Thursday, December 5, 2013

Social Media

          EDLT516, Social Media for Blended and Online Learning, went so fast. When I reflect back to the beginning of the course, I find that I really learned many new concepts, skills and experiences.
          This course exposed me to different social media tools that I did not use before. In this course, I used Facebook as a learning tool for my first time. I frequently use Facebook to communicate with my family and friends in Egypt, but I never thought before that I would use it in learning. Practice using Facebook in this course makes me recognize the collaborative aspect of it. For example, rather than spending many hours searching for resources about social media, I used the resources that other students in the course collected. I also benefit from their insights/thoughts about the resource. 
          Through discussion with my classmates about social media and its affordances I realized the importance of using social media in education. We educators should be aware of the importance of social media for students’ engagement and motivation to learn. Students use social media in their daily life; it is an essential part of their life. Therefore we educators need to know how to use these digital tools to encourage higher order thinking and creativity. I also realized the risks of students using social media and the importance of teaching students about these risks in order to keep them safe online.
         Learning community in this course played a great role in enhancing my learning. Collaborating with others provided me with other perspectives besides my own.  Collaboration and communication with students from different backgrounds exposed me to different perspectives and ideas about social media and its use in education. From my own experience with the collaborative group, I realized the importance of group work in online course. Working in groups allowed me to learn from other students who have different experiences than me. Teamwork provided the social presence I needed to be successful. Group work reduced my feeling of isolation that I usually suffer from in online classes.
          What I see myself doing with the knowledge I gained from this course? Well, for sure, I will use social media for my professional development. I believe that tools like  Twitter and learnist can be valuable tools for professional development. However, I am not sure if I will use social media tools like Facebook in the courses I teach, especial with my undergraduate students in Egypt. The cultural differences between Egypt and US makes me carefully think about using a social media site like Facebook. 





Thursday, November 14, 2013

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Curriculum of Power Over

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Curriculum of Power Over: Through my life journey, from my childhood to adulthood, I have constantly struggled with hierarchical relationships ...

Curriculum of Power Over



Through my life journey, from my childhood to adulthood, I have constantly struggled with hierarchical relationships in the Egyptian society. People have power over other people. At home, my father has power over me, my mother, my sisters, and my brother, and my brother has power over me and my sisters, and my older sisters have power over me because I am the youngest one.  At my schools, from elementary school to high school, teachers have power over me and over other students in the class, and the school administration has power over my teachers. At my college, professors have power over me and other students. I learned that there is always a group has power over a group- a group rules, controls and exploits other. I learned the world is hierarchical, and I must learn my place in the hierarchy because there is no alternative to either controlling or being controlled. This paper outlines my story with “power over” relations that shaped my present.
Once I entered school, I found the same hierarchical relations; I found hierarchical relations between me and my childhood teachers. I remember my fifth and sixth-grade science teacher, Mr. Ahmed: a short man with a thick, black mustache. Mr. Ahmed was surly; I am not sure if he can smile and laughs like us. Mr. Ahmed also spanked his students. When we were disobedient, we had to submit to several whacks with a stick on our hands. Each student expected to undergo this whacks at some point in the school year. I remember my fear of Mr. Ahmed’s class- fear not of the physical pain but, as Kreisberg (1992) describes it, the pain of “the humiliation and submission I would be forced to experience” (p. 4). In Mr. Ahmed’s class, there was no doubt that he had a complete control in the classroom and had the right to govern alone, to teach from his point of view, to discipline and punish, and to evaluate students.
Mr. Ahmed’s classroom was designed in a way gave him power over students; that is, his chair was placed in a special spot of power, at the front of the room near the blackboard and behind a wood desk while students’ chairs set in rows facing the teacher’s desk. This classroom design is what Shor (1996) describes, “Like plants growing toward sunlight, students are expected to sit in rows facing the lecturing teacher at the front, the unilateral authority who tells them what things mean, what to do, and how to become people who fit into society as it is” (p. 11).  This classroom design helped Mr. Ahmed assert his power to deliver a one-way curriculum dominated with his talk.  Mr. Ahmed was talking all the class time; it seems that, as Freire (2000) puts it, our minds were empty containers and he was a depositor who was busy filling them with his narratives.
I also remember my English teacher in my high school, Mr. Mansour.  I remember his insisting that we memorize verb tenses and requiring to us to write sentences explain past time, present time and future time using the same verb. I remember his frightening voice and his obvious pleasure at students for not knowing the correct answers. He used the pressure to enforce his rules and impose his expectation. Mr. Mansour’s curriculum was designed in a way that moves toward directing the students, instead of engaging them, in a way that depends on what he thinks “best” for the students.  This one-way curriculum silenced me. It sent me a message that I am inferior to the teacher who possesses knowledge; therefore, he can do education for me as he sees it. As a result, I have not a say in what I learn; I have not the right to decide what I need to learn or how I might do it. Thus, as Taliaferro-Baszile (2010) describes it, my teachers’ inner eyes became my inner eyes and “yet these distort and refract much like a funhouse mirror” (p. 489).
At the college I graduated from, professors' power over students was more obvious than school teachers' power. I remember Dr. Yousef insisting that students raise their hands whenever they want to speak and wait until he decides who should speak and in what order. I remember when one of my colleagues spoke without getting his permission to talk; Dr. Yousef was so angry that this student interrupted him and he asked the student to leave the class and meet him in his office after the lecture. Dr. Yousef was the only one who can decide what and how students should learn; as a result, the curriculum was fixed and ready-made reflects his view, not the views of me and other students in the class. I was never asked to relate my personal experiences, interests, needs, speech, and perceptions to the course of study. I do not remember that he asked me or other students about what we already know about the topic, what we know independently of the classroom, or how we think in the context of our daily lives.
It seems that what I study at the college and my personal experiences are in different directions and they never meet.  Ignoring my experiences conveys to me the insignificance of my voice. Therefore, I felt that the curriculum was something out there did not belong to me; as a result, I found a hard time understanding what I was being taught. That is, as Slattery (2006) explains, “in order to understand knowledge, I must experience intimacy. The knower cannot be separated from the known, and meaning cannot be separated from the context that gives rise to the meaningful experience” (p. 295).  Therefore, I was always wondering “Why do I learn this?” “Why am I doing this?” or “What is the benefit of studying this?” I could not realize the importance and the benefits of what I study because there is no clear relationship between what I study in the classroom and my world outside the classroom.  
Although my struggle with power over relationships within Egyptian schools and college, I find that I treat my college-level students with the same power over relations, as my teachers treated me. From my previous experiences with teacher treatment to his/her students, I came to believe that “the teacher”, the “knower”, should have power in the classroom in order to be able to control students and maintain the discipline in the classroom.  As a result, I intent to have complete power in my classroom.  I am the one who decides the content students learn in the course, who determines assignments and tests through which the material will be mastered, who grades the students, who controls and regulates the flow of communication, deciding who gets the opportunity to speak, when, and for how long, and who decides the classroom rules. Overall, I am the one who makes all (or even most) of the important decisions about learning for students, and students have not the rights to discuss these decisions with me.  For example, as soon as I enter the classroom, I close the classroom door and do not permit any late student to attend the lecture. Students should raise their hand if they want to speak and wait until I call on them. I do not allow students to discuss any issue or concern outside the topic that I want to lecture about. Students are not permitted under any condition to call me by my first name even if they are older than me.
My treatment to my college-level students is a result of years of hierarchical relationships I live in and with to the degree that they become part of my identity. Grumet (1989) argues, “What we know becomes incorporated into our identities. It is connected to what we can do and who we are” (p. 14). Also, Pinar (1975) argues, “The present … becomes an acting out of the past, the superimposition of past issues and situations and persons onto the present” (p. 22). From my childhood and adulthood experiences, I grew to believe that the world is hierarchical and I have to find out my place in the hierarchy, to control or being controlled; therefore, I chose to control. As a result, I taught and treated my student by the same way I was taught and treated when I was a student because I did not another way. Grumet (1989) argues, “Knowledge is a symbol for our experience in the world. What we know is connected to what we can do” (p. 16).
These relationships of power, where school teachers and college professors have power over their students, are not unsystematically and randomly developed. Rather, they reflect predominant norms, values, and beliefs of a society (Kreisberg, 1992). Noddings (2009) argues, “Educational aims always reflect the aims-explicit or implicit- of the political society in which they are developed” (p. 434). Also, Shor (1996) emphasizes that these power problems “are social and historical, not personal peculiarities; that is, they already exist in class before the teacher’s introduction of the syllabus, before the presentation of formal academic subject matter, before the teacher utters a signal word, because education is a social activity formed within the cultural conflicts in society at large” (p. 17). Thus, the Egyptian teacher power over students reflects values and beliefs exist in the Egyptian society- a society that has suffered many years of colonization. Being a colonized country for many years, Egypt and its people are shaped by and reflect legacies of colonization. Asher (2010) argues, “While not all of us may have experienced colonialism/imperialist expansion, I argue that we all implicated in and affected by its effect-the fact of colonization” (p. 396). That is, “colonization – the physical and psychic occupation and control of a people, a place, a person- happens at the individual and systemic levels and that the colonized internalize the colonizer” (p. 395). Thus, Egypt is affected by the colonization, and its people, including myself, and its institutions internalize the colonized structure, where some have power over other.
This was my story with power over relationships, with my school teachers and then with my college teachers, which affected my present relationship with my students. Conceptualizing my past and my present enables me to envision new possibilities to democratic teacher-student relationships, possibilities to mutual authority between teacher and students where students decide aspects of their learning, and possibilities to learning, not knowledge transfer, occurs in a dialogic form. In particular, conceptualizing my past, my present, and my future enables me to see the possibility and necessity to change my relationship with my students; that is as Todd (2003) argues, “our commitment to our students involves our capacity to be altered” (as cited in Springgay & Freedman, 2010, p. 237).
I dream of democratic teacher-student relationships where both teacher and students learn from each other. Freire (2000) argues, “Education must begin with the solution of the teacher-student contradiction, by reconciling the poles of the contradiction so that both are simultaneously teachers and students” (p. 72). To resolve the teacher-student contradiction, the relationship between teacher and students should be a horizontal relationship-“A with B” relation- fed by love, humility, hope, faith and trust, instead of a vertical relationship- “A over B” relation- which “lacks love, is therefore acritical, and cannot create a critical attitude” (Freire, 1973, p. 46).   That is, although the fact that the teacher clearly has knowledge that the students do not have, students also have knowledge that the teacher does not have- knowledge about their everyday lives. Therefore, in teaching the students, the teacher necessarily must reconstruct his/her own knowledge and thus join the students in the act of learning. Therefore, a teacher should accept that s/he does not know everything, and students should recognize that they are not ignorant of everything.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

A Practice for Building Online Learning Communities



In the following, I discuss the processes I use in one of my online course (EDUC 518) in order to build online learning communities. EDUC 518, Technology and Pedagogy, is a fully online course in an Educational Learning Technologies’ master’s program at a medium-sized university in the U.S. Southwest.

Building Community From the First Day of the Class
           
            In my online course, I provide activities that assist students to connect with peers and to build relationships from the beginning of the course. The first assignment asks students to introduce themselves to their classmates with the purpose of helping students find others with whom they can build a collaborative relationship.  I find that the introductory activity is quite successful in assisting students to develop collegial relationships and to help them to get to know each other early on in the course. The introductory activity effectively enables students to locate compatible colleagues with similar interests to support further collaborative work on assignments and projects. In my online courses, the introductory activity does not require anything more than the ability to express knowledge of self. In the introductory activity, I ask students to provide information about 1) something personal (married, kids, hometown, hobbies, etc.), 2) something about their professional and educational background, and 3) favorite video, favorite song, favorite spoken piece, favorite website, and/or favorite photo/image; thus expanding the range of personal information to be shared with the class. Students are also required to respond to each other.

Using Web 2.0 Technologies

I extensively use Web 2.0 tools in my online course to foster students’ sense of community. In the first unit, I ask students to create a Skype account, a Gmail account, and a Twitter account and send me a message using these tools. The purpose is to help students be familiar with these tools before they actually use them during the semester. In the next unit, I use Twitter to facilitate class discussion. I ask students to read about the week’s topic, and then tweet about what they learned from that week’s reading assignment using the course hashtag #EDUC518. Students are also required to reply to at least two other students’ tweets.
            Additionally, students are required to create blogs through Blogger and engage in conversations through these blogs. The students are to blog in reaction to a prompt. Then they are required to read and comment on each other’s blogs. The course assigns five blogs. Rubrics are used to grade students’ blogs and grade their feedback to each other. In another unit, students are asked to collaborate using Skype and Google Doc to create a lesson plan. Besides, at the beginning of each unit, I use Screencast-o-matic to give students an overview of the unit and to increase students’ sense of belonging in the course. I find that using Web 2.0 technologies help connect students  through these various forms of communication. Particularly, the use of blogs and Twitter helped to build a learning community through dialogue and conversation among students.

Using Threaded Discussions
           
            Threaded discussions are used to encourage students’ sense of community. The course uses Canvas’s threaded discussion feature to conduct asynchronous discussions. There are three discussion forums in the course. In each discussion forum, I post three questions, each as a separate thread. Students are expected to respond to each of the three threads and then react to the responses of a minimum of two peers. By replying to each other’s posts, students have the opportunity to work collaboratively with each other to expand and deepen their learning experience, test out new ideas by sharing them with their classmates, and receive critical and constructive feedback. Students are also required to include references and citations to relevant articles that support their argument. The discussion activities have clear instructions about how much time is involved in participation in the discussion. The discussions are graded using a rubric that assigns points according to the level of engagement. 
            Additionally, there is an ungraded discussion, titled “Get or Give Help Here”, where students are encouraged to post any questions they may have and to help each other. This discussion area became a gathering place where students could engage with each other outside of the regular or required discussion assignments. The focus here is to provide a safe place for students to connect without having to feel like they are being evaluated.

Pairing Students in Activities
           
            Once students have gotten to know one another on a social level through the introductory activity, Canvas’s threaded discussions, and blog discussions, peer partnership activities are utilized. The purpose of pairing learners for an activity is to help them to develop a sense of community and to prepare them for team activities. Around the midterm, I design a Dyad activity in which students are asked to find a partner to work together. In the Dyad activity, students are asked to work with a partner of their choice to investigate a specific topic and use the results of their interaction to prepare a joint posting to the discussion board. Two weeks before the Dyad activity starts, students are asked to select their partners in order to give them enough time so that the selection process can occur. Student evaluation in the Dyad activity is based on: 1) the quality of the discussion which is assessed using a discussion rubric, 2) peer evaluation using a rubric, and 3) reply to at least 2 other students' posts.

Encouraging Collaborative Activities

            After a peer partnership activity has been completed, students are asked to create their own collaborative groups. The students who worked on the Dyad activity have the freedom to combine their small groups into larger teams for collaborative activities or to create new groups. Students are asked to create their groups two weeks before the collaborative activity will start in order to give students enough time so that the selection process can occur. Additionally, before working in the collaborative activity, students are provided with a written explanation of the importance of the collaborative work as well as instructions for completing it. Students are also given guidance to establish group polices and procedures and suggestions of collaborative technology tools that can be used (See Figure 4). Before working in the group activity, the students are asked to use a group contact template suggested by Conrad and Donaldson (2004). This document suggests that the group members specify the primary method of and frequency of communication, make contingency plans for emergencies, and decide whether or not to select a group leader. The contract allows group members to create a group management plan for the semester’s activities. Additionally, before working in the collaborative activity, students are asked to participate in a practice exercise for group development. With this class, a graded activity, titled The Critical Insight Activity, is used. The purpose is to help students to practice their group polices and procedures and to practice collaborative technology tools. Student grading in the collaborative activity is based on: 1) the quality of the content that is graded using a rubric and 2) peer evaluation in which students are asked to assess each other’s performance on the team using a rubric.           
            During the group work, I offer suggestions throughout the creation process, act as a mediator when needed in various groups throughout the semester, and have the final word when problems arose. The contracts were effective in that all groups completed a product or project according to the specifications given in the syllabus. Groups typically handled their problems according to their contracts before asking me for help in this area. Most groups followed the contracts they created without difficulty, but when difficulties arose that the group could not handle, the members sought help from me. The group contracts helped to build a subset of the community (small groups) within the larger community (the class). In addition, the contracts helped to facilitate group interaction and cohesion by subtly forcing group members to look at the various personalities, skills, and workloads involved in their group.
  
Conclusion

            The literature provides evidence that students’ sense of community is critical to student success in online environments. Thus, building and sustaining strong learning communities should be an essential dynamic in virtual classrooms. We educators should intentionally work to build and foster learning communities among students in online courses. A review of the literature suggests that instructors teaching at a distance may promote sense of community by 1) building a learning community from the first day of the class, 2) using Web 2.0 technologies 3) using threaded discussions, 4) pairing students in activities before collaborative work, and 5) encouraging collaborative activities. In my online course, I intentionally draw on these processes in order to build learning communities among my students. I need to continue to evaluate and revise these processes in order to effectively build and sustain learning communities in my online courses. Yet, building online learning communities is a difficult task. However, doing so is an integral step for improving learning and teaching in online environments, and thus work in this area should continue.





  
  




Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: The Process of Building Learning Communities in an...

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: The Process of Building Learning Communities in an...: Online courses are different than face-to-face courses at many aspects. As we can see in this image, in the face to face class, the...

The Process of Building Learning Communities in an Online Course


Online courses are different than face-to-face courses at many aspects. As we can see in this image, in the face to face class, the learner is present and the instructor can read the body language, make eye contact, identify students’ expressions– read the visual cues. the instructor can recognize when learners are bored, lost focus. 

This is not so easy to do online. Students in online classes work at computers miles apart at varying times of the day, resulting in a feeling of isolation.

Fostering online learning communities can help reduce a sense of isolation and improve the educational experience of students.


Community building is widely accepted as a sense rather than a tangible entity (Wiesenfeld, 1996). Sense of community has been defined as “a sense that members have a belonging, members matter to one another and to the group and a shared faith that member's needs will be met through their commitment to be together” (McMillan & Chavis, 1986, p. 9). The literature highlights many strategies and processes to help online students build a sense of community. The following section reviews the literature that puts the foundation for the processes I use in my online course to build a sense of community among students.

In order to help students to develop a sense of community, we educators need to develop authentic and effective ways to assist them to connect with peers and to build relationships from the beginning of the online course. It has been argued (Dixon, Crooks & Henry, 2006; Palloff & Pratt, 2005; Conrad & Donaldson, 2004) that instructors must develop ways to create a community of learners early on in online environments. Additionally, Palloff and Pratt (2007) assert the necessity of establishing “human-to-human contact before the interaction involved with the course content begins, a means by which presence can be established (p. 12). To establish human contact between students before their participation in the course content, the use of an introductory activity is recommended. According to Ebersole (2003), creating discussion areas for students to use for initial introductions is one of community building activities that help reduce the feeling of isolation and increase social presence from the beginning of the online course. Introductory postings provide opportunities for students to present themselves to their classmates and begin the interaction with one another in a nonthreatening manner (Conrad & Donaldson, 2004).

Much of the writing on the community-based approach to online learning—that are related to developing and sustaining it—describes the use of asynchronous threaded discussions in response to instructor discussion questions as the main means by which this community is developed (Cazden, 1988; Buckingham, 2003; Palloff & Pratt, 2007; Clark & Kinne, 2012). In online learning, these discussions have become a common feature for structuring learning experiences through personalizing and humanizing the course (Palloff & Pratt, 2007). Many researchers who work in online environments agree that asynchronous discussions are places where students learn from each other (Carr-Chellman & Duchastell, 2000), provide accessibility to each other’s thinking (Peterson & Slotta, 2009), and enable students to participate even more than in live classroom discussions (Hirumi & Bermudez, 1996; Paloff & Pratt, 1999; 2007). Additionally, Ebersole (2003) recommends creating spaces for student-to-student interaction where students can engage with each other outside of the regular or required discussion assignments. These spaces, as Ebersole explains, contribute to an online learner’s sense of connectedness with other students and contribute to overall level of satisfaction with the course.

Collaborative activity is also critical to help develop that sense of community, thus enabling the creation of an environment in which further collaborative work can happen (Palloff & Pratt, 2005; 2007). For helping students to work effectively in activities that involve online collaboration and reduce resistance to the activity, Palloff and Pratt (2005) suggest providing students with an explanation of the importance of and reasons for including collaborative activity in an online course. Dell (2004) also stresses the importance of giving clear instructions and guidelines regarding not only the assignments, but also the method and tools of communication that will be used. Dell also suggests designing evaluation criteria to include peer evaluation. He argues that this peer evaluation rewards extraordinary team members while at the same time appropriately evaluates non-contributing members. Additionally, the use of an agreement or contact among group members has been noted to be of significant importance in promoting learner satisfaction with collaborative learning experiences online (Murphy, Mahoney & Harvell, 2000; Doran, 2001). The contact outlines how the group members will interact together, determines the roles each member will play in the collaborative activity, and creates benchmarks and deadlines for the completion and submission of collaborative work (Palloff & Pratt, 2005). Furthermore, it is advised to pair learners for an activity as a way to build a bridge to collaborative group work later in the course and help learners to develop an appreciation of collaboration (Conrad & Donaldson, 2004; Palloff & Pratt, 2005).

Web 2.0 technologies can play an important role in the development of a learning community among students in online courses (Kearns &Frey, 2010; Palloff & Pratt, 2009; Gunawardena et al., 2009). Web 2.0 is the term used to describe a variety of web sites and applications that allow anyone to create and share online information or material they have created. A key element of the technology is that it allows people to create, share, collaborate, and communicate. There is a number of different types of Web 2.0 applications including wikis, blogs, and social networking. According to Palloff and Pratt (2009), Web 2.0 technologies do have the ability to enhance the development of community online and reduce the isolation and distance felt by students in online courses. Palloff and Pratt argue, relying on any tool of Web 2.0 technologies to accomplish that task is a bit shortsighted. However, the inclusion of a variety of means by which community is developed in an online course can only serve to facilitate this task by increasing the means and amount of communication possible between students as well as between students and the instructor (Palloff & Pratt). 

Reference


Carr-Chellman, A., & Duchastel, P. (2000). The ideal online course. British Journal of Educational Technology, 31(3), 229–241.

Cazden, C. (1988). Classroom discourse: The language of teaching and learning. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Clarke, L., & Kinne, L. (2012). More than words: Investigating the format of asynchronous discussions as threaded discussions or blogs. Journal of Digital Learning in Teacher Education, 29(1), 4-13.

Conrad, R., & Donaldson, A. (2004). Engaging the online learners: Activities and resources for creative instruction. USA: Jossey-Bass.

Dell, D. (2004). Philosophy of online teaching. Capella University.

Dixon, J., Crooks, H., & Henry, K. (2006). Breaking the ice: Supporting collaboration and the development of community online. Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, 32(2), 1-14.

Doran, C. (2001). The effective use of learning groups in online education. New Horizons in Adult Education, 15(2). Retrieved May 6, 2004, from http://www.nova.edu/~aed/horizons/volume15n2.html.

Ebersole, S. (2003). Online learning communities: Connecting with success. Retrieved September 20, 2012, from http://bcis.pacificu.edu/journal/2003/09/ebersole.php

Hiltz, S.R. (1998). Collaborative learning in asynchronous learning networks: Building learning communities. Orlando, Florida.

Hirumi, A., & Bermudez, A.B. (1996). Interactivity, distance education, and instructional systems design converge on the information superhighway. Journal of Research on Computing in Education, 29(1), 1–16.

Kearns, L., & Frey, B. (2010, July/August). Web 2.0 technologies and back channel communication in an online learning community. TechTrends, 54(4), 41-51.

LaPadula, M. (2003). A comprehensive look at online student support services for distance learners. The American Journal of Distance Education, 17(2), 119–128.

McMillan, D. W., & Chavis, D. M. (1986). Sense of community: A definition and theory. Journal of Community Psychology, 14(1), 6 – 23.

Murphy, K., Mahoney, S., & Harvell, T. (2000). Role of contracts in enhancing community building in Web courses. Educational Technology & Society, 3(3), 409-421.

Palloff, R., & Pratt, K. (1999). Building learning communities in cyberspace: Effective strategies for the online classroom. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Palloff, R., & Pratt, K. (2005). Collaborating online: Learning together in community. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Palloff, R., & Pratt, K. (2007). Building online learning communities: Effective strategies for the virtual classroom. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.


Peterson, S. S., & Slotta, J. (2009). Saying yes to online learning: A first-time experience teaching an online graduate course in literacy education. Literacy Research and Instruction, 48, 120–136.

Rovai, A. P., Wighting, M. J., & Lucking, R. (2004). The classroom and school community inventory: Development, refinement, and validation of a self-report measure for educational research. Internet and Higher Education, 7, 263–280.

Sadera, W., Robertson, J., Song, L., & Midon, M. N. (2009). The role of community in online learning success. Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, 5(2), 277–284.

Walker, J., Wasserman, S., & Wellman, B. (1994). Statistical models for social support networks. In S. Wasserman and J. Galaskiewicz (Eds.) Advances in Social Network Analysis. (p. 53-78) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Wellman, B., & Gulia, M. (1999). The network basis of social support: A network is more than the sum of its ties. In B. Wellman (Ed.). Networks in the Global Village. (p. 83-118) Boulder, CO.: Westview Press.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Teaching Graduate Students

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Teaching Graduate Students: Educators of graduate students may need to explain the reasons for asking students to participate in an experience and expa...

Teaching Graduate Students


Educators of graduate students may need to explain the reasons for asking students to participate in an experience and expand their traditional role. Adult students, as Knowles et al (2005; 1998) and Grow (1991) argue, need to be given explanations and evidence that carrying out some activities carries benefits for them. Grow (1991) argues that adult learners will be motivated and encouraged when they are given clear explanations of why the experience is important.

 Educators of graduate students need to be willing to share power with students and to be guided by their interests and needs in such a way that encourages students’ input in the course content, the format in which the material is presented, and the manner in which their performance is assessed. The shift of content from being the instructor’s sole possession to something that is presented in response to the expressed interests and needs of students can contribute to graduate students’ engagement and ownership of learning. Educators of graduate students need to be flexible and sensitive to respond to students’ learning needs and the direction in which the students want to take the curriculum. However, students might not have enough or might not have the right kind of knowledge and skills to participate in curriculum design. Therefore, a move toward involving learners in curriculum decision-making requires flexibility and risk-taking, and entails a strong faith in the capacity of learners. Besides, faculty need to be willing to suspend their own judgments over the suitability or value of students’ suggestions and ideas for classroom work, in the spirit of drawing out and building upon the learners’ own capacity to create knowledge.

Graduate students, after spending so many years in traditional educational settings, have been trained to be dependent on teachers to teach them, which may make it difficult to invite them to determine what they would want to learn. Hence, educators need to consider possible difficulties that students may experience due to their familiarity with an education system where teachers have dominated the classroom. We educators and students need to challenge these habits and confront fundamental questions about the nature of teaching and learning. We educators need to engage in critical reflection to understand the dynamics of power in the classroom and to uncover the hegemonies that drive our practices. We must be alert to the presence of power in our classrooms and its potential for misuse. This may help us to be more aware of the effects we are having on students. As Brookfield (1995) argues, “Becoming alert to the oppressive dimensions of our practices (many of which reflect an unquestioned acceptance of values, norms, and practices defined for us by others) is often the first step in working more democratically and cooperatively with students” (p. 9). 

Meeting graduate students’ needs is essential. Having the opportunity to develop objectives and topics based on their perceived needs and goals can make the course meaningful, encourage students’ investment in the course, improve their motivation to learn, and enhance their sense of ownership of learning. This indicates the significance of creating a space for graduate students to develop learning objectives for themselves based on their felt needs and interests. Involving adult students in developing learning objectives for themselves is critical for their involvement and learning (Knowles et al., 2005; Mackeracher, 2004; Wlodkowski, 1999; DeVries & Zan, 2005; Auerbach, 1992). According to DeVries and Zan (2005), “Adults are often capable of constructive effort even when interest is at a low level [...] however, the absence of interest can prevent effective effort. When our interest is thoroughly engaged, our efforts are most productive” (p. 63).

Involving graduate students in designing course assignments can give them a sense of control over their own learning, which can encourage them to take responsibility for their own learning. The traditional role, in which the instructor has power to make all decisions relating to the education of students, needs to change into a partnership. In this partnership, students are encouraged to take some control of their education, including some control over their own assessment. Heron (1979) asserted that no relation of partnership between students and faculty would be complete without the consideration of giving students some control over assessment. Heron said, “If there is no staff/student collaboration in assessment, then staff exert a stranglehold that inhibits the development of collaboration with respect to all other processes” (p. 13). Therefore, assessment needs to move to a cooperative relation in which the assessment is “jointly owned by both staff and students” (Boud & Prosser, 1980, p. 26). However, inviting students to have some control over assessment does not mean that students no longer need the instructor’s help. Graduate students need some control of the assessment process, but also they need the instructor’s intervention through the process. They need the instructor as a facilitator who guides without telling them what to do. This suggests the need to achieve a balance between student control and the instructor’s facilitation in a way that does not undermine students from assuming responsibility in the pursuit of understanding and developing new knowledge.
  
Combining different delivery modes with inviting graduate students to choose their mode of participation can accommodate a face-to-face class to students’ different needs and life situations. This in turn can enhance students’ motivation to learn, engagement, and participation in the course. This indicates the significance of flexible delivery with giving students the opportunity to choose their mode of participation. Graduate students as adult learners need flexible instruction that extends the boundaries of learning so that learning can occur in the classroom, from home, and in the workplace. The goal is to provide quality-learning experiences through a consideration of the learners’ personal characteristics, work responsibilities, learning needs, and personal circumstances (Espinoza & Pannell, 2002; Casey & Wilson, 2005; Iqbal, 2011). Educators of graduate students are actively encouraged to find effective and flexible delivery models to provide all students with more convenient access to quality learning experiences than is possible with traditional on campus offerings alone.

Blending multiple delivery modes with the choice of how students can complete course activities during any given week or for any given topic can offer a way to differentiate instruction to meet students’ different learning styles and strategies. Educators of graduate students need to consider the learning needs of individual learners and focus on producing learning with every learner by whatever means work best for them. This requires that instructors of graduate students value providing participation choices to students more than they value forcing everyone into the “best” way of learning a set of content. Educators of graduate students are highly encouraged to find ways to supplement traditional classroom-based classes by alternative instructional delivery methods to provide all students with more convenient access to quality learning experiences that match their preferences, schedules, and professional goals.

The flexible approach toward participation can give graduate students some control over the time and place of their participation, thus a feeling of being more in control of their own learning approach. This suggests that educators of graduate students need to develop courses and instructional activities in a way that allows learners to take some control over their learning environment. Allowing graduate students to control (or at least influence) the pacing and specific activities in a learning environment can improve their learning experience (Beatty, 2010) and increase their motivation and engagement in the learning process (Wlodkowski, 1999).

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Critical Pedagogy and Democratic Education

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Critical Pedagogy and Democratic Education: Critical pedagogies (e.g. Dewey, 1938; Freire, 1993; Shor, 1992; 1996) criticize the imbalance of power between educators a...

Critical Pedagogy and Democratic Education


Critical pedagogies (e.g. Dewey, 1938; Freire, 1993; Shor, 1992; 1996) criticize the imbalance of power between educators and students. Freire (1993) criticizes the “banking” model of education in which the relation between an educator and students is described as a “A over B” relation. In the banking model of education, educators are the primary decision makers and sole deliverers of knowledge. Freire describes the banking approach to teaching and learning as follows:
a) The teacher teaches and the students are taught; b) the teacher knows everything and the students know nothing; c) the teacher thinks and the students are thought about; d) the teacher talks and the students listen-meekly; e) the teacher disciplines and the students are disciplined; f) the teacher chooses and enforces his [her] choice, and the students comply; g) the teacher acts and the students have the illusion of acting through the action of the teacher; h) the teacher chooses the content and the students, who were not consulted, adapt to it. (p. 54)

Freire argues that in the “banking” model of teaching and learning, educators control students’ thinking and action, leading to students’ passivity and inhibiting their “creative power” (p. 58).  For democratic education, Freire (1993) argues, “Education must begin with the solution of the teacher-student contradiction” (p. 72). The contradiction that Freire meant is the hierarchical relationship between the teacher and students in which the teacher is seen the expert who owns the knowledge and knows everything and students know nothing. Rather, Freire emphasizes the partnership between the educator and students. He describes such partnership as one in which both students and the educator learn from each other in a way that “they become jointly responsible for a process in which all grow” (p. 61). To accomplish such partnership, there should be a horizontal relationship between the educator and students in which the role of the educator is “to create, together with students” the conditions of learning (p. 62). Freire argues that dialogue has the power to break the vertical relationship between teachers and students and transform it to a democratic relation in which both teachers and students have a voice. He emphasizes, “Through dialogue, the teacher-of-the-students and the students-of the-teacher […] The teacher is no longer merely the one who teaches, but one who is himself taught in dialogue with the students, who in their turn while being taught also teach” (p. 61).
Much in line with Freire’s ideas, the critical educator Ira Shor (1992; 1996) asserts that students’ meaningful participation in their learning provides an important basis for constructing the fundamental imperatives of a strong democracy. Shor (1992) argues that democracy is a process of open communication and mutual governance in a community of shared power, where all members can express ideas, frame purposes, and act on intentions. Shor (1996) further argues that democratic principles can be fostered and realized in the classroom community when power in the classroom is shared so that students are able to actively participate in the learning process. For Shor, without student active participation in decision-making, the classroom will be a place of undemocratic transfers of information, and students will develop as authority-dependent subordinates, not as democratic citizens. In contrast, Shor explains, when higher education seeks to maximize students’ participation in decision-making, they develop intellectual curiosity, scientific thinking, cooperative relations, social habits, and self-discipline. Sharing the decision-making power with students can serve as an important means to help realize the vital goals of democratic education. 

However, teaching democratically by involving students in the decision making power does not mean that faculty abdicate their authority (Schultz & Oyler, 2006; Weimer, 2002; Oyler, 1996; Brookfield, 1995). Kreisberg (1992) agues, “‘Power with’ is not a zero-sum proposition where one person gains the capacity to achieve his or her desires at the expense of others” (p. 71). Rather, the “power with” relation, Kreisberg explains, manifests in relationships of “co-agency”, in which “individuals and groups fulfill their desires by acting together” (pp. 85-86). Therefore, as Oyler (1996) argues, sharing power with students does not mean that the instructor “moves out of the students’ way to the soft place of abdicated authority” (p. 24). Rather, Schultz and Oyler (2006) explain, the instructor should remain a member of the classroom as decisions are being made. Also, Shor (1992) argues that sharing power with students does not mean students can do whatever they like in the classroom, neither can the teacher do whatever she or he likes. What it does mean, as Brookfield (1995) explains, is that educators make an effort to create conditions under which all voices can be heard, and in which educational processes are seen to be open and genuine negotiation. 

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Dewey and Democratic Education

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Dewey and Democratic Education: MODERN life means democracy, democracy means freeing intelligence for independent effectiveness-the emancipation of mind as...

Dewey and Democratic Education


MODERN life means democracy, democracy means freeing intelligence for independent effectiveness-the emancipation of mind as an individual organ to do its own work. We naturally associate democracy with freedom of action, but freedom of action without freed capacity of thought behind it is only chaos. (Dewey, 1903, p. 193). 

Democracy for Dewey means freedom of mind in discovering and proof; it is a free capacity to think for one’s self. For Dewey, democracy entails finding conditions to “the development of individual mental power and to adequate responsibility for its use” (p. 194). Students’ meaningful participation in their learning sets up the conditions for freedom of thought. Dewey argued that the growth of freedom of thought entails that students participate in determining the conditions and the aims of their own work. Dewey explained:
Until the emphasis changes to the conditions which make it necessary for the [student] to take an active share in the personal building up of his own problems and to participate in methods of solving them […] mind is not really freed. (1903, p. 201) 

Accordingly, students’ meaningful participation in their learning is another fundamental principle of democracy (Dewey, 1903; 1938). When it came to democratic education, Dewey (1938) was clear about students’ active participation in their learning. Dewey emphasized participation as the point at which democracy and learning meet in the classroom. For Dewey, participation is democratic when students construct purposes and meaning, carry out plans, and evaluate results. For Dewey, learning material supplied by others is a denial of democracy. He argued, “To subject mind to an outside and ready-made material is a denial of the ideal of democracy, which roots itself ultimately in the principle of moral, self-directing individuality” (Dewey, 1903, p. 199). From Dewey’s perspective, the external and ready-made material “tends automatically to perpetuate the very conditions of inefficiency, lack of interest, inability to assume positions of self-determination” (p. 198). In other words, by creating the environment and learning experiences that bring student to actively participate in making decisions in the learning process, faculty can develop the skills needed to make democracy a reality with their students. Dewey (1903) asserts that the process for reaching democratic education principles should be participatory and inclusive; the student has “a share in determining the conditions and the aims of his own work” (p. 179).

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Student Participation & Democratic Education


MODERN life means democracy, democracy means freeing intelligence for independent effectiveness-the emancipation of mind as an individual organ to do its own work. We naturally associate democracy with freedom of action, but freedom of action without freed capacity of thought behind it is only chaos. (Dewey, 1903, p. 193). 

Democracy for Dewey means freedom of mind in discovering and proof; it is a free capacity to think for one’s self. For Dewey, democracy entails finding conditions to “the development of individual mental power and to adequate responsibility for its use” (p. 194). Students’ meaningful participation in their learning sets up the conditions for freedom of thought. Dewey argued that the growth of freedom of thought entails that students participate in determining the conditions and the aims of their own work; Dewey explained:
Until the emphasis changes to the conditions which make it necessary for the [student] to take an active share in the personal building up of his own problems and to participate in methods of solving them […] mind is not really freed. (1903, p. 201) 

Accordingly, students’ meaningful participation in their learning is another fundamental principle of democracy (Dewey, 1903; 1938). When it came to democratic education, Dewey (1938) was clear about students’ active participation in their learning. Dewey emphasized participation as the point at which democracy and learning meet in the classroom. For Dewey, participation is democratic when students construct purposes and meaning, carry out plans, and evaluate results. For Dewey, learning material supplied by others is a denial of democracy. He argued, “To subject mind to an outside and ready-made material is a denial of the ideal of democracy, which roots itself ultimately in the principle of moral, self-directing individuality” (Dewey, 1903, p. 199). From Dewey’s perspective, the external and ready-made material “tends automatically to perpetuate the very conditions of inefficiency, lack of interest, inability to assume positions of self-determination” (p. 198). In other words, by creating the environment and learning experiences that bring student to actively participate in making decisions in the learning process, faculty can develop the skills needed to make democracy a reality with their students. Dewey (1903) asserts that the process for reaching democratic education principles should be participatory and inclusive; the student has “a share in determining the conditions and the aims of his own work” (p. 179).

Friday, August 23, 2013

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Student active participation in learning

Mariam Abdelmalak's Blog: Student active participation in learning: Higher education institutions should not be merely training sites that provide students with the technical expertise required to f...

Democratic Education


Throughout my life’s journey, from my childhood to adulthood, I have constantly struggled with undemocratic relationships in Egyptian society. People have power over other people. At home, my father has power over my mother, my sisters, my brother, and me. My brother has power over my sisters, and my older sisters have power over me because I am the youngest one. At my schools, from elementary school to university, teachers had power over me and other students in the class, and the school administration had power over my teachers. Even among students, some students had power over others because of class, gender, or religion. I learned that the world is hierarchical; there is always a group that has power over another group- one group rules, controls and exploits another. I always wondered how to change undemocratic hierarchical culture in my country to a more equitable and just society. Does education have a role in transforming my country to a democratic one? How can education develop people as citizens able to participate and influence democracy? What educational values can develop people as citizens who act democratically?
Coming to the USA as a doctoral student, I searched for answers to my questions. Taking courses in the field of critical pedagogy and reading Ira Shor’s (1992/1996) ideas about empowering democratic education answered many of my questions about how to create a democratic society. I learned that “education is more than facts and skills. It is a socializing experience that helps make the people who make society” (Shor, 1992, p. 15). I realized the important role that higher education can play to develop a democratic culture in society. Students need to practice democratic habits in the classroom, so that democratic habits become a way of living.  Democratic habits cannot be cultivated by listening to lectures about democracy. Rather, democratic habits must purposely be cultivated through democratic educational practices. Creating a learning environment that invites students to actively participate in designing the course curriculum is an example of a democratic educational practice. As a teacher educator in process, I have been inspired by these ideas. I wished to explore educational contexts in which democratic education is encouraged and supported. It is important for me, for Egyptians, and for others to envision a practical example of a kind of democratic education, a new way of being as a teacher, and new patterns of relationships between students and teachers.