mercredi 27 avril 2022
Toute la journée
format hybride

Cette année, nous vous invitons à deux journées au format hybride (présentiel et en ligne).

Ces évènements rassembleront l’ensemble des équipes enseignantes, chargé-e-s de cours et assistant-e-s de toutes les facultés d’UniDistance Suisse.

  • Mercredi 27 avril, Jen Ross parlera de la création de communautés d'apprentissage en ligne dans l'enseignement supérieur.
  • Jeudi 9 juin, Emily Nordmann expliquera comment transmettre un enseignement de qualité en vidéo.

Les conférences seront données en anglais.

Programme - Nouveau format !

  • Matinée – participation en présence à Brigue ou en ligne
      9h30      accueil + café
    10h00      conférence et discussion avec la conférencière invitée (27 avril - Jen Ross / 9 juin Emily Nordmann)
    12h00      repas de midi pour toutes les personnes présentes à Brigue
     
  • Après-midi – participation uniquement en présence à Brigue
    (En cas d’intérêt pour un workshop en ligne, merci de l’indiquer dans le formulaire d’inscription.)
    13h30      workshop avec la participation de la conférencière
    16h00      fin de la journée

Plus d'informations ci-dessous

"Contact works in multiple ways: online learning communities in higher education"

by Dr Jen Ross, University of Edinburgh

Wednesday, April 27th, 2022

Lecture

The Manifesto for Teaching Online (2020) makes a number of claims about the value and potential of digital education. One of the most important is that "contact works in multiple ways. Face-time is over-valued". This talk is a deep dive into this claim, exploring current thinking and practice from online higher education contexts, and research into networked learning, virtual communities and post-digital education. It argues that meaningful, engaging and sustainable communities can be at the heart of digital education practice, but such communities do not emerge from attempts to copy ‘what works’ from a face-to-face setting. The nature of time and space, contact and interaction, and knowledge sharing is different in mediated settings, and designing for digital communities requires attention to those differences.

Workshop

We are the campus: the future of online communities

"Campus envy" is the tendency to see the university campus and face-to-face encounters on it as embodying the authentic university experience. This workshop is about what might happen if we don’t succumb to campus envy: instead using speculative and activity-centred methods to envisage distributed, accessible, and sustainable online learning communities, and designing approaches to help operationalise this. You will work collaboratively with colleagues to identify values and principles that can inform relational online teaching.

By the end of the workshop, you will be able to:

  • identify specific features of your teaching context that have relevance for building rich online learning communities;
  • consider the gains and losses involved in online community settings;
  • plan for developing a community-centred approach to your online teaching.

Dr Jen Ross is co-director of the Centre for Research in Digital Education at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. She developed and directs the new MSc in Education Futures at the Edinburgh Futures Institute, and has more than 15 years’ experience as an online teacher and course developer on the MSc in Digital Education. She publishes, teaches and supervises on topics including education and learning futures, speculative methods, museum and gallery learning and engagement, surveillance cultures in education, the impact and pedagogy of MOOCs and open education, and student and teacher experiences of online distance learning. She is co-author of The Manifesto for Teaching Online (MIT Press, 2020), and author of the forthcoming book Digital Futures for Learning: Speculative Methods and Pedagogies (Routledge).

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