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Transcript of iTEC widgetStore
http://itec.eun.org
Widgets in pilots
Dai Griffiths and Fernando Rui Campos
25/26 November 2013Brussels
Extensive evaluation of the Widget Store with users
Evaluated in WP 8– Usability evaluation day with authentic users
(UK)– Evaluation following use of the store
• Austria (16 teachers)• Norway (16 teachers)• Turkey (70 teachers)• Spain (30 children)
– Analysis of server data and contents
… and extensive evaluation in pilots
The Widget Store was evaluated extensively in pilots, and reported on in WP5– Smart, Promethean– Estonia, Finland, France, Italy, Portugal,
Slovakia, Turkey– Largely positively received
Feedback from National Coordinators passed to WP
All analysed in D8.3
Widgets and WidgetStore Portuguese approach
NTCLocal Support &
Technical Leadership
Teachers Guidance
WP6
Widgets community Blog
A case study from the Widget Store pilot
Widget & WidgetStore Community
544 visits
1)
10 themes
1) – Categories developed by Lisbon University; 2) The letter size is proportional to the number of occurrences
Forum categories
A case study from the Widget Store pilot
Widgets & WidgetStore C4
Thems
http://moodle.erte.dgidc.min-edu.pt/course/view.php?id=581
Nº Posts
Total: 2086 viewsMax.:810 views
Widget Blog
Context:Classroom examples
http://itecwidgetsportugal.blogspot.pt/p/apresentacao.html
Widgets – What the teachers say
T1- They are useful and easy to see by students. They allow the organization of a learning sequence on a single page, using various elements, making them all accessible.
[Drivers]
T2-Because they are small applications that are compatible with various platforms, widgets can become practical and easy to use resources when teaching different topics.
.
T3 -Widgets can be a great resource in helping aggregate information in several formats, regardless of which platform is being used, facilitating the student research/learning activities. T4-I see this area of work / exploration as a challenge to authorship but also and especially as a way to collaborate and share. As a first "impression" I see widgets as easy use and easy to integrate in different environments and contexts of learning, thanks to their format flexibility and granularity. Naturally, their value will depend on the context and the pedagogical framework…
T5-The use of widgets can facilitate the use of technology in the teaching/learning process, as they facilitate access to various applications. Its use with interactive whiteboards is very easy because it reduces the use of keyboard, as users can access applications through the widget link.
A case study from the Widget Store pilot
Widgets – What the teachers say
T6-Our experience with widgets was not very good due to the numerous problems that the school had with internet access.
T7- In the meantime, professional duties increased and I could not possible take on yet another task.
[Barriers]
A case study from the Widget Store pilot
Portuguese Widgets in the WidgetStore
(partial view)
A case study from the Widget Store pilot
Pilots and evaluation fed into revision of the Widget Store
iTEC Widget Store release 1.4 now available
Based on invaluable feedback from users (WP8 and WP5 pilots)
Thorough interface revision Store as a Widget:
– More store functionality accessible in the shell– No login– Easier integration into new platforms
Some features in release 1.4
Opportunities for creating widgets– Embedding, upload of designed widgets,
Flash import– Serving websites as widgets
Associate icons with widgets Facetted search, my favourites and others’ Administrative tools: rate, featured, delete,
workflow
The wider implications of evaluation We know that the Widget Store
– provides an effective service– is usable
We know that many national coordinators and teachers think it is a good idea
We also know that – Use outside pilot sessions has been limited– Attitudes to the store
What can we do to – Understand better the dynamics of adoption?
• pedagogic, institutional, technological
– Act to enhance the prospects for adoption?
A programme of actions to understand use and adoption Carry out pilots of the Store
– Planned: Austria, Estonia, Portugal, Spain, Italy & Hungary– All have coordinators in place who can support the pilot– Varying needs, and perceptions of the Store give opportunity
to understand adoption Assess the positioning of the Store
– not only a system for teachers– also for educational managers and pedagogic coordinators
Provide demonstrators (hand in hand with pilots) – Configurations and profiles of the store– Content capabilities– OMDL to deliver collections of widgets
Outputs for the final year Description of D8.4 (M48) focuses on standardisation Important, but not a sufficient focus for work in the final year
– The store demonstrates the capabilities of W3C widgets– Deploys OMDL– LTI profile of the store will be produced and demonstrated– Wookie extensions to W3C widgets submitted to W3C– We are maintaining a dialogue with IMS about their App Store
initiative (which uses LTI) Final year tasks for WP8
– maintenance of the Widget Store– creation of demonstrators – evaluation of their use.
Tasks enable us to understand the mechanisms determining use and adoption, a key outcome for iTEC.
Task descriptions take priority over the deliverable description.
For further information
The work presented in this presentation is partially supported by the European Commission’s FP7 programme – project iTEC: Innovative Technologies for an Engaging Classroom (Grant agreement Nº 257566). The content of this presentation is the sole responsibility of the consortium members and it does not represent the opinion of the European Commission and the Commission is not responsible for any use that might be made of information contained herein.
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