Sean Michael Morris makes a strong argument in part one of the ‘Decoding Digital Pedagogy’ article. My understanding being that there is a major difference between digital pedagogy and online teaching. Although I agree with this position, I do think that online teaching is a necessary step in the field of Education. The Learning Management System (LMS) can be defined as web-based technology used to plan, implement and access courses or training programs. It incorporates a rigid structure of learning, where a range of information is presented with expected memorisation. Yes, the interface and functionalities control the methods of online teaching and it is not the most creative decision, but it is still beneficial. The LMS is arguably a centralized source of learning, where multiple users can access the information at any given time. These systems ensure consistency and offer an affordable alternative to individuals who lack the necessary resources to pedagogically engage.
How smoothly would our PGCE course run without SUNLearn?
It isn’t that “we are not
ready to teach online” per se, but rather that we are still in the process of
understanding the technological terrain we have created, and hitting a pothole
on the way to discovery does not necessarily make it an incorrect choice.
Upon reading these articles,
I felt online teaching merely indicated a starting point on the ever-growing
scale of technology and pedagogy. On this note, I view digital pedagogy as the
next step – the utilization of electronic elements to correct the defaults
embedded in online teaching. The major downside of online teaching is the lack
of active learning and engagement, which is an aspect thoroughly emphasised in
digital pedagogy through the idea of collaborative teaching. In hindsight, a
number of teachers in the classroom (who have the ability and resources to be
digital pedagogues) STILL merely slot “pre-written materials into an online
framework” and call it teaching – this is neither pedagogy nor due to the LMS
alone!
Jesse Stommel states that in
order to become an expert in digital pedagogy, “we need research, experience
and openness to each new learning activity, technology, or collaboration.”
I thus find Morris to be contradictory in
his claim that the LMS has failed. In true pedagogical style, we should learn
from the limitations posed. Digital pedagogy requires the pedagogue to take
control of the tools at his/her disposal, where creativity is key! Do the
unexpected and it is bound to keep the class interesting.
Digital pedagogy is not the
final product… there is more to come in a world where flying cars are
anticipated.
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