
Applying the Conversational Framework using an online learning design tool
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Key Details
In this video Diana Laurillard of the UCL Knowledge Lab introduces the , a free, online, learning design tool for teachers. Based on the Conversational Framework, it builds in the six learning types so that the user can specify and evaluate the nature of the pedagogy being designed for each session within a course or module. This bite-sized recording was filmed as part of FutureLearns free put together by teaching experts at the UCL Institute of Education.
This video will cover:
00:24 Introduction to the free Learning Designer tool
00:56 How to adapt an existing learning design to your desired subject area
02:58 How to analyse your learning design
Transcript
The conversational framework疳s meant to guide us on how to疲elp students learn using both digital and畚onventional methods. So how do we use it眩o support teachers trying to work out疲ow best to plan their online teaching?
Well for this, we developed the . It's a free and open online留esign tool and it turns the theory-based畚onversational framework into practical action.胼
It enables you to express your learning design as畝 sequence of learning activities, to help your盎tudents achieve your intended learning outcomes.
So your design becomes a digital object which you畚an analyse and then share with colleagues and students. So let's go through what it does.胼
You can create a learning design from盎cratch, but you might also want to begin畜y adapting an existing one. On the website, you can go to the browser screen which lists畝ll the designs that teachers疲ave contributed and made public.胼
So I'm going to try one to see if it might be真seful and under "vocational education", I'm going眩o select risk assessment, understanding risk畝ssessment. Now I don't teach risk assessment but涅 want an idea for a design that helps盎tudents understand complex practical concepts.胼
And looking at this on the designer screen, I see眩hat the pedagogy might actually work for my topic疹et's say it's correlation. So I turn editing on畝nd now I'm in edit mode and I can edit everything疳n what's now my copy of the design.
So I'm going眩o change all these mentions of risk assessment眩o my topic of correlation and I can edit疾verything else on the screen now as well.
Now I'm going to expand the detail of眩his middle teaching learning activity皋n applying correlation. As it is now,砰ou can see there are three different疹earning types here which you can盎elect using this drop-down menu.胼
In this case, produce and practice and畚ollaborate, and each activity has its皋wn pedagogical features that you can change- the duration in minutes, 10 here, 15 and 15;眩he size of the group just one here, group of眩hree students in these two; whether the teacher疳s present or not; whether you're using the疳nternet or not, as they are in all these cases;眨hether it's synchronous or asynchronous, so this疳s not ticked because this is asynchronous but病or these ones it's synchronous. The students are眨orking together, so the calendar icon is ticked.涉nd then it tells me how many resources are attached to this particular activity.胼
Now because the software knows how much眩ime I've assigned to each type of learning,疳t provides this pie-chart as feedback on the皋verall distribution of the learning types within眩his particular session, and that will dynamically真pdate as I'm developing my design.
So now I want眩o find out from the analysis tab, I'm going to畚heck exactly how my design is progressing. Well,眩he main pie-chart shows I've used four learning眩ypes, mostly discussion, this big blue one here.胼
And that's fine, there are no rules about what it盎hould be, that's entirely up to me as a designer.胼
The other charts show it's entirely online, it's皰ale blue, all pale blue, there's no face-to-face.胼
There are more, the teacher is present for about畝 third of the time, that's a dark brown bit, and痂ore than half of it is asynchronous, that's the留ark pink bit. And then it shows me that it's痂ostly individual work, this pale green, then症roup work, and then finally the whole class.
Now finally, I want to look at something疳nteresting about these learning designs. I'm畚omparing here my design about correlation with眩he one that I originally started with, on risk畝ssessment. Now look at the differences between眩hese. The only differences are the topic related眨ords, all the rest are about the pedagogy.
That's what I'm borrowing here and that's眨hat's interesting because all of this guidance is盎till relevant to my students. It stays the same,疳t seems to work perfectly well for my very留ifferent topic.
And that's why it makes sense病or teachers to share their learning designs畝cross topic areas and even across age groups.
So these are the ways of helping you and all眩eachers think through your own designs for畜lended and online learning, using the model皋f the conversational framework. And then疳mplementing it via the Learning Designer眩ool. I hope you enjoy trying that out.
Diana Laurillard is a professor of learning with digital technologies at the UCL Knowledge Lab, , and one of the creators of the FutureLearn .
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