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October 11, 2015

I blog therefore I'm spammed

Some of the spam comments posted to my blog are amusing. Others are simply baffling. They aren't quite as pathetic as the son of a Nigerian former finance minister who has millions of dollars to deposit into your bank account, and requests your banking details, but I think they're amusing enough to be given a wider audience. They are almost always posted by 'Anonymous' which seems quite a common name for those sad individuals who spend their time trying to promote their lacklustre or spurious website links on the back of someone else's success.

Maybe Anonymous is one person. If so, he is incredibly industrious, because I receive at least a dozen spam comments every day from him. I'm glad I decided to moderate all comments so they don't just automatically appear on my blog. Anonymous invariably posts inept and unintentionally funny comments (around a hidden website address) in the hope that I will believe that Anonymous is a genuine reader, and will then be convinced to allow them through the net. Here's one of Anonymous's recent offerings that would give Lewis Carroll's nonsense writing a run for its money:

Truly no matter if someone doesn't know then its up to other viewers that they will help, so here it takes place. 


Er... yeah, right. Fathom that one out. Other spam comments from Anonymous offer fake flattery in the hope that you think they are commenting positively on your blog post. One or two turn out to be quite ironic:

I do believe all of the ideas you have offered for your post. They are very convincing and can certainly work. Nonetheless, the posts are too brief for novices. May just you please extend them a bit from next time? Thank you for the post. 

That from someone trying to tout a website selling diet pills. Reductio ad absurdum. The next one also offers some cheap flattery, but falls very wide of the mark:

Hurrah, that's what I was seeking for, what a information! present here at this weblog, thanks admin of this sight. 

This spammer is trying to get me to post their website selling customised T-Shirts. Hopefully, the spelling and grammar they print on their shirts is a little less error strewn. Oh boy, can it get any better? It certainly can... with this obscure beauty:

What a stuff of un-ambiguity and preserveness of precious know-how on the topic of unexpected feelings. 

I think that was a compliment, but whatever the sentiments his website is not being published on my blog. Thank you Anonymous for your entertaining and, at times, baffling comments. I laughed until I stopped.

Photo by Freezelight on Flickr

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I blog therefore I'm spammed by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


October 04, 2015

The #twistedpair list

The #twistedpair blogging challenge asks you to put together an unlikely pairing of characters - these can be historical, contemporary or fictional - and write about the connection they have (however tenuous) and how it relates to teaching and learning. Here is the original challenge. You can use any of the pairings listed there or create a strange pair of your own.

So, what is the thinking behind this challenge?

Going through the process of thinking about this should involve a lot of creative, lateral thinking, and the end result will be a unique perspective on education - on a blog post which we can all enjoy reading and learning from. If we try this out ourselves, perhaps we can adapt this and similar ideas to promote good writing skills for our students too!

Below is a growing list of all the awesome, thought provoking blogs that people are publishing as their responses to the #twistedpair challenge. Join in!

Maha Bali - Audrey Watters meets Doc McStuffins
Niall Barr - Walter Bright, Professor Branestawm and me (Walter Bright // Prof Branestawm)
Sue Beckingham - Enquire within upon everything (Pablo Picasso // Sir Tim Berners-Lee)
Chris Betcher - Twisted pair (Pablo Picasso // Sir Tim Berners-Lee)
Steve Brophy - Know thy context
Amy Burvall - Madonna meets McLuhan (Madonna // Marshall McLuhan)
Amy Burvall - Twisted Pairs (The Beatles // Alfred Hitchcock)
Amy Burvall - Twisted Pairs: Pedagogy from the Unlikely
Amy Burvall - Leonardo Da Vinci meets Billie Holliday

Vanessa Camilleri - It's all about Spiderman and Paulo Freire

Lee Mark Davis - Of Grace and Mansbridge (W.G. Grace // Albert Mansbridge)
Debsnet - Coaching fields forever (Strawberry picking // coaching)
HJ DeWaard - What Dewey and Yoda reveal about learning (John Dewey // Yoda)
Charlene Doland - Downton Abbey and Frog and Toad

Terry Elliott - Epictetus and Mojo Nixon
Terry Elliott - A short ride on a fast hoverboard
Wendy Eiteljorg - Twisted Pair (5th graders // 12th graders)

Enoch Hale - Learning transformation or Chindogu?
Scott Haselwood - Doctor Who + Jack Sparrow + Leonardo da Vinci + Me
Sarah Honeychurch - Fools march in (Alexander Pope // Roobarb and Custard)
Sarah Honeychurch - Kicking down the cobblestones (Dave Cormier // The Red Queen)
Sarah Honeychurch - Blogging is a way of life (Mr Motivator // Steve Wheeler)
Sarah Honeychurch - Making an ass of you and me (Aristotle // Chicken Licken)
David Hopkins - Connor MacLeod and Wile E Coyote

Andrew Jacobs - Spoonful of sugar (Mary Poppins // Isambard Kingdom Brunel)

Gordon Lockhart - Connection not content (Hound of the Baskerville // MOOCow)

Richard Martin - Fork in the cat (Erwin Schrödinger // Jonny Wilkinson)

Laura Ritchie - The music lesson and the walnut tree

Tania Sheko - How Seinfeld and Maria Montessori influence me as an educator
Tania Sheko - #twistedpair for teacher PD (Slideshare)
Andrew Smith - How Monty Python and Albert Einstein inform my professional outlook (Albert Einstein // Monty Python)

Wendy Taleo - To twist or not to twist? That is the question (Deleuze and Guattari // Yuen et al)
Steve Turnbull - Talking gibberish - from nonsense to meaning in learning (Jack Bauer // Teletubbies)

Colin Warren - If at first you don't succeed... (Wile E Coyote // Sisyphus)
Sue Watling - Klimt and the Venus of Willendorf
Steve Wheeler - Danger illustrated (Socrates // Maria von Trapp)
Steve Wheeler - Einstein, Monty Python and lateral thinking
Steve Wheeler - I want to break free (Nelson Mandela // Jack Sparrow)
Noeline Wright - Heston Blumenthal and the research process

If you notice one that is missing, let me know in the comments section below, and I will add it to the list.

Photo by Greg Jordan on Flickr

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The #twistedpair list by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


Einstein, Monty Python and lateral thinking #twistedpair

The #twistedpair blogging challenge asks you to put together an unlikely pairing of characters - historical, contemporary or fictional - and write about a connection they have (however tenuous) and how it relates to learning. I hope that going through a process of thinking about connections between two seemingly unconnected characters will involve a lot of creative, lateral thinking, and that the end result will be a unique perspective on education from which we can all enjoy reading and learning.

Yesterday Sarah Honeychurch wrote a first blog post in response to the challenge and came up with Fools march in which is a brief but pithy reflection on professional practice and human impulsiveness using a tentative connection between Alexander Pope and the cartoon characters Roobarb and Custard (I love it!).

Andrew Smith swiftly followed up on my #twistedpair challenge with another strange pairing: How Monty Python and Albert Einstein inform my professional outlook just goes to prove my point that a lot of lateral thinking can be generated when we stretch our imagination a little. I created a whole bunch of other unlikely pairings in my initial blogpost. What kind of conversation might Tarzan have had with Jean Piaget? How might the love child of Marshall McLuhan and Madonna have turned out? Would Han Solo have been BFF with Queen Elizabeth I or would he have been beheaded? And what the heck has that to do with education?

Feel free to choose one of the unlikely pairs, or better still, make your own up, and join in with the fun and mayhem, as together we explore our professional practise through humour, imagery and creativity. I look forward to reading your #twistedpair blogs!

Photo source

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Einstein, Monty Python and lateral thinking #twistedpair by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


October 03, 2015

Twisted Pair #twistedpair

Are you up for another blogging challenge? If you accept this challenge, it should encourage you to write creatively, and you'll end up sharing a new idea with a large audience.

It's happened before: you might remember the #blimage and #blideo challenges from the summer. The first was a challenge where you were sent an image to inspire you to write about learning. The second was the same idea, but with a video.

Many of those who participated said it caused them to think more deeply and creatively about how they teach or learn. Some remarked that they had discovered new bloggers they didn't know existed, and many reported that their blog traffic had increased significantly. It was a win-win for everyone who took part.

So here's my idea. It's called twisted pair. After my post from yesterday about how Socrates and Julie Andrews (a strange pairing indeed) influenced my teaching, I got to wondering. Are there any other strange (twisted) pairs that would inspire people to write thoughtful blog posts on education and learning? Well, if anyone is up for this challenge, here are a few very strange pairings to get you going. I bet you can think of loads more.

Batman and John Dewey
Michaelangelo and you
Paulo Freire and the Hunchback of Notre Dame
Eddie Izzard and Pavlov's dogs
Jack Sparrow and Nelson Mandela
Pablo Picasso and Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Micky Mouse and Adolf Hitler
Han Solo and Queen Elizabeth I
William Shakespeare and Buzz Lightyear
Marshall MacLuhan and Madonna
Tarzan and Jean Piaget
Paddington Bear and Barack Obama
Jean Jacques Rousseau and the Easter Bunny
Walt Disney and the Grim Reaper
Sir Winston Churchill and the entire cast of Frozen
Doctor Who and Snoopy
Jack Bauer and the Teletubbies
Mr Spock and Margaret Thatcher

Go on - I dare you. Choose a strange pairing from above (or make up one of your own, the weirder the better). Let your imagination run wild, go very slightly unhinged and dig deep into your knowledge of those characters. Some of the connections may be tenuous. That's part of the fun.  Come up with an inspirational, satirical or thought provoking blog post about teaching and learning. Share it and include the tag #twistedpair. Don't forget to also challenge at least three other people. I'm gathering responses together on this page so they are all together in one place. Up for the challenge? So, let's twist again, like we did last summer...

Photo by Baran Ivo on Wikimedia Commons

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Twisted Pair #twistedpair by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


Danger illustrated

Students often struggle with critical thinking. They are great at description, but ask them to move beyond this into critical analysis and they look at you and shrug. And yet critical thinking is a vital graduate skill that once acquired, can be applied to all aspects of life.

Recently I have been teaching a research skills module to a whole year group of third year education undergraduates. The time came to address critical thinking, and I thought long and hard about the best way to help them to learn.

There are some great exemplars of effective education from across the ages. Think of Socrates with his constant questioning, or the great educator Comenius with his naturalistic approach to learning by 'obtaining knowledge through objects rather than words'. Then there was Maria von Trapp (played by Julie Andrews in the movie musical The Sound of Music. Look, I'm being serious here - kind of). She used a combination of sounds, imagery and mnemonics to teach the children to sing. She could have taught them to sing anything using this method - even Firestarter.

I brought all these ideas together to teach critical thinking this week. I illustrated my teaching with a simple plastic bottle of water. I asked my students to describe it. 'It's transparent', 'It's made of plastic', and 'It holds water' were perfect answers. These are superficial qualities to the bottle of water, but they don't really tell us much more about it. It's dangerous to accept something at face value without examining it in depth.

So, I made the illustration a little more difficult. I asked them to analyse the bottle of water. Now, there are many ways you can do this. You could chemically analyse the contents for example. Or you could simply trust the manufacturer and read the contents label on the side to see what levels of calcium, sodium or magnesium were present. You could also analyse the shape of the bottle - its design - and the affordance of the bottle top and whether it allowed you to twist or flip the bottle open.

The next stage is one that most students struggle with. How do we critically analyse the bottle of water? After a lot of thinking, several ideas were ventured including 'the water is almost gone, therefore the owner might have been thirsty', and 'the design of this bottle isn't as good as another brand I usually buy.' In essence the students were speculating based on their analysis of the bottle, and were also beginning to evaluate the worth of the bottle. They could have gone further and evaluated its worth in terms of value for money, or its health benefits in comparison to other popular drinks. They may have discussed the history of bottle water, its cultural impact, or even debated the plastic bottle in terms of how easy it would be to recycle its component parts. In fact, when you get to the critical analysis and the evaluation stages of thinking, there are endless possibilities. Let's hope the students make the connection to their education studies.

Photo from various sources to numerous to list here

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Danger illustrated by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 30, 2015

Open warfare #eden15

It was good to sit Martin Weller in the hot seat recently, for a forthright discussion about various aspects of openness in education. Martin is well known for his work around digital scholarship and his various research into the use of MOOCs and other open education approaches at the British Open University. I caught up with him in Barcelona at the 2015 summer EDEN Conference, where he had just given a keynote speech entitled 'The Battle for Open.' I originally interviewed him via text for this blog post ahead of conference, so many were already aware of what he would be saying. Subsequently, I also posted a live blog of his speech as he stepped off the stage at the event. The video of his keynote will be made available soon on this site, but below is some additional content in the form of the video interview.

The key premise of Martin's presentation was that although openness is now more mainstream and accepted in education than it was previously, there are still small battles to decide the direction and development of openness in the coming years. I asked him about the future of MOOCs and other open courses, and we also discussed the concept of open scholarship. These, and several other related topics made this encounter into what I hope you will agree, is an engaging and thought provoking interview about the importance of open education, and the critical role open content, open courses and open scholarship will play in shaping the future.


Video produced by the European Distance and Elearning Network

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Open warfare by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 28, 2015

Uneducation of a technologist #eden15

Once in a while you meet someone who inspires you to think more deeply. Jim Groom is one such person. He is anarchic, subversive, the original EDUPUNK (it was Jim who coined the phrase and insists on it being written in upper case) and he constantly challenges the status quo of education. He has redefined what it means to learn online with groundbreaking initiatives such as the open course ds106. As a part of the run-up to EDEN's annual summer conference in Barcelona, I was invited to interview him. Jim and I had previously interacted only on Twitter and other social media so to put some questions to him directly was hugely enjoyable, and he gave me his fairly unique take on the world. And so it was with even greater pleasure and a lot of anticipation that I finally met him in the same physical space in June 2015, where he gave a keynote speech at the EDEN conference in Barcelona entitled 'The Uneducation of the Technologist'. I live blogged during his keynote speech and met him afterwards for a chat in the EDEN studio. Below is the video interview we recorded:



Video produced by the European Distance and Elearning Network

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Uneducation of a technologist by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 27, 2015

Punk learning

By 1977, punk music had emerged as a creative force to be reckoned with. It was a form of music that was furiously loud, aggressively energetic and full of discordant anger.

Some were outraged by the audacious behaviour of the punk rockers. Their clothes and hairstyles were bizarre and their demeanour was antagonistic and aggressive.

Others were energised and inspired by punk rock - some enough to take up a guitar or microphone and give it a go themselves. You see, at the heart of the punk movement was the belief that you could do-it-yourself. To release a record you didn't have to bow and scrape to the multi-national music publishers and labels.

Anyone could take part. Audiences and bands often merged. Many punk bands created their own labels and fanzines, promoting their music to new audiences by subverting the rules, challenging the established way of doing things and creating a new and vibrant culture of creativity.

Punks cared nothing for authority or tradition. The only thing they respected was authenticity. Essentially, punks spat in the face of 'the establishment' and went off to do things their own way.  



Punk learning (some would call it Edupunk) reflects that seventies music ethos. For some time, educators have been subverting established methods and turning their backs on institutional tools and technologies such as the managed learning environment (also known as LMS or VLE). I would argue that these are 'punk' educators, whether they realise it or not. Some educators have at some time openly identified themselves as edupunk, including Amy Burvall (who created a series of history teacher videos for YouTube), Jim Groom (pictured top, considered the originator of Edupunk) and Pam Nelmes (who has transformed communication across her large cohorts of nursing students and with the general public through creative use of social media).

Many punk educators are finding viable and for them, more acceptable alternatives to proprietary software, structured courses and closed journals, and instead are devoting their energy to creating new approaches including open software, open courses (including the original C-MOOCs) and open publishing with free tools. The C-MOOC or Connectivist Massive Open Online Course was a free at the point of delivery online learning experience with no limits to the numbers who participated, and where 'students' could choose how, where and when they learnt. Some of the early MOOCs also allowed students to choose their own preferred method of assessment, and spawned many creative outcomes such as global radio with #ds106.

There is also a lot of energy being directed into transforming the education experience. Some go as far as to argue that autodidacticism - or self-teaching - is an important part of contemporary learning. Learning by watching YouTube or participation in social media discussions are certainly methods that are gaining traction. For example, 2015 world champion Kenyan javelin thrower Julius Yego claims he owes his prowess to watching YouTube videos. Even professional teacher development through social media is gaining great impetus, evidenced by the large numbers of participants on education Twitter chats such as #edchat, #AussieEd and #ukedchat as well as global online events such as the Reform Symposium.



In this digital age some are changing their opinions about what we think education is and should be. Punk educators have a lot to do with this - it's not just the disruptive nature of social media and personal technologies. It's also the energy and commitment they have to making a difference in a new way. But punk educators need to be wary of a precedent. What happened to the original punk rock movement? It was compromised and commercialised - becoming the very thing it was trying to avoid in the first place. The contrast between the raw late-70s punk rock of The Clash and The Sex Pistols and the more polished post-punk (or 'new wave') commercial sounds of the early-80s from U2 and Blondie is stark.

Fast forward to today, and we see signs that the early dynamic MOOCs and other punk learning approaches are being adulterated. The recent offerings of the so called xMOOCs which use Coursera and other bespoke developed platforms is returning the MOOC to the traditional online delivery and it is now hard to tell the difference. But a hard core of punk educators remains who are determined to do things differently. Whatever pressures the commercial world throws at education, and whatever the criticism thrown at them by traditional educationalists, edupunks will still continue regardless, practising their own particular brands of pedagogical anarchy and will answer with a: 'WE DON'T CARE.'

Graphic image courtesy of Jim Groom

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Punk learning by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 25, 2015

A future

I was reminded this week exactly why I work in teacher education. It is incredibly rewarding. Our graduation ceremony on Plymouth Hoe yesterday saw not one, but two of my student teacher groups receive their degrees. The picture above is one of those two extraordinary groups of young people. They are a part of a larger group of digital literacy specialists - primary school teachers who specialise in technology supported learning. They have been with me for four years, developing their skills as educators and acquiring all the knowledge they need to go out and transform the learning of our children. They are all just as passionate as I am about learning, and each of them has a unique and creative perspective on how to use technologies to enrich and extend children's education.

With me in the picture from left to right, they are Charlotte Langslow, Matt Povey, Hannah Shelton, Megan Douglas, Chris Nesbitt, Charlotte Rice, Polly Short, Rebecca Legatt, Peter Tolley, Lloyd Chilcott and Adam Easterbrook. Missing from the picture are Kelly Holborrow and April Farrell-Langler. Each of these former students, now newly qualified teachers, have contributed significantly to knowledge already, with their regular blogging, video making and other activities related to education.

Take the example of the blog Learning to Teach by Megan Douglas which is a frank and honest running account of her time as a student teacher. Or read Hannah Shelton's account of her own journey to become a primary educator in her Life as a Trainee Teacher. Chris Nesbitt always wrote deeply thoughtful pieces, reflecting on his own learning and produced an exceptional piece of blogging for his assignment on psychological perspectives in education. Lloyd Chilcott has quite a presence on social media as can be seen here, and won the prize yesterday for the highest grade on his research project in digital literacy. I will miss the verbal sparring I enjoyed with others such as Peter Tolley, who always challenged and never stopped questioning. Along with other students in the group Polly Short was always very active in organising Teach Meets and other Education Society activities and fully deserves her first class honours degree. In fact, over half this group achieved first class degrees - something that is rare in any field of academic study. And I can't forget the brutally honest and wonderfully touching video Kelly Holborow created on her own digital identity - one that I have shown several times in my own presentations as an exemplar of student video autobiography (below).



I could go on, but I like to keep my blog posts short. I will miss this extraordinary group of young educators. I believe I have learnt as much from them as they have from me. I'm certain that each will go on to significantly impact their own particular corners of the education world. I hope to hear from one or two of them now and again to hear how they are progressing in their teaching careers, but I have no worries for any of them. They will all become great teachers. I will never forget how rewarding it has been to teach them during their time at Plymouth University, and I will treasure the immense sense of pride I felt yesterday as I watched each of them receive their awards.

Someone asked me yesterday what would be the collective noun for a group of newly qualified teachers. My response: 'A future'.

Photo: Steve Wheeler

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A future by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 21, 2015

Cut and thrust

I saw a thought provoking blog post this week. Posted on the BERA blog, Peter Ford made the argument that unless academics and educationalists engage with classroom teachers on social media, they are in danger of being consigned to the periphery. Ford's argument is that currently, much of the cut and thrust of educational practice is played out on Twitter, Facebook, in blogs and other public online spaces. Classroom teachers in their tens of thousands (this is no hyperbole) have a significant presence on social media sites, where pertinent discussion is published on a daily, or even hourly basis. This is especially true in regular chats such as #edtechchat, #flipclass and #edchat. The latter has many variants, including the #ukedchat British version and #edchatie for Irish educators, and are public discussion zones where any teacher who is interested can join in to share ideas and chew over the educational issues of the day. Many teachers also regularly blog their news, views, top tips and anecdotes for others to read and learn from. In these ways, informally, educators around the world are connecting and learning from each other in powerful ways, and all for free. How many academic educationalists do the same? Not many, says Peter Ford.

Peter Ford makes a compelling case for academic blogging and social media engagement, citing several high profile politicians who have cited teacher bloggers in their speeches or who follow them on Twitter. I know this is true from personal experience. My own blog has been cited by the Irish Education Minister, while another, the US Secretary of State for Education, Arne Duncan follows my personal Twitter account. This blog, and many like it are becoming first ports of call for information, the latest news, reviews and discussion groups. My own blog is well on its way to six million views (over 100,000 views each month), and there are others that can boast significantly more visits from readers. How does this compare to academic texts? Are peer reviewed journals as well read, or as dynamically responsive to their readership?

Reading between the lines, Peter Ford seems unrepentantly traditionalist in his allegiance, while I am a unashamedly a progressive educator in my thinking and my practice. It would not be easy to find a forum where our polemic views could gain equal time, but social media is one such place where this kind of debate can be hosted. Were we to hold such a debate we would not require a room or lecture hall, and there would be no need to invite an audience. The blogs themselves would be the room and the audience would be those who were connected through social media. Excluded from the discourse would be those academics and teachers who either refused to participate in social media discussions, or for whatever other reason, were unable to be involved.

The digitial divide is very real in academia and education. The 'haves' and the 'cans' are moving along at a pace, discussing and sharing and learning from an online community of practice. The 'have nots' and the 'cannots' are in Ford's words 'in danger of being sidelined'.

Photo by emaze.com

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Cut and thrust by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 16, 2015

A message to Auntie

Now and then, just to fall in step with other the tabloid press, BBC News resorts to sensationalist headlines. I'm not sure why they do it, because they already have a huge global audience and they don't need to hype themselves. But one of The BBC's most recent headlines is a little misleading.

Yesterday, 'Auntie' (the affectionate nickname we Brits give the BBC) ran this headline: Computers 'do not improve' pupil results says OECD.

Predictably, the somewhat negative spin in the article provoked a small storm of social media comments and TV interviews, while the anti-technology brigade gleefully rubbed their hands. Earlier, the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) had released the results of a survey on the use of technology in schools. Its director of education and skills Andreas Schleicher had said among other things that 'technology had raised too many false hopes.' The BBC article then went on to quote Tom Bennett who said: 'teachers have been dazzled by school computers.' Reading this, you might think the BBC was itself anti-technology in schools wouldn't you? But if you don't read the entire story and simply take in the headline and opening salvo, or fail to get to heart of the OECD report, you won't see the full picture.

Anyone who takes time to read through the OECD report summary will see that it is actually very positive about the use of technology in schools. It's certainly more positive than Auntie's article. It calls for new approaches to integrating technology into teaching, because at present technology use is not optimal.  It would be mindless to read this report and then simply dismiss technology as having no place in schools. What the report is actually saying is that technology is no substitute for good pedagogy. All teachers would agree with this. It also suggests that technology can be a distraction for students if it is poorly deployed. Again, there is no argument with this. Both conclusions tell us more about the pedagogy prevalent in schools than they do about the potential of technology.

The study reports that in schools where they use technology more, children's grades suffer. So technology prevents good grades? Care needs to be taken here. Far too many variables are unconsidered for us to make any firm conclusions about such statistics. To conclude that the more children use technology the lower their grades will be, is tenuous at best, and at worst absolutely misleading.

The bottom line is this - if used appropriately, technology can, and often does make learning more engaging, and it has the potential to transform educational environments. Schleicher has gone on record to say this in recent TV interviews. The key word is 'appropriately'. The crux of the matter is that many schools have yet to find ways to embed technology. In the words of Andreas Schleicher himself: 'Technology can amplify great teaching, but just doesn't replace poor teaching.'

I have a message to Auntie: Please don't use sensationalist headlines to hype your news articles. Simply tell it like it is. We will respect you more if you do.

Related posts:

Mobile phones and iPads hamper learning!! by Neil Atkin
Pedagogy first, technology second by Steve Wheeler
Tech doesn't improve student results study: Why news reports like this are damaging by Claire Amos

Photo by Edward on Wikimedia Commons

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A message to Auntie by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 15, 2015

Photo finish

It was a pleasure to spend some time with Jonathan Worth following his ALT-C keynote in Manchester last week. We got on just fine because we discovered that we have a lot in common, not least of which was that we both did formal training as photographers, in the pre-digital age. And so we took time reminiscing over all the tasks we needed to perform as we learnt photography in the studio and the darkroom to produce our work and remarked on how much more involved and difficult it was to make images then than it is today. The skills we had to acquire back in the day were different to the skills now required to manipulate and produce photographs in the digital age.

I recalled my first time in the darkroom, about 3 days into my photography course. I had already been out that morning capturing my images. I had then processed my 35mm black and white FP4 film and had dried it. Using a light-box, I then carefully selected a negative to print, and used an enlarger to expose a 10 x 8 sheet of photosensitive paper. The magic moment occurred for me when with tongs, I submerged the exposed paper in a shallow tank of developer fluid and gently agitated it. For a few seconds nothing happened, and then slowly, as if by magic, I saw an image begin to appear on the paper. It really did feel magical. Within minutes the image was fully developed, and I placed the paper in the fixing fluid.

I had discovered the power of images, and also the secrets behind how they were made. I had produced my first photograph, and it was all my own work. It was a huge sense of achievement, and I had been involved at every step of the creative process, from start to finish. I shared my memory of this with Jonathan, and he agreed with me that producing his first photographic image in the darkroom was a magical moment for him too.

Although time has moved on, and we are now in an age where one click of a button will produce a high resolution, full colour digital photograph on your smartphone, there is still something very special about the longer process by which we used to create our images. It took time, effort and a lot of forethought to get those images. Sometimes it went wrong, and we had to start again. But this was part of the old school charm of developing your film and printing your images yourself. You understood how images were made. You played a part in the creation of those artefacts. Some photographers still adhere to these old way of creating images. Many others rely on digital image making, where the art comes in the composition, cropping, and digital manipulation of the image using Photoshop and other software.  

Whichever way we learn, whether it is photography, or some other skill, being involved in the creative process retains its magic and is hugely important for the learning experience. Learning by making is again becoming something we consider to be very powerful. In fact in never really went away. The rise in popularity of maker spaces and fab labs is an indication of its importance in today's learning. Making, creating, fixing and designing are all processes we need for education now and in the future. With them, we can turn our hands to just about anything.

Photo by Vladimir Agafonkin on Flickr

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Photo finish by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 14, 2015

All our yesterdays

Kenneth Wheeler (aged about 8 years old in 1936) with his mother
Don't ever tell me that technology is only for the young. About four years ago I introduced my Dad to Facebook. Now aged 87, at first he struggled to get to grips with it, just as he had done when we gave him a mobile phone ("It's all gone dead, boy..." - "Yes it will, Dad. You need to make sure you keep recharging the battery").

Yet once he gained an understanding of the concept of social networks - that he could find and connect people he knew, and send them messages and photographs and share links, instantly, no matter where they were in the world - he was in like Flint.

He started out on an old laptop, but then one of the family bought him a mini iPad. Now there is no stopping him. He is prolific, sharing links he discovers, commenting on other people's status updates, and has also been blogging daily on Facebook for the last few months with over 90 posts to date.

If you read his posts, you will feel the sense of wonder he experiences when he uses Facebook. Here is a man who was born and raised between the first and second world wars, in a time where telephones and television were uncommon, and newspapers and radio were the main mediums of public communication. Mail would take days or even weeks to arrive at its destination. He served for 32 years in the armed forces, where being sent to any part of the world would take days or even weeks.

He called me over to his house not so long ago to ask what the '47K' meant below his most recent status update. I took a look at his account. He had replied to a mainstream Facebook discussion, and had received over 47,000 likes in less than 24 hours! (I was secretly jealous of his overnight success). Here's his own account of this:
"....some time ago I saw a story about a couple that had been married for 63 years and died with in a few hours of each other, I happened to say that my Wife and I had also been married for the same amount of time, I had loads of replies I asked my Son Steve, what was the K by the numbers, he told me it meant thousands, and there really was thousands of replies, I had only just started on my computer then, I have to admit I have not improve a great deal since ,still only typing with two fingers so it take a time, but I have plenty of that these days."
He speculates on the future, because his dalliance with technology has made him aware of the many possibilities that are opening up to us all. He is amazed at the progress he has seen and expresses it evocatively:
"I felt such a kick out of hearing from all over the world,that has grown smaller with the internet ,and is in almost every home in the world, this has put the world in easy reach to any one and every one, when I was on my first troop ship it took us 11 days to get to Egypt, now we can get to New Zealand and back again in that time, with a few days rest in between. What is going to happen next?"
Dad with Mum recently at a family wedding
Dad is not a 'silver surfer' in the way that dreadful, condescending term implies. Like many others who are in their mature years, Dad is a walking history book who happens to have discovered another tool for communication.

Those like him who venture into a potentially bewildering high tech world such as social networking, should be considered real treasures of our society. We can all learn a lot from their experiences, their triumphs and failures, their eye witness accounts of history - and when they share their lives online for us, we are greatly enriched.

So, long may Dad, and many others just like him be encouraged to continue sharing their wisdom with us online. Write them a brief comment or simply 'like' their posts when you find them. This is what Dad posted when he came home yesterday and saw the responses to his latest post:
"I have been blown away at the response of people that answered my blog this morning, when I got back from Church I had a quick look and almost fell over in shock, I thought only a few were reading it, but in the end it was over 500 that is fantastic, I am so pleased to have comments and all of it was kind and pleasing to read, I have to say it made me well up for a while, it was so unexpected. And from all over the world too I have already said how I am amazed at the fact I can write a message on FB and get an answer back in a split second, from out of the way places in the world to you all it's the norm, but to me it's unreal and amazing."
I'll leave the last word to Dad with one of his signature stories:
"Because Her Majesty is now the longest serving monarch in the world, here a story that I thought you might like to hear, it was when both the Queen and Princess Margaret were little children in Scotland, and had gone for a walk over the hills ,when they needed a drink, so they went to a croft knocked on the door and asked the lady ,"could they please have a drink of water,"the lady got them the water and asked the question. Who are you? The Queen replied. "We are no body, but our Father is a King." This is so precious, I think..."

 Inset photo by Steve Wheeler
 Main photo source unknown

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All our yesterdays by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 12, 2015

Senses working overtime

A man walks into a bar, and is surprised to see a horse serving drinks. He stands there astonished, his jaw dropping. The horse looks up, sees the man and says: 'I know you're surprised to see a horse behind the bar, serving drinks...' The man finds his voice: 'No, it's not that' he says, 'I just never thought the duck would sell the place.' 

Or... alternatively, a man walks into a bar and, seeing a horse serving drinks, he realises he is dreaming. 

Or... in an alternative reality, a man walks into a bar and sees a horse serving drinks, and knows he is in a virtual reality (VR) environment. The 'dream world' he is experiencing inside his head is an artefact of the images being rendered by the visor he is wearing.


We are still a little way off from making such immersive experiences ad interactions available to organisational learning. What about room based systems? The iconic Star Trek holodecks (or the virtual room featured in the movie Disclosure), are probably facilities that won't be seen for several decades. But personal, wearable devices are already here and are being refined. The emergence of personal visor technologies such as Facebook's Oculus Rift, Sony's Project Morpheus and other similar wearables will more likely make the above scenario, or any similarly fantastic context possible.

Perhaps a more salient question is not when VR environments will be available for education and training, but for what they will be used? How costly would it be to develop VR content that supports organisational learning? The answer depends on scalability. If enough employees can be trained using VR headsets, and enough headsets are available for all participants, then virtual reality training will be feasible. The key secret to the success of VR though, is psychological rather than technical. It lies in the propensity of the human mind to quickly adapt to its environment. VR wearables are designed to flood your senses with information. While your ears and eyes are receiving synchronised digitised stimuli, the rest of your body is sensing the real world around you, such as the solid seat, pedals and handlebars of a bycycle. It is this psychological blend of real and virtual that causes the user to believe in the experience.



In other words, if the system is good enough to fool your sense of proprioception (where you sense your body is in a space), then the experience will be credible. Several recent VR reviews mention this phenomenon, as seen for example in this article. Currently, VR technologies that are commercially available are used predominantly to play games. However, it is only a small step up from games playing to games based learning. I believe this is the opportunity for content developers and instructional designers to grasp.

If the VR content is skilfully designed, the wearer of the device will (almost) believe they are experiencing it for real. Almost. Problems persist around rendering speed and resolution, audio quality, latency, content development and human issues such as nausea and equilibrioception problems. Experiences can be... well, clunky. Although progress is being made in addressing these issues, more effort will be required before we see a time when any student can learn by using immersion experiences supported by VR.

Wearable, personal VR systems are on the horizon for learning and development - one day we will see them in everyday use. But this won't happen until the problems, which are mainly technical, have been ironed out and appropriately designed content becomes available.

Photo courtesy of Samsung on Flickr

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Senses working overtime by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 11, 2015

#ALTC Hangout

Directly after my keynote at ALT-C,  along with my co-presenters Becca Smallshaw and Kate Bartlett (who were absolute stars), I took part in a Google hangout discussion. Ably hosted by Simon Ensor (France), Alan Levine (USA - @cogdog barks here) and Rebecca Hogue (who was with us in Manchester) we had a wide ranging conversation about digital literacy, the use of virtual learning environments, digital citizenship, openness in education, personal learning environments, assessment and student centred learning. It was a great conversation with many interesting and thought provoking questions and comments. Below is a YouTube recording of the hangout for those who couldn't join in live. [Other hangouts are also available.]





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#ALTC Hangout by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 09, 2015

Why schools shouldn't ban smartphones

I was asked to write an opinion piece for the Western Morning News earlier this week as a response to the comments from Ofsted and their advisers on the use of technology in schools. Many teachers are left wondering whether personal technologies such as smartphones actually have a place in education and what risks and threats accompany them. My view is that children can and do use technology to support their learning but they need to be guided to do so responsibly.

(It has been edited from my original longer version and can also be viewed here on the newspaper site).

When slate was replaced by paper there was a public outcry. Many complained that paper and pencils were too expensive, and that they would ruin children’s writing skills. Sound familiar?
Progress within education is not a new dilemma, and has been discussed for generations. But why is technology still a bone of contention? By its nature, it moves on while schools can be notoriously conservative places where little change happens.
As for smartphones, some claim there is no scientific evidence that technology has improved learning in schools, and I took part in a public debate almost a decade ago where this question was raised. I answered with a single phrase: “special educational needs”. Suddenly the debate was over and my opponent conceded the point.
For many children who have physical or cognitive impairment, technology doesn’t just support learning, it enables learning to happen. This is just one example. I can take you to many schools in the Plymouth area where technology is being used responsibly and creatively to engage children, enhancing, extending and enriching their learning experiences.
They use smartphones and tablets to solve maths problems, blog to develop their creative writing skills, build robots and learn how to code. These are new forms of literacy I didn’t learn in school, but they are transferable skills that will be needed in the future, when our children enter a world of work significantly different from today.
Many children have a natural affinity with technology. They bring their smartphones into the classroom, and will use them whether schools ban them or not. Teachers are wary of the darker side of mobile phones. They worry about children accessing dangerous content, or using cameras to send each other images they wouldn’t want their parents to see.
Recently there have also been warnings from Ofsted that mobile phones are distracting children from their lessons. These are reasonable concerns. Children are easily distracted by texting in class, but to completely ban smartphones in schools is short-sighted, and ignores a fundamental truth of our present society. Like it or not, we are surrounded by technology, and it isn’t going away.
Technology is neutral until used for a specific purpose, good or for bad. We shouldn’t blame smartphones for the way they are used. Instead it would be wise to harness the power of these tools for learning and teach children to use them responsibly. Children need to be taught from an early age about acceptable use, and every school should include digital citizenship in its curriculum. This would go a long way to addressing the problem.
At an education conference in New Zealand a few years ago a primary school principal in my audience said: “We don’t allow the Internet in our school. There are too many dangers.” My response was: “So you don’t teach your children to safely cross the road either – because that’s also dangerous?”
Technology has its dangers. But surely school is the safest place for children to learn how to use technology? It is a controlled environment where they can ask questions and discover for themselves what to avoid. If schools don’t manage this process, children will learn how to use technology in their bedrooms or behind the bike sheds. But to what dangers might they be exposed, and who will know to help them?
Teaching should never be led by technology, but technology can influence change. Arthur C Clarke, the science fiction writer, once commented: “Any teacher who can be replaced by a computer, should be.”
Teachers should not simply deliver content. Indeed, there is evidence that teachers’ roles are changing because of technology. Many encourage students to drive their own education, and the technology supports this independent learning.
As students take more responsibility, teachers adopt the roles of questioner, coach and facilitator. The teacher becomes a guide, a mentor in the room for when children need expert help. Teachers will not be replaced by technology, but teachers who use technology will probably replace those who don’t.
When smartphones are used appropriately, learning can continue beyond the walls of the classroom. Children can learn on the move, because they have a connection to their course work and to their teacher and peers through their phone – if the school allows it. Ban them, and the opportunities are more limited. Learning doesn’t need to be confined to school hours. If their experience is exciting and motivating, children will want to continue learning long after the school bell. A passion for learning is the best preparation for the future.
Technology is like water to a fish. It surrounds us, and we rarely notice it, but we use it all the time. Instead of keeping children away from the water, we should teach them to swim. Any alternative would be unthinkable.
Photo by Anthony Kelly on Flickr
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Why schools shouldn't ban smartphones by Steve Wheeler was written in Manchester, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 05, 2015

Selfie number 1

In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies (including elsies and photobombs) with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

So here it is - my number one 'selfie' - a picture of me alongside the legendary Apple Computer inventor Steve Wozniak. I happened to wander into the speaker's lounge during a learning technology conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and there he was, sat preparing to give his keynote. I kind of knew he would be there, because he was scheduled to keynote the conference that morning, and it was the place all speakers prepared before they took to the stage. There was no-one else in the room at the time, and I walked over to introduce myself. He stood up and shook my hand, and then we sat down and enjoyed a one-on-one conversation that lasted about 10 to 15 minutes before anyone else came into the room to interrupt. My conversation with him is captured here. I asked him about the early days of Apple and his first meeting with Steve Jobs. He told me they knew nothing about what they were doing when they first set up the companym, except that their roles were clearly defined. Jobs was actually the business head behind Apple and had nothing to do with the design of the computers, which was solely Woz's domain. It turned out that Jobs' entreprenuerial acumen and Wozniak's innovative engineering skills were the perfect combination for one of the most successful and valuable companies the world has ever seen. What would you have asked Woz if you had a similar opportunity?

There is no question in my mind that Steve Wozniak has probably influenced my thinking as much, if not more than anyone else in the world of learning technology. He has literally changed the world with his innovative approach to designing computers. I remember tinkering with Apple Macintosh Computers back in the late 1980s and recall thinking how much more intuitive they were than IBM systems. It was these early forays into computers that shaped my later career as an academic and learning technology specialist. We have Woz to thank for the hardware and software designs behind the early success of Apple Computers, and when you hear him speak about his own education experiences, and his vision for the future of learning, you will be inspired. His down to earth, simplistic, no nonsense approach to education is refreshing and insightful - and what many people don't know is that he has given a lot of his personal fortune away to support technology programmes in schools. Woz is a man who practices what he preaches, and it was a pleasure and a privilege to spend some time with him.

Photo courtesy of the ELI Conference: Saudi Ministry of Higher Education

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Selfie number 1 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 04, 2015

Selfie number 2

In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies (including elsies and photobombs) with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

I first read Being Digital during the emergent years of the Web, when we were all discovering for ourselves how our lives would be shaped through technology. It was published in 1995, and its author, Nicholas Negroponte was establishing himself as a mover and shaker on the digital landscape. He had already founded MIT's Media Lab, and was well on the way to making sure Wired Magazine would become a must read for the tech savvy (I remain a subscriber). Eventually, he would go on to establish what arguably became him crowning achievement - the One Laptop Per Child project, which has had such wide reaching impact on global education. One of the significant statements Negroponte made in Being Digital was that everything (and he meant everything) was being transformed from atoms to bits. In other words, the world was going digital. In many ways, he was right. The entertainment world, news and media, commerce, business and communication sectors have all more or less migrated to digital format, and this is as irrevocable as it is transformative.

It was an absolute pleasure to meet Nic and spend time talking with him over dinner in London ahead of the Learning Technology conference in January 2013. He told me and our fellow diners some wonderful stories about how his work in digital media was progressing, and gave us a unique insight into the history of technology and his association with other luminaries of the digital world. You can read more about our conversation here. I brought my first edition copy of Being Digital along to the meal for him to sign. He duly obliged and his autograph added greater value to what was already one of my prized possessions.

Tomorrow: Selfie number 1

Photo by Donald Taylor

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Selfie number 2 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


September 02, 2015

Selfie number 3

In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies (including elsies and photobombs) with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

This is me with Sugata Mitra in Oslo, in 2013, just after I had interviewed him for the EDEN Conference television channel. I first heard him speak at Online Educa in Berlin, Germany about 10 years ago. There, he presented his seminal (and many would say controversial) work on minimally invasive education. He set up computers with tracker balls in holes in walls in the slums of India and observed how the children taught themselves in small groups, in what became known as the 'Hole in the Wall' project. The results of this research led to his belief that children can learn independently of adults or experts if they have a) the tools, b) the support of peers, and c) the motivation.

At the time, when I first heard about this project, I was quite excited by the idea that education does not have to be content led, or expert led, but that learners can lead their own learning. This chimed with the work of a number of theorists I had studied during my teacher training, including Carl Rogers, Paulo Freire and John Dewey. But Sugata's approach added technology into the equation, and located self directed learning within a digital context, which interested me the most. Several questions entered my mind. Could the pedagogical role of the educator be redefined? How could school be transformed into a minimally invasive environment? What role might technology play in the future to support autodidacticism?

I have subsequently worked alongside Sugata in many contexts, and am fascinated by his concept of the 'School in the Cloud' where retired people who have some spare time can connect remotely through video tools to children in place where teachers cannot, or will not go. Sugata Mitra has been criticised and praised in equal measure and his ideas polarise the education community. He has received the brickbats as well as the bouquets. Some are quite vehement in their attacks on his reputation and work, and conversely, others are equally aggressive in their defence of his ideas. Many a heated exchange has been observed in recent years on social media and in the mainstream press about this controversial and catalytic academic. Just like many influential scientists in the past, he has upset the applecart, and now everyone has an opinion about his work, his premises, his conclusions. He certainly has us all talking.

I have to say on a personal note that whatever you think about Sugata Mitra or conclude about his research, I have found he is genuinely open and approachable, always has plenty of time for people, and he has inspired me to think differently about education, learning and technology.

Photo courtesy of the European Distance and E-learning Network

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Selfie number 3 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


August 31, 2015

5 survival tips for new university students

Some of my students studying together
Here's some advice for all students who are about to start university. You have probably just left school, and at first you may experience a few difficulties adjusting to university life.

Everything will be new. You may feel a bit lost. You may be far from home. There will be unfamiliar things you will need to remember. You will meet lots of new people. University may feel like an alien environment, but there are certain things you, and all other new students, should do if you really want to make a success of your time in higher education. Here are five key things to remember:

1) Lectures. Make sure you get to your teaching sessions on time - try not to miss anything if you can help it. Make sure you get to know your campus. When you're there, don't look as though you're bored in lectures and seminars (even if you are). Not all lectures are engaging - even though they should be! - but every session has been designed to give you the best chance to get good grades in your assignments and exams. Don't start packing up your books and laptops as the clock ticks toward the top of the hour. Spend as much time as you can immersed in your subject and gain a passion for it. It will pay off in the end.

2) Tutors. Your lecturer/professor is not your mate, so don't treat them as though they are. When you compose an e-mail, be professional. I dislike e-mails from my students that say 'hey steve', or 'yo prof' as though I'm a room mate. Show due respect, avoid over familiarity, and your lecturer will be more inclined to go the extra mile to support you if they can. Similarly, don't disrespect your lecturer online on social media sites, even if your account is protected/closed. If more than one person can read your posts, they are public. Rude remarks on social media have a habit of getting back to those you have written about.

3) Friends. It's great making new friends and going out for drinks, and university can be a lot of fun. You will need to chill out now and then, and there are plenty of great social activities and societies you can be involved in. But remember why you are there - to learn, to study, to get a good degree. So don't waste all your time in the bar, or out with your mates. Most former students would agree that working hard is the biggest secret to graduating. Put enough hours into mastering your subject, and you are more likely to be successful.

With some of my Czech, German and Polish students
4) Assignments. Don't try to take short cuts. Many students panic when assignment deadlines are approaching.  Some search online, and then copy and paste text into their assignments to pad them out, trying to catch up on time they may have wasted. This is called plagiarism - especially if you don't acknowledge the sources - and if you are caught cheating (which more often than not you are - it's usually not that hard to detect), the penalty can be severe. At the very least, you'll face the ignominy of sitting in front of a disciplinary panel, at worst you could be thrown off the course. It's not worth the risk. Manage your time effectively and you won't run out of time.

5) Fun. Enjoy your learning. You chose your subject for a reason - just make sure it is the right reason. You will be in university for 3 years (or more), so get used to being a student! However, studying for a degree isn't only about your subject, it's also about acquiring other skills too. Doing your degree is a wonderful journey, and you will discover a lot more about yourself than you ever thought was possible. You will find out exactly what your limits are, and this will be great preparation for the rest of your time on this planet.

I wish you every success in your studies!

Photos: Steve Wheeler

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5 survival tips for new university students by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


Selfie number 4

Me with Jay Cross and Graham Attwell, Salzburg 2008
In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies (including elsies and photobombs) with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

In this photo I'm with Jay Cross and Graham Attwell, at a conference in Salzburg, Austria. I first met Graham at an event in the UK around 2006, just when I was becoming aware of the potential of social media such as wikis, blogs and social networking platforms as learning tools. My first impression was that he was something of a contradiction. He is a Welshman, but he speaks with a broad West Country accent, which belies everything that lies beneath. Tall and spare, and casually dressed, he is deceptively quiet - but then he lopes onto the stage, commands attention in the style of a trade union official (he was one and so was I) and everyone sits up and takes notice. He has some radical things to say about education, and he isn't always popular. But he caught my attention immediately, and we struck up a friendship.

With Josie Fraser, Helen Keegan and Cristina Costa in Utrecht, 2007
Graham invited me to speak in Utrecht the following year at an event called 'Show that you Share', which in retrospect became a pivotal point in my involvement in the open learning movement. The event was more than just a gathering of like-minded individuals from across Europe - it was a catalyst for change. I made my mind up around about this time that I needed to do a lot more research into this emerging field of openness, and decided that social media were the ideal tools to promote this concept. I then wrote and published a flurry of papers on the use of social media in education, about the same time as I started this blog. It transformed my professional practice. I have subsequently shared the stage with Graham on more than one occasion, and the sessions have always been laced with humour and lively debate.

Among his many projects, Graham was instrumental in launching the Personal Learning Environment (PLE) Conference, a global event that showcases research and practice in student centred pedagogy, and Sounds of the Bazaar - a live, internet radio programme that promoted open learning in all its forms. He also heads up the European research agency Pontydysgu (A Bridge to Learning). Whenever you hear him speak, you will be impressed by his passion for learning, and perhaps angered by some of the things he says. You can disagree with him, but you can't ignore him, because Graham is everywhere. I hope that continues for a long time.

Photo source unknown

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Selfie number 4 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


August 28, 2015

Selfie number 5

In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

I first met Alec Couros among that amazing gathering of people at the inaugural PLE (Personal Learning Environment) conference in Barcelona, in 2010. Alec is Professor of educational technology at the University of Regina in Canada. I add him to my list of selfies and photos for many reasons (here we are larking about on the Barcelona Metro). Alec is very influential in the world of learning technology, and has a huge following on Twitter and other social media channels. Alec is what you would call a 'connected educator', and you can watch him talking about this in an interview with Howard Rheingold during a video webcast. Watch out in particular for his ideas around 'visualising networks' and how tools mediate connections.

When you hear Alec speak you realise just how passionate he is about openness in education. He is a true champion of web democracy, and he practising what he preaches by sharing all his content and resources freely. Time and time again he demonstrates how social media and personal technologies can be used to enhance learning, engage students, reach out to others and gain a deeper understanding of the world around us. He also has a wonderful sense of mischief, and makes you think deeply as he entertains you with his humour. I don't know anyone else in the field of learning technology who can pack so many fresh ideas into a keynote speech. Many of his talks and all of his slideshows are available online to download for free - and I admit to having used some of them in my own presentations over the years!

Photo by Joyce Seitzinger

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Selfie number 5 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


August 27, 2015

Selfie number 6

In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

I met American teacher, artist and edupunk Amy Burvall last year. Our pathways crossed when we were attending different events in London and so we arranged met up for a few drinks. I was already familiar with Amy's work online, especially her excellent series of YouTube videos called History Teachers. If you haven't viewed them yet, you should do so - they are a must watch, even if you are not a teacher of history. Amy has taken popular songs, rewritten the lyrics about specific periods in European history, and has then created new music videos for educational purposes. Particular favourites of mine include the story of Martin Luther (to the tune of the Bangles' Manic Monday - in which she takes on three singing roles), Charlemagne ('Call Me' by Blondie), the classy Elizabeth I ('She's not there' by the Zombies) and the comical animated Henry VIII and his six wives (Money, Money, Money by Abba). The combined viewing figures for this collection of teaching videos is now in the millions. But History Teachers is just one of the many contributions Amy has made to digital learning in the past few years.

What inspires me most about Amy Burvall? She is quirky, unpredictable, creative, mischievous, and she is not afraid to take risks - all characteristics I recognise in myself. She is also a cancer survivor, which in itself should inspire all of us. She is tenacious and has boundless energy, and she never seems to stop. I believe this is because she has a burning desire is to help as many people to learn as she possibly can. She does this through her writing, videos, photography, artwork, live sketching (see Graffikon), keynote speeches and her very popular workshops on creativity, making and learning. Recently we collaborated for the first time on a project that is now known as #blimage which can be read about here (join in - it's fun!). I'm hoping that this is just the start of our collaboration, and that we will continue to bounce ideas off each other for some time to come. Watch this space!

Photo by Jeffrey Teruel

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Selfie number 6 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


August 26, 2015

Selfie number 7

With Shelly at EduTech Australia, Brisbane, June 2015
In this series of short posts, I'm writing about my top ten selfies with people who have inspired me or have influenced my thinking. Previous selfie posts can also be viewed on this blog.

I meet a lot of people on my travels, many of whom are very expert in their specialism, but I don't believe I have met anyone who is as enthusiastic and passionate as Shelly Terrell. She is a live wire and an ultra-connected educator. She has been called a global netweaver and curator. Above all, she is an innovator.

I first met Shelly when she stood in at the last minute when one of my keynote speakers fell ill and had to withdraw from the Plymouth Enhanced Learning Conference (Pelecon). At the drop of a hat, Shelly flew in from Germany where she was living at the time, and gave a rip-roaring performance that had everyone enthralled. She talked about how social media was making a huge impact on learning, and gave some great examples from her own professional practice. It was the start of many subsequent encounters.

Shelly has been behind a large number of the high impact initiatives that have influenced education globally in the last few years. She was one of the founders of the Reform Symposium, a very popular 72 hour, follow the sun online event with facilitators on 3 separate continents. Along with Tom Whitby and Steven Anderson (sadly I have not yet met either of those gentlemen), she was responsible for setting up #edchat, a highly influential Twitter chat for educators across the globe and she also established the much respected Teacher Reboot Camp. She is also behind the 30 goals challenge (which can be viewed here) and NAPW voted her Woman of the Year for 2014. And of course, Shelly has a huge following on social media, and is a prolific speaker and presenter on the international circuit. She has an insatiable appetite for helping others to learn, and pours all of her considerable energy into supporting and developing teachers. Not only has she inspired me, she has had an impact on the lives of countless other educators across the globe.

Photo by Steve Wheeler

Creative Commons License
Selfie number 7 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


August 25, 2015

Selfie number 8

This is a countdown of selfies and photographs with people who have influenced my thinking or inspired me over the years. Previous selfie posts can be found here and here.

As a regular speaker on the international conference circuit, I am privileged to meet and work with some of the brightest minds in my field. It was a special pleasure to meet former head teacher Richard Gerver at a conference a few years ago, and as a added bonus, to spend time working together recording a video for the Saudi Ministry of Education. The video we made can be viewed on this website. I had already read Richard's first book, Creating Tomorrow's Schools Today, and had been challenged by his radical vision for the future of education. One of my favourite quotes from his book is a critique of the current school system and a clarion call for authenticity:
'To our children, learning is something they do at school. [..] it is a distraction from their real lives. When they look beyond the gates they don't see timetables, subjects, paragraphs and full stops. They see a huge, glistening, confusing world. They do not see how, by engaging in one, you can understand the other. They feel that they leave their real life at the gate. It is our job to move schools forward so that they are seen by our children as a development of their real lives.' (Gerver, 2011, p. 57)
Richard and I spent quite some time together during those few days, and I learnt a great deal from him. He has subsequently gone on to achieve best seller status with his follow up book Change, and has developed into one of the most sought-after speakers in education. When Richard wrote the foreword for my latest book Learning with 'e's, he told the yarn about how we first met while riding camels in the Saudi desert. It's almost true - we did ride around on camels in a Bedouin encampment, and I have memories of Richard doing the Arabic Sword Dance around an open fire (I declined, owing to my aversion to sharp objects) - but we really met while travelling from Riyadh airport in a lot more comfort via limousine to a very nice hotel.

Reference
Gerver, R. (2011) Creating Tomorrow's Schools Today: Education - Our Children - Their Futures. London: Continuum.

Photo courtesy of ELI Conference, Saudi Higher Education Ministry

Creative Commons License
Selfie number 8 by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


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