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School of something FACULTY OF OTHER ULBERG FACULTY OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches Hayley Atkinson and Dr Neil Morris

Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

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Slides from presentation "Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches". Given on Wednesday 3rd July 2013 at the Higher Education Academy Annual Conference (theme "Powerful partnerships: defining the learning experience"). This presentation was given under the strand "students as partners". I was also asked to give this presentation again at the HEA STEM workshop "Engaging students as partners in the STEM disciplines". This was held at Leeds University on 28th November 2013. Outline: "This paper will detail the experience of using interns and undergraduate project students to create and evaluate interactive learning materials for a laboratory training module in biomedical sciences. An intern and three project students created interactive multimedia eBooks for the module Experimental techniques in neuroscience, and configured tablet devices with a wide range of freely available learning related apps. Students taking the module had access to these materials and apps on the tablet devices, for a four-week period. There were two strands to the project. In the first, learning materials were created to support laboratory work in the module. Videos were created to highlight techniques and to demonstrate equipment. These videos, along with other learning materials, were incorporated into multimedia interactive eBooks, designed using iBooks Author, and provided to students on the iPads. The second strand looked at the students’ use of apps on the iPad and investigated changes in study behaviour throughout the project. The project students used structured interviews, questionnaires and data from the tablet devices to collect data on usage of the materials and apps, and to evaluate the learning materials. The learning materials created will be made available as Open Educational Resources. The session will reflect on the methodology, results and implications of the project, using video diaries from the students involved in the project. This session relates to the conference strand ‘students as partners’, detailing how students can be engaged to design materials for learning and lead the evaluation of these resources."

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Page 1: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

School of somethingFACULTY OF OTHER

ULBERGFACULTY OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Hayley Atkinson and Dr Neil Morris

Page 2: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Dissertation students and a student intern worked with Dr Neil Morris to:• Assist with a HEA collaborative grant funded project,

• Design eBooks based on pre-existing materials,

• Choose apps to be made available to students via an iPad,

• Design tutorials to guide app usage,

• Design a research methodology to investigate student use of the eBooks and iPads,

• Design surveys to capture data from students using the eBooks and iPads.

The background

Page 3: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

The context

students as researchers students as content creators types of partnerships

Page 4: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as researchers

Page 5: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators

Advantages for the content creators:

• Technology skills,• Communication skills,• Understanding of copyright concepts.

Advantages for the content consumers:

• Materials presented by students with knowledge of module,• Concepts explained by peers

Page 6: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators: eBooks

http://lutube.leeds.ac.uk/libha/videos/9953

Page 7: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators: eBooks

Cutaneous testingImmunofluorescence

Electrophysiology

Page 8: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators: eBooks

Digital literacy

Joe:

“I still feel immensely proud of what I have produced; I think it looks professional and smart, whilst also including all relevant information to the practical, and having a good level of interactivity.”

Page 9: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators: eBooks

http://lutube.leeds.ac.uk/libha/videos/9940

Page 10: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Student perceptions: eBooks

Aesthetic appeal:

“I think the eBook is more inviting to use than the hand-outs, like before the lab I wanted to go over some of the material and I went straight to the iPad because the eBook looks nicer and it explains it well”

Skills training:

“I've used the eBooks just in practical [classes] with the videos, sometimes its better to have a pictorial display instead of just a written protocol to understand how to do things particularly in dissections.”

Page 11: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Students as content creators: iPad tutorials

iPad apps

app tutorials

Page 12: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Access to learning resources:

“Well I’ve got the access to internet in lectures. I think the main thing I’ve used it for is cos it’s portable and easy to carry around and stuff, so I’ve always got access to you know the internet and VLE wherever I am, I don’t have to get a computer. Accessibility is probably the main thing it’s changed.”

Organisation and time management:

“I feel more organised, like before I was always the person asking other people when assignments were due, but it took two minutes to set up and I’ve found it really useful”

Student perceptions: study habits

Page 13: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Different types of student partnerships:

• Student intern,

• Dissertation students,

• Students as content users.

Working with students

Page 14: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Benefits to students

Communication

“Interviews during the practical classes enabled me to develop communicational skills.”

Academic skills

“It [the project] has provided me with valuable skills such as the capabilities of literature searching and data analysis.“

Planning

“approaching students and teaching them how to use the iPad taught me that that thorough preparation is essential as you are being looked upon to give advice and instruction.”

Page 15: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Benefits to dissertation students: teamwork

http://lutube.leeds.ac.uk/libha/videos/9941

Page 16: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

Benefits to dissertation students: organisation

http://lutube.leeds.ac.uk/libha/videos/9952

Page 17: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

School of somethingFACULTY OF OTHERBenefits to the project team

• Re-usable resources created,

• Time saved,

• Skills acquired.

Page 18: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

School of somethingFACULTY OF OTHERImplications

Students can be successful partners to create digital material and evaluate mobile learning approaches.

• Students in research intense universities can make positive contributions to pedagogic experimental design due to critical evaluation skills,

• Students know each other demands and can pitch resources at the right level,

• Students can help enormously where they have the IT skills,

• Both structured and flexible working arrangements with students can work.

Page 19: Students as partners to produce digital learning materials and evaluate mobile learning approaches

School of somethingFACULTY OF OTHER

ULBERGFACULTY OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

Hayley Atkinson

[email protected]

@ebookslearning

Dr Neil Morris

[email protected]

@LT_tech_HE

University of Leeds Bioscience Education Research Group

@UL_BERG