A blog about technology-enhanced learning, teaching and assessment, with side order of open educational practices. Written by Leo Havemann, Learning Technologist at Birkbeck, University of London (a member institution of the Bloomsbury Learning Environment, hence 'BLE'), and co-ordinator of M25 Learning Technology Group and ELESIG London.
Monday, 29 March 2010
Friday, 19 February 2010
Notes from the Turnitin User Group (Birkbeck, 3rd February 2010)
Welcome & Introduction
New appointments at iParadigms:
- CEO - Chris Caren
- VP Engineering - John Hartman
One outstanding issue since the last UG - problems with generating Grademark images, is ongoing. 4 other issues have been fixed.
User voice - log in to the institutional administrator account and at top right of screen click on Feedback Forum. You are allocated 10 votes. Most-voted requests will go into the development/release schedule. (In Bloomsbury we only have one admin account - can we have more, in order to vote more?)
nlearning are now on Twitter but they have protected their updates - you can request to follow them at http://twitter.com/nlearninggold.
They have produced some free anti-plagiarism and referencing guides for Ofqual, designed for sixth formers (but may well be relevant to first years).
New Peermark functionality added (seems like Grademark for peer review).
The developers are moving toward a unified interface where you can see the assignment with the originality reports, Grademark etc as an overlay and more rapidly switch between them.
Also the integration for Blackboard will become a 'deep integration', meaning we will gain the same functionality with our integrated assignments that standalone Turnitin website users have with theirs. (Possibly this has been done for the Moodle integration already?)
View requests straw poll - when a request is sent to view a paper in the database due to a match being flagged up in an originality report, the email currently goes to the instructor. The group generally felt this should go to the institutional system administrator, or else to both.
Grademark
Speaker: Stephen Bostock (Keele Uni)
Discussed Grademark in terms of student benefits and staff barriers to its use.
General discussion:
- Most institutions had seen some use of Grademark, and people who have used it are generally positve about it - but many academics remain unwilling to mark online.
- The much-voted for ability to bulk-download Grademarked papers is now scheduled for April release.
- Importing rubrics can be done at an individual account, or else system-wide level - the group requested this feature could be rolled out at a 'department' level.
Formative Use of Turnitin
Many institutions are seeing benefits from incorporating formative use of Turnitin into student training on academic honesty / information skills / anti-plagiarism and referencing. In some cases training is delivered by academics, sometimes by the library, and sometimes with input from various sources. The group generally felt there was value in formative use as the students would be able to learn about plagiarism without fear of getting in trouble.
Institutional policies governing use of Turnitin were discussed. Policies included:
1) for each assingment, either all submissions or none must be checked.
2) each student must have one formative experience of Turnitin before submitting real coursework.
Formative use cases discussed:
1) Students submit a report to Turnitin (not assessed), then based on the results write a piece of reflective writing which is assessed.
2) Students submit a draft of a piece of coursework, and later the finished version. (In the case of the draft, the submissions should not be added to the student assignment database, in order to avoid causing a high level of matching when they submit the finished piece.)
It was suggested that formative use works best when tied in with assessment and not done as an isolated exercise.
University of Leicester subject-specific plagiarism tutorials were recommended.
Monday, 15 February 2010
Durham reflections (post-Blackboard conference)
Overall, I thought it was interesting (ironic perhaps at a Blackboard conference - though to be fair there was a social media theme) that the most interesting work being done by presenters is generally happening outside the VLE itself. It must be said though that most continue to regard their VLE as an important tool in the e-learning kit.
There was a lot of reflection on barriers to e-learning development, with major ones cited being:
- many staff lack the time, and sometimes skills or willingness, to engage beyond creating course document repositories;
- students often demonstrate an unwillingness to participate in tasks that are not assessed; and indeed sometimes also to participate in collaborative tasks which appear to hand advantage to 'competitors';
- students are not necessarily the ‘digital natives’ they are often assumed to be;
- some students, while confident in their use of technology, don’t see the relevance of it for learning.
Images courtesy of ewjz31 via Flickr.
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Recently bookmarked ...
Blogging (macro & micro):
- 10 Quick Tips to Boost Your Blogging Skills http://bit.ly/A7TeM
- 10 Ways You Can Use Twitter Lists http://bit.ly/24mq6U
- 5 Ways to Get Your Blog Indexed by Google in 24 Hours http://bit.ly/3lBuEz
- Twitter vs blogging [Learning with 'e's]: Is Twitter killing blogging? http://bit.ly/15rUkZ
Get Googling:
- Google Lets You Customize and Curate the News: custom Google News launch. http://bit.ly/2dT6zx
- The Complete Guide to Google Wave: How to Use Google Wave http://bit.ly/1ZZTsp
e-Learning 'tips and tricks':
- Make Your eLearning Suck Less http://bit.ly/DwsO7
- Embedded Media HTML Generator: Select your media type, fill out form, submit, copy and paste generated HTML http://bit.ly/Ija2D
- Discussion Management Tips for Online Educators http://bit.ly/x36cy
- How Tiny Camcorders are Changing Education http://bit.ly/9aOgW
General interest:
Social networks and social class (CNN story) - http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/10/13/social.networking.class/index.html
The Dirty Little Secret About the "Wisdom of the Crowds" - There is No Crowd http://tinyurl.com/ll6q8t
...What are these tags I speak of?
'Tagging' is web 2-speak for adding metadata so that bookmarks added are searchable and findable again. I tag and then share my bookmarks via delicious (and then 'tweet' them via twitterfeed) - here are some examples of tags I use often...
blackboard, podcasting ,presentations, web2.0 , socialnetworking.