Some general conclusions on introducing self-study in forms 10 (all year long) and 11 (one semester only)

May 2012

 

After working for one year on the introduction of the Self-study Technology into my work with forms 10 (during the whole year) and 11 (for one semester only), I came up with the following conclusions:

This gives me as a teacher a picture of what students like and think about learning, activities we do. Even though the reflections influence the number of points students can get for the test, quite many of them approach this issue superficially, and they either do not submit reflections or write superficial/not specific answers. Though, this is not connected with the self-study, I find it important to mention it here as I consider it to be connected with learners’ awareness about their own learning.

Comments  

# Alexander Sokol 2012-06-18 18:15
Renata, there are several issues you are touching upon here, so I will write several comments to separate the discussions. Let me start with the most general thing. The question of effective organisation is always an issue in self-study. The best thing in my experience (and I've tried quite a few) is an online portfolio. It really makes the whole thing different. Now the student doesn't need any technical things for launching an online portolio and it gives so many additional resources for learning. Have you ever considered this option? There are a few online portfolios of my former students that are still available online. You can see this, for example:
http://assessment09-10.narod.ru/
https://sites.google.com/site/asessmentportfolio/Home
These are both good examples but you can find various quality if you look up the forum of e-portfolios at thinking-approach.org
Do you think you could consider launching sth like this with your students?
# Renata Jonina 2012-06-18 22:44
Thanks for comments, Alexander. I'll be replying in turn.
I have once seen portfolios of your students and the idea looks good. In fact, at a certain point I really felt that launching web2.0. page would be useful for organising, monitoring, sharing and learning. But I never considered using e-portfolios. I'll check the options.
# Alexander Sokol 2012-06-18 18:18
Another thing that changed self-study quite significantly with me was a move from plans to problem-network based approach to self-study. Please see this handout on problem networks for self-study:
http://www.thinking-approach.org/index.php?id=2439
If students start putting real problems there, self-study becomes much more real.
# Renata Jonina 2012-06-18 22:46
I've heard about problem-network and I believe it might really be a qualitative turn in organising self-study. In fact, it might solve my problem I voiced in one of the posts, namely, 'selling' self-study as a problem-solving tool.
# Alexander Sokol 2012-06-18 18:20
Re aim - objective - activities. You can produce a doc, of course, but I don't think it will change anything. The difficulty here is that it requires procedural rather than declarative knowledge, ie you can only improve through doing it rather than reading. This, in fact, refers to most of TA related things. Yet, if you are interested in the explanation, I'd recommend a tutorial on planning at www.thinking-approach.eu
# Renata Jonina 2012-06-18 22:49
I agree here. At the same time, at least some 'declarative' support is useful at the initial stage.
Re EU website and procedural things, you are right I am sure many questions might be answered once I go through the systems myself.
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