Bryant, 2021). This approach allowed us to support faculty professional development, establish design patterns, implement new asynchronous, interactive, social tools, and build knowledge about blended and online approaches, moving faculty away from the existing teacher dependent model (Pham, Lai, & Nguyen, 2021) with LMS as repository (Pham & Ho, 2020; Washington, 2019) to designing active, purposeful learning sequences connecting asynchronous and synchronous learning.    These three initial courses were used to showcase our approach to senior stakeholders and secure buy in. Within one year, as positive word of mouth spread, demand for our services grew exponentially, to over 70 blended courses. As a direct result of this popularity, meeting each school's needs required tailoring support to scale up as well as expanding our team from 1 to 8 members. However, limited local expertise created hurdles amidst exponential demand, needing extensive on-the-job training and creative resourcing (Heggart & Dickson-Deane, 2022).   While early generic workshops designed to address scale generated interest, they lacked practical relevance. Developing tailored support offerings addressed the specific needs of schools and programs and facilitated meeting the increased demand. Our ongoing codesign relationships with academics were crucial for moving academics to a more student-centered blended model with students taking more ownership of learning (Davis & Fill, 2007). As a complement and key focal point, we created a multipurpose Canvas site showcasing our design principles, tools, and sample modules from exemplar courses. This self-paced resource engaged stakeholders on their own terms, sparking interest while concurrently educating new learning designers and academics. We leveraged the site for showcase sessions, consultations, and events, updating it regularly to highlight approaches and design principles identified by the team as requiring extra support and attention. Through codesign relationships, exemplars showcasing value and tailored support, the learning design team successfully created awareness and enthusiasm to drive institutional change (McInnes, Aitchison, & Sloot, 2020, Taylor & Newton, 2013) toward an active, learner-centered blended approach. In this presentation, we will share specific strategies, tools, and lessons learned that equipped our team to foster stakeholder buy-in and scale up effectively. By documenting critical experiences and insights from our journey establishing awareness amidst obstacles, we aim to inspire innovative solutions so that others may successfully implement learner-centered pedagogies at their institutions under challenging conditions.
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