[With thanks to Ray Schroeder]
The well organised and informative 2009 National Survey of Student Engagement [50 pages, 20 MB PDF] report is produced by Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research in cooperation with the Indiana University Center for Survey Research. The report aims to provide data to colleges and universities to "assess and improve undergraduate education, inform state accountability and accreditation efforts, and facilitate national and sector benchmarking efforts". This year's report has a two page section (go to pages 19 and 20) about Teaching and Learning Technologies, including a tantalising but all-too-briefly explained table (below, with its rubric) "Relationship Between Technology and Engagement, Deep Learning, and Gains".
"How Do These New Technologies Relate to Student Learning
and Engagement?
Course management and interactive technologies were positively
related to student engagement, self-reported learning outcomes,
and deep approaches to learning (Table 7). Course management
technology was most strongly related to student-faculty interaction
and self-reported gains in personal and social development. It is
possible that the use of this type of organizational technology
encourages contact among classmates as well as between students
and their instructors. Interactive technologies corresponded most
strongly with students’ self-reported gains and the supportive
campus environment benchmark. Students who use interactive
technologies are also more likely to say their campus environment
is supportive and contributes to their knowledge, skills, and
personal development."
"Into something rich and strange" - making sense of the sea-change: call for proposals for the 2010 ALT conference
Last week ALT (for which I work part time) published the calls for papers and abstracts. Links to these are as follows:
Posted on 30/11/2009 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
|