Clay Shirky's recent essays "Napster, Udacity, and the Academy" has attracted a fair bit of attention. I've written about some of the things it doesn't discuss on my personal blog, but here, I'd like to use it as a jumping off point for a description of a tool I'd like someone to write for us. Given that my last request produced working code in just a few hours, I'm hoping one of you will wow me again :-)
Our starting point is peer instruction, a scalable, evidence-based teaching model that replaces "sage on the stage" with the following interactive cycle:
Chris Lee, at UCLA, has built a tool called Socraticqs to implement this model using a little web app running on the instructor's laptop (which they connect to over WiFi). I'd like to go one step further and try to do this over the web—after all, it is supposed to be a medium for collaboration. Here's what I'm imagining:
The pieces of this all exist, more or less: we can do one-to-many broadcast and four-way split-panel talking-heads chats. What's lacking is the integration: in particular, leaving one Skype call or Google Hangout and joining another several times an hour will introduce a lot of friction and frustration.
Based on our experiments earlier this year with online tutorials, I think this would be a much better online learning experience for most people. Does it already exist? If so, where? And if not, how hard would it be to build?
Originally posted 2012-11-19 by Greg Wilson in Education, Tooling.
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