Archive for the 'Ning' Category

The True Value of Ning?

I’ve been mulling over for some days now what I read @Injenuity. Jennifer Jones wrote a compelling post about “Being Trapped in a Ning
She mentions:
I have found that my most rewarding online connections are with people I know where to find when I need them. The tool doesn’t even matter. I’ve learned their habits and can locate them in a space where they are most comfortable interacting. There are people I’m connected with through gmail chat, skype, twitter, blogs, email and other networks, but I’ve learned which arena works best for communicating with each of them. For my Twitter contacts, I can quickly check their status on Twitter, and if they’re around, I’ll contact them through the method that works best. My colleagues all have preferred contact methods. I have some instructors who only use the phone, others email.
At the end of the year, I created the Ning group for my online students and blogged about it saying that Ning was the place where learning happened. http://explorations.bloxi.jp/a/ning-wher…
However, I must agree with Jennifer. Learning is not in Ning. It’s everywhere. When people already have their own spaces of self-expression, if they started blogging somewhere else, it’s like as if they’re dispersing their thoughts instead of aggregating them. For example, I love the fact that in the blogging4educators Ning, whenever we want we can start a forum discussion, or share something there. However, people already have their preferred way of sharing and collaborating. So, aren’t we forcing them into a relationship that existed before? Do we need to be in the “same room” to be tied and dialogging? Of course not. That’s why I feel now that I was pushing the members there, but, in fact, our bonds were already strong in other online spaces. I still like the idea of having everybody there and knowing that whenever needed we can just send a message to the network with something interesting. But, yes, Jen, what really matters is aggregating conversations and building up knowledge using each one’s favorite means and not forcing people into a digital trap. I do hope that the members in the blogging4educators don’t feel this way. I do hope that if they decided to join the group is because they saw value in it. However, it is worth speaking up our minds and questioning our practices. As for my students, it’s a different case in the sense that most of them don’t have an online presence in their learning process. They have their favorite social networks, but they consider it a different domain of socialization, not for learning, though they might be learning valuable skills. So, Ning, can focus their attention to the learning process. But, again, I have had such amazing interactions through emails, skype chats, Orkut messages with them that we might be trapped in some way. They might feel I don’t want to communicate in another digital medium, which is certainly not true. They are mostly busy adults who prefer to receive an email. Some will give me feedback and keep conversations. Others read my personal blog.
Ning is still an appealing place for learning and sharing, and I’ve had invaluable interactions there. For example, Celso, a former student, has been reporting his learning journey abroad in a forum, Marcelo talks about his news professional challenges in a blog.However, it only works if it’s the group willingness to interact there, and not us trapping a group of brilliant minds in a space that they don’t feel as theirs. It shouldn’t be unilateral where one person is trying to feed the group with information, resources, ideas, but an interactive space. If it’s not, maybe we’re using the wrong tool for the right purpose. Then, we’re missing the wonderful input each one can contribute in a network.
In the case of my online students, I know that some of them have fully profited from it and I have, as well. But, now, I think, couldn’t we keep having enriching connectivity where we started, on our class blog? A lot of food for thought there. I still believe in the power of Ning, but with more critical eyes, pondering its true value for networking. I’ll keep exploring it to have a clearer view how it’s useful in my professional development and in my students’ learning path.
Michele Martin discusses the issue in the Bamboo Project Blog. She sees the value of Ning for new users of social media, the ones who still don’t have their own blogs, or don’t use RSS to keep connected to others in their network. As I mentioned above, this is exactly the case when some of my students profit from Ning. Their shared space become a sandbox for their self-expression. It can be the spark they need to speak up their minds and find the tone of their potent voices. .

e-Learning Listening Plus – Learning 2007 Revisited

listeningplus
e-Journey 2.0.
That’s how I’d call the first online listening course held at the school I work for. I had this dream some time ago, but was never able to fulfill it until earlier this year when the administrators at my school contacted me as they felt how urgent it was at that point to offer elearning opportunities for our students and for prospective learners. They realized they were missing an important part of English learners public because they didn’t have the online component. Of course, they’ve known that for a while. However, only then was the group mature and ready to give it a try.
As I was taking some courses at University of Florida, I told them I had already devised an online course for a final course project. It was an online listening course with objectives, weeks, and weekly tasks. They liked the idea and asked me what I needed to teach that course. First, I mentioned the need to have an edtech plan for the school. Planning is certainly an essential part of the game. Then, I told them that I needed technical support to install MOODLE and during the course. I got what I asked for. It seemed perfect and the course was already on paper. So, surely it would be easy to transfer the content to the online platform. Was I dreaming…
Reality is certainly different from implementing. I knew I would have some work, but not as much.
Well, things are never quite what we expect in the online sphere…Just when I started uploading the content, I realized that I needed tutorials for students, FAQ pages, as well as meaningful connectors among the tasks to add the human element to the class. I had to set up a blog, an online social bookmarking space, the forums, the online tasks. All the nodes were supposed to make sense to students in a cozy atmosphere in which cooperation and interaction would be key elements for the class success. Even the tasks, when I started adding them to the platform, I realized slideshows, photos, options of listening activities for students with different levels of proficiency, self-assessment tools were necessary for a successful online venue. I also had to make sure I knew the students from the beginning. So, surveys could certainly give me a clearer picture of my group and their level of proficiency and expectations. I spent dozens of hours preparing the course and joining the pieces of the e-puzzle.
wiziq1 Anyway, as the course moved along, I was pleased to see students evolution, to accompany their interest and motivation to learn. Some of them really excelled and used every single suggestion of e-tool I gave them. An e-learning course must have a direction, objectives, tasks, but there are parts that are “undesignable”. You can only add certain elements as the group progresses. It’s about listening to their queries, doubts, anxieties and providing them with the means to finding the answers. You have to tailor the course for your public according to their interests and needs. Caring is fundamental. Sharing primordial.
What you hear in this podcast is just part of what was a grand finale of this first learning stage for all. Yesterday, after six weeks of intense interaction, learning and sharing, students finally gathered in Real Life with Erika Cruvinel without whom I couldn’t have accomplished such a big job and Paula Pacheco representing the academic Coordination. Both of them were essential in this journey. Paula gave us the administrative support with Isabela Villas Boas encouragement, and Erika was always there with me for whatever I needed, be it some information about students or during our live sessions. She’s my dear partner and friend. Dennis Oliver, another fantastic partner, was online with me. We interacted with students via WiziQ. It was simply a blast. Everybody kept chatting, interacting with us online, and holding their Certificate of Attendance with deserved pride after such hard work. We were all connected and I told them that, in fact, we were connected forever in Ning, our network!
This was that kind of experience that takes us to another dimension of professional development, learning and understanding. What I’ve been apprehending through the online Communities of Practice for some time now was in full use during our course. Although my students, in general, were low-tech highly-anxious students, they started blogging, using online bookmarking, understanding the concept of podcasts and the power of e-learning to achieve their learning objectives. Some still haven’t finished the course, but, I guess, that’s the beauty of online learning, each one of us has an option and can choose our path as we wish and need. Persistence is also a key factor in the success of e-learning, on the side of the teacher as well as for the student. I tried to show them that we learn by connecting, sharing, collaborating with others. I reached them in different ways, but if just some of them see the power of the Web 2.0, my mission will have been accomplished and there will be more people joining me in this Journey 2.0!
I’m thankful for having had the chance to fully use the Web 2.0 potential and show the way to my learners together with the invaluable help of my partners, Erika and Dennis. That’s what really matters.
I learned in 2007 that no matter which e-tools you’re using, your human touch to the online environment is still what matters the most to create a meeting place that is inviting, that makes students comfortable to try out, a place in which they know they will have supportive feedback, that they will be heard. No matter what your approach is to teaching and learning online, the moderator’s facilitation can cause an impact on the learners if there’s a sense of confidence and understanding of difficulties to overcome. If dialog is established and the process is fed by feedback, then people are connected in a magic 2.0 fashion!
Now, back to Ning, my treasure of 2007, to keep sharing and learning with this fantastic group of cheerful learners!

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This post is in response to Learning Circuits Blog question: What did you learn about learning in 2007?
 
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Ning – Where Learning Happens

I’ve been part of some networks at Ning for some time. I check it once in a while. There are just fantastic networks there in which learning happens in a blog post, a photo, a reference in a forum, a connection to someone in your area, an exchange of comments. However, I’ve never really considered the power it holds. Ning is a platform that aggregates many of the tools every educator dreamed of in the past to keep communication flowing among participants of a group. And I’m not mentioning only in terms of classroom. I mean educators as learners need to have their sharing space for professional development. So, Ning is empowering. An educator can be part of a variety of networks according to his professional and personal interests and might create a network to connect to his students, as well.In my case, I had been part of other communities, but then it dawned on me that I could create a network to keep the students of an online course I was teaching connected. It was their wish. So, as a surprise of end of term, Ning became the beginning of another stage of our interaction. Plus, I realized that it was an open learning space in which I could invite friends and even former students to be there as they shared their interest in language learning. Another great aspect was that Ning was visually appealing and had features of a social networking that my younger students just love, infinite possibilities to add photos, videos, music, whatever they feel like sharing.
Well, not to mention the fact that I requested an ad-free space. I got a first prompt reply saying that my students were adults. I told them that I had also invited teens for the space, and another quick reply: the ads had been removed! How cool is it to have a learning space with collaborative features which are just an educator’s dream plus the attention and support that every human being wish for in any service?
Thanks Ning Team! Part of my education and my learner’s success will certainly be due to your never-ending support to the educational community. View my page on ListeningPlus and join us!


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