PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

81
PLN’s “Friends Educating Each Other”: Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD Debbie Fucoloro, Ph.D. MOREnet M3 Annual Conference October 15, 2013

description

MOREnet M3 Annual Conference 2013.

Transcript of PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Page 1: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

PLN’s “Friends Educating Each Other”: Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Debbie Fucoloro, Ph.D.MOREnet M3 Annual Conference

October 15, 2013

Page 2: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

ABOUT ME

• B.A. & M.A.T. Webster University• Ph.D. Saint Louis University, 2012• 19 total years in teaching• Classroom teacher – 10 years + 9 years• 3rd, 4th, 6th S.S., 7th Sci., and digital video to

middle schoolers• Instructional Technology Specialist – 9 years• Currently Technology Coordinator

Page 3: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 4: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Computers are not being utilized as education tools as expected.

Bauer and Kenton (2005), Toward Technology Integration in the Schools: Why It Isn’t Happening

Page 5: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 6: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Overriding sentiment: “It’s been 30 years since the advent of the personal computer and we’re still struggling to get teachers

and administrators to integrate digital technologies into their daily work in ways that are

substantive and meaningful.” ~ Scott McLeod (2011)

Page 7: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Purpose

Investigate educators who use social media for informal professional learning.

What motivates them: • to seek out and connect with other educators• to advance their professional learning• on their own time

Page 8: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Importance of the Research

filling the gap in literaturehttp://globaltoynews.typepad.com/.a/6a0133ec87bd6d970b014e86e58ea8970d-500wi

Page 9: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

So What?

- shed light on how to better support all educators professionally

- nurture reluctant technology users- encouraging and mentoring their participation

in these environments- increasing their ability to use best practices in

technology integration in order to positively impact student learning

Page 10: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Conceptual Framework Evolution1. How do we encourage and support educators

to incorporate best practices in technology integration when planning lessons?

2. Can educator use of social media for informal professional development increase technology integration and, in turn, student learning?

3. However, first it is important to learn more about educators who currently use social media for informal professional development.

Page 11: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Foundation of Conceptual Framework

• Paulo Freire – learning is a social act and dialogue is the heart of education

Page 12: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Foundation of Conceptual Framework

Page 13: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Literature Review• Adult Learning Theory• Professional Development• Personal Learning Network

Page 14: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

“Friends educating each other” Basil Yeaxlee, 1925

Adult Learning Theories

Stresses potential

for informal

social learning

Page 15: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Self-directed learning, desire for control, flexibility, and feedback

Page 16: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

• Inclusion (giving voice)• Empowerment

(belongingness)• Opportunities to negotiate

between and across cultures

Page 17: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

CoPs enable adults to learn with and from each other

Adult Learning

Page 18: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Adult Learning

Connectivism focuses on theamplification of learning, knowledge, and understanding through the extension of a personal network via social media

Page 19: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Professional Development

self-directed, ongoing and job

embedded—not an event

Page 20: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Professional Development

• the community concept (social media) and

• the knowledge aspect (access to information) of learning

Page 21: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Personal Learning Networks

PLN = connections to people and resources, both offline and online, who enrich our learning

Page 22: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

PLN = “friends educating each other” revived

Page 23: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 24: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Typical Teacher Networkby Alec Couros

Page 25: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

The Networked Teacher

Page 26: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Socially Networked Teacher

Page 27: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

New Paradigm Suggested

• Self-directed• Differentiated• Ongoing• Job embedded• Flexible• Encourages self-analysis and personal

reflection

Page 28: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

New Paradigm

• PLNs should be validated as a powerful professional development component

• Not: Traditional vs Informal

• But a mix of:

traditional & emerging, formal & informal

Page 29: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Research Questions

Q1 What are educators’ perceptions and reported behaviors associated with participation in informal, online professional development networks?

Page 30: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Research Sub-Questions

Q1a motivationQ1b typesQ1c specific

Page 31: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Q2 Do educator’s perceptions and reported behaviors differ based on:• current assignment• years in education• age

Research Questions

Page 32: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Methodology

“Unless researchers first generate an accurate description of an educational phenomenon as it

exists, they lack a firm basis for explaining or changing it.”

~ Gall, Gall & Borg

Page 33: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Instrumentation

• 1st Demographics• 2nd Traditional Professional Development and

Technology Integration• 3rd Using Social Media/Networks to Meet

Professional Development Needs

Page 34: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

• establish a baseline description of knowledge regarding educators who use social media for professional development

• lay the groundwork for further in-depth studies based on the findings

Page 35: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Variables

1. Current assignment – grade level, position, subject area, and school setting

2. Years in education--categories included 1-10 years, 11-20 years, and 21+ years

3. Respondent’s age included a drop-down box for exact age

Page 36: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Population Sample

• Pre-K through higher education• Teachers, administrators, librarians and media

specialists, specialists (Art, Music, P.E., Foreign Language)

• Instructional support personnel (Technology Specialists, Special Ed., Counselors, Gifted Ed., Language acquisition)

• Education industry (retirees, consultants, bloggers, authors)

Page 37: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Population

• Snowball sampling method to access approximately 16,900 educators via Twitter and Nings

• 1,000 Twitter followers• 10,000 members of Educator’s PLN Ning• 6,000 members of ISET Community Ning

Page 38: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Sample

“…return rates for Internet surveys are lower than mail surveys and sometimes abysmal.”

~ Cox & Cox, 2008

Hoped to get at least 100 participants.

Page 39: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Findings

Page 40: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Demographic Sample

• 4,950 visited survey• 147 began • 14 dropped out before end of demographic

info and were excluded• 133 participants

Page 41: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Descriptive Findings

Page 42: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Respondent Demographics

Average Age43 years-old

Page 43: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 44: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

FindingsFavorite social media application to use for informal professional development:

http://bettergraphic.com/free-and-paid-fonts-used-in-logos-of-popular-brands/

Page 45: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Open-ended Themes - Why Twitter? Community & Convenience

“It is the modern equivalent of the 18th century coffeehouse—a place teaming with ideas, opinions, research, discussion, collaboration, and bold vision.”

http://blog.songcastmusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/twitter-community-600.jpg

Page 46: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Open-ended Themes – Why Twitter? Informal Learning & Sharing

“I have created a PLN that I feel meets my needs by providing resources, ideas, and challenges to improve learning for my students.”

http://images.wisegeek.com/people-independently-working-in-a-cafe.jpg

Page 47: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Open-ended Themes – Why Twitter? Professional Improvement

“I have developed more as a professional since participating in #edchat than I did in the last five years.”

http://appliedsimplicity.org/files/u2/group_3w.jpg

Page 48: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Open-ended Themes – Why Twitter? Isolation Reduction*

“The largest difference is that I no longer feel alone in the classroom. I think it is hard for those outside of education to realize how isolated teachers were before social media.”

Page 49: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Findings

• Educators (99%) believed they should take personal responsibility for continued professional growth and improvement.

Page 50: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Findings

How well did each of the following prepare you to make effective use of technology for instruction?

Page 51: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 52: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 53: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Comparative Findings

Page 54: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Administrators vs Classroom Teachers

http://leadershipfreak.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/disagreeement.jpg

Page 55: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Current Assignment - Position• Administrators perceived that employers used

more methods to support technology integration than classroom teachers.

• Administrators had a more positive view of the effectiveness of PD in educational technology provided by school, district, or campus than classroom teachers.

Page 56: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Yes

No

{

Page 57: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 58: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

As age increased:

• confidence using technology decreased

• PD activities made respondents feel more prepared

• use of social media decreased

Page 59: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Other Relevant Findings

Page 60: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 61: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 62: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 63: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 64: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

??

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

Page 65: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD
Page 66: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Recommendations & Implications

• Researchers• Educational leaders• Teachers

Page 67: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Recommendations to Future Researchers

1. Examine successful programs currently supporting the use of, and giving credit to and recognizing educators for participation in informal, online professional development networks.

Page 68: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Recommendations to Future Researchers

2. Is there a correlation between participation in informal, online professional development and:- Improved practice- Increased student learning- Increased technology integration- Increased confidence in tech integration and lesson

planning- Increased feeling of belongingness—less isolation- Increased satisfaction with personal professional

development

Page 69: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Recommendations to Future Researchers

3. Conduct longitudinal studies to investigate:- quality of teacher education programs - employer-provided professional development

on the integration of technology for instruction

Page 70: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Implications forEducation Leaders

1. Make technology integration a priority. Focus on sound pedagogy and lesson planning rather than just tools and application use.

Page 71: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kjarrett/4138613146/

Page 72: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Implications forEducation Leaders

2. Allow educators input regarding professional development:- differentiated- self-directed- example – unconference and edcamp models,

or cMOOCs

Page 73: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Implications forEducation Leaders

3. Provide professional development that is ongoing and job embedded.

4. Encourage (don’t demand) participation in informal professional development networks and support development of PLNs.

Page 74: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Implications forEducation Leaders

5. Explore ways that would support, honor, and give credit for time spent in informal, online professional development.

6. Administrators need to lead by example by modeling effective use of technology—for example, in communicating with students, parents, and staff.

Page 75: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Key Implications forEducation Leaders

7. Teacher education programs should focus on teaching pedagogical aspects of effective technology integration.

Page 76: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Implications forEducators

1. Participate in informal, online professional development by starting your own PLN built on your needs and passions—start small, find mentors, be patient.

2. Take responsibility for your own professional growth and improvement.

Page 77: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Implications forEducators

3. Advocate for the legitimacy and recognition of time spent participating in informal, online professional development networks.

4. Advocate for professional development that is self-directed, differentiated, ongoing, and job embedded.

Page 78: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Implications forEducators

5. Be bold and share what you learn in these environments and encourage others to join in the conversation.

6. Model lifelong learning by staying as up to date as possible regarding technology integration.

Page 79: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

The next best thing to being wise oneself is to live in a circle of those who are.

~ C. S. Lewis

The next best thing to being wise oneself is to live in a circle of those who are. ~ C. S. Lewis

Page 80: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

http://sociability.ca/blog/thanks-21st-century/

Page 81: PLNs "Friends Educating Each Other": Informal, Self-directed, and Social PD

Find me at:Twitter: @debbiefucoBlog: The Educators’ CaféEmail: [email protected]