Programme

Thursday, 18 June, 2015 - 17:00 to 18:15
Single session
Thursday, 18 June, 2015 - 18:30 to 19:15
Conference room: 
Chair: 

Educational Research: measuring activity and reasoning

Abstract: 
Background: our ability to measure what we do and how we think is poor. Our reliance on MCQs and OSCEs may be misplaced. Our assumption that smart people do good things is unfounded. We need better ways to explore activity and reasoning. Approach: we are currently exploring various approaches in assessment and activity metrics. Using Script Concordance Testing, Situational Judgment Testing and Signal Detection Theory to assess skills in clinical reasoning, we use OpenLabyrinth as an exam emulator. High fidelity simulation is highly valued for effective, metrics-based feedback but is too resource intensive for widespread use. Increasingly, we use OpenLabyrinth as a broad-based, educational research toolset to explore task performance, cognitive load, and operational reliability. Semi-automated item generation will help relieve stressed teachers from creating large banks of assessment items. Big data and learning analytics show great promise – the Experience API affords the ability to connect related systems: the LMS, LRS, OpenLabyrinth, WordPress for social learning. Results: so far, much turbulence which hinders smooth progress. But we have some striking examples where simple metrics are most illuminating on topics such as preceptors’ failure to fail; maladaptive study patterns in struggling learners; and interesting patterns of workflow in routine clinical tasks. The challenge of designing and implementing computer-based learning environments is to incorporate into them teaching features: the capacity to recognize and capture relevant events from observing the learner activity, the ability to understand the learning needs and then to provide the adequate feedback in the most adapted form. This challenge is even more demanding when the knowledge at stake cannot be fully accessible with explicit representations but has to be materialised by means of simulations and shared within an apprenticeship approach. What means "relevant event", "learning needs" and "adequate feedback" are epistemological questions which cannot be answered only in technical terms. This talk will present concepts from the theory of didactical situations and a modelling approach knowledge centered which can ground the search for responses. Concrete examples from mathematics and surgery will be used to provide an intuition of the generic value of the proposed framework.
Single session
Thursday, 18 June, 2015 - 19:15 to 20:00
Conference room: 
Chair: 

Hot topics in eLearning and Distance Learning

Abstract: 
e-Learning can be defined as 'learning facilitated and supported through the use of information and communications technology'. It can cover a wide range of activities that use technology to support learning as part of a ‘blended’ approach. Whilst attention should naturally be concentrated on impact on the learner, the world of eLearning is inevitably shaped mostly by emerging technologies. In this talk, I will briefly introduce the range of technologies at our disposal, and then concentrate on four technologies, course delivery platforms or applications, that have been recently topical in medicine and healthcare. Some will be new, others more mature, and each will be placed in the context of the eLearning ‘cycle of acceptance’. Finally we will look at what we believe may be on the horizon, and the best way for teachers, scientists and institutions to engage with others in programmes across Europe.
Single session