Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis

This paper analyses the impact of blogging on teaching/learning in the English Curriculum unit of a postgraduate teacher education programme that had traditionally been taught face-to-face. Since the 22 teachers of this unit met as a whole group only once a fortnight for most of the semester, blogging was used to introduce course content, to promote reflection and research, and to facilitate teacher interaction. Activity systems criteria such as use of tools, distribution of community learning, interplay of contradictions, and achievement of objectives were used to analyse comments posted to topics on the English Curriculum blog. Two post-blog questionnaires were also administered to gain feedback on interactivity and blog outcomes. Findings suggest that while blogging did promote course content dissemination, it promoted little self-generated research. Teacher interaction was highest on topics of current local concern, while reflection, critical thinking, and risk taking varied with length of teaching experience and individual teacher aptitude. Implications are that in transitioning to online learning in the Caribbean, teacher educators should pay attention to cultural issues and to traditions of learning in Caribbean educational systems. With the rapid evolution of e-learning resources and ongoing research in mixing traditional and online technologies, a blended learning approach that accommodates a "flexible learning" philosophy might be best suited for the Caribbean as educators acclimatize to and indigenize technologies

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: James, Cynthia
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine 2009
Subjects:Teacher education, Postgraduate study, Blogs, Online teaching, Course evaluation, School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6581
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-65812011-03-03T21:38:24Z Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis James, Cynthia Teacher education Postgraduate study Blogs Online teaching Course evaluation School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine Trinidad and Tobago This paper analyses the impact of blogging on teaching/learning in the English Curriculum unit of a postgraduate teacher education programme that had traditionally been taught face-to-face. Since the 22 teachers of this unit met as a whole group only once a fortnight for most of the semester, blogging was used to introduce course content, to promote reflection and research, and to facilitate teacher interaction. Activity systems criteria such as use of tools, distribution of community learning, interplay of contradictions, and achievement of objectives were used to analyse comments posted to topics on the English Curriculum blog. Two post-blog questionnaires were also administered to gain feedback on interactivity and blog outcomes. Findings suggest that while blogging did promote course content dissemination, it promoted little self-generated research. Teacher interaction was highest on topics of current local concern, while reflection, critical thinking, and risk taking varied with length of teaching experience and individual teacher aptitude. Implications are that in transitioning to online learning in the Caribbean, teacher educators should pay attention to cultural issues and to traditions of learning in Caribbean educational systems. With the rapid evolution of e-learning resources and ongoing research in mixing traditional and online technologies, a blended learning approach that accommodates a "flexible learning" philosophy might be best suited for the Caribbean as educators acclimatize to and indigenize technologies 2010-04-14T17:29:15Z 2010-04-14T17:29:15Z 2009 Article James, C. (2009). Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis. Caribbean Curriculum, 16(1), 71-92 1017-5636 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6581 en application/pdf School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
topic Teacher education
Postgraduate study
Blogs
Online teaching
Course evaluation
School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
Trinidad and Tobago
Teacher education
Postgraduate study
Blogs
Online teaching
Course evaluation
School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
Trinidad and Tobago
spellingShingle Teacher education
Postgraduate study
Blogs
Online teaching
Course evaluation
School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
Trinidad and Tobago
Teacher education
Postgraduate study
Blogs
Online teaching
Course evaluation
School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
Trinidad and Tobago
James, Cynthia
Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
description This paper analyses the impact of blogging on teaching/learning in the English Curriculum unit of a postgraduate teacher education programme that had traditionally been taught face-to-face. Since the 22 teachers of this unit met as a whole group only once a fortnight for most of the semester, blogging was used to introduce course content, to promote reflection and research, and to facilitate teacher interaction. Activity systems criteria such as use of tools, distribution of community learning, interplay of contradictions, and achievement of objectives were used to analyse comments posted to topics on the English Curriculum blog. Two post-blog questionnaires were also administered to gain feedback on interactivity and blog outcomes. Findings suggest that while blogging did promote course content dissemination, it promoted little self-generated research. Teacher interaction was highest on topics of current local concern, while reflection, critical thinking, and risk taking varied with length of teaching experience and individual teacher aptitude. Implications are that in transitioning to online learning in the Caribbean, teacher educators should pay attention to cultural issues and to traditions of learning in Caribbean educational systems. With the rapid evolution of e-learning resources and ongoing research in mixing traditional and online technologies, a blended learning approach that accommodates a "flexible learning" philosophy might be best suited for the Caribbean as educators acclimatize to and indigenize technologies
format Article
topic_facet Teacher education
Postgraduate study
Blogs
Online teaching
Course evaluation
School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
Trinidad and Tobago
author James, Cynthia
author_facet James, Cynthia
author_sort James, Cynthia
title Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
title_short Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
title_full Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
title_fullStr Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
title_full_unstemmed Using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at The University of the West Indies (UWI): An activity systems analysis
title_sort using blogging as a teaching/learning tool in a postgraduate teacher education programme at the university of the west indies (uwi): an activity systems analysis
publisher School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6581
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