Prof
Trevor Barr Keynote 1: Whither
Communications. Monday 9-10 am |
Prof
Erno Lehtonen Keynote 2: Evaluating
the Impact of Educational Technology. Tuesday 9-10 am |
Dr
Michelle Selinger Keynote 3: Education
and Skills Development in Sub-Saharan Africa. Tuesday 4-5 pm |
Mr
Ray Price Keynote 4: Maximizing
Employee Performance Through Education and Training. Wed 9-10 am |
Ms
Carol Daunt Plenary: Untangling
the Conference! Wednesday 11.30-12.30 |
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WHITHER
COMMUNICATIONS?
Professor
Trevor
Barr
Swinburne University of Technology
tbarr@swin.edu.au
Powerpoint
Presentation
(1.2 MB)
pdf
Version (315K) |
Bio:
Trevor Barr is the Director of Convergent Communications at Swinburne
University of Technology in Melbourne. Trevor's books have been standard
references in university media and telecommunications courses for many
years and influential in policy formulation. His most recent book is new
media.com/ The changing face of Australia’s media and
telecommunications. He has been employed as a senior adviser or
consultant by a number of government and industry bodies, including the
Commission for the Future, Telstra, and Ericsson Australia. He was the
inaugural Director of the Australian Electronics Development Centre, an
initiative of the Commonwealth and Victorian governments to develop
small and medium sized companies in information based industries. He has
been a regular national media commentator for a long period, notably on
ABC Radio, with AM and PM, Background Briefing, and regularly on Terry
Lane, but also on Australia's leading news and current affairs
television programs, including Four Corners, 7.30 Report, and This Week.
Trevor has spoken at international conferences in Tokyo, Bangkok,
Glasgow, Seoul, Beijing, New York and London. He is a member of the
Saxton Speakers Bureau, inc Harry M Miller’s Speakers Bureau - in
their Australia’s top 100 speakers club. In May 2001 Trevor was
invited to deliver one of the prestigious Alfred Deakin Lecture Series
as part of The Federation Festival in Melbourne where 53 leaders in
their field were invited to discuss critical issues regarding Australia’s
future. The Sydney Morning Herald has chosen him as one of the 20
influential thinkers about major future issues facing Australia.
Keynote Abstract: This
presentation will argue that so much of our attention in educational
technology focuses on means and techniques and consequently little
consideration is given to the understanding of the key conceptual
frameworks. Trevor will present an overview of the major schools of
thought about critical issues in contemporary communications and the
associated vexed issues for the next decade. This will be a multi
-disciplinary analysis drawing upon social, behavioural and business
literature and experiences. His call will be that we need not only to
use the new communication technologies in our teaching and learning but
we need to teach about the new communication environment. Particular
attention will be paid to debates about the future of the Internet from
the perspective of end users. Only limited investigation has been
undertaken into the nature of Internet audiences or participants in
their different contexts. Questions that have not been systematically
researched are about what motivates people to go onto the Net, and their
sense of expectation of what it might be able to provide. There are also
some critical user ‘bottlenecks’ that need to be understood before
key initiatives, such as e- commerce, can succeed on a major scale.
While technologists do valuable work on new security systems related to
transactions so many users still fundamentally lack trust in trading on
the Net. So where does this lack of trust come from, and how can we
build greater confidence on the part of end users? An overriding theme
in Trevor’s address will be that the critical issues for us in the
next decade will be not only what the technologies are going to be like
but also understanding what we are going to be like.
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HOW TO
EVALUATE THE IMPACT OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY: THEORETICAL PROMISES AND PRACTICAL EXPERIENCES
Professor
Erno
Lehtinen
University of Turku, Finland
erno.lehtinen@utu.fi
Powerpoint
Presentation
(210K) |
Bio:
Erno Lehtinen is professor of education at the University of Turku in
Finland. He
has worked as a teacher and researcher in several universities including
the Universities of Turku and Joensuu (Finland) University of Bern
(Switzerland) and the Learning Research and Development Center at the
University of Pittsburgh (USA). His scientific work is aimed at
combining basic research on cognition and motivation with the practical
development of diagnostic tools and technology based learning
environments. Lehtinen has 180 scientific publications covering various
fields of education, educational psychology and educational technology.
In the mid-1980s he established The Centre for Learning Research with
his colleagues at the University of Turku and in 1988, the Research and
Development Center for Information Technology in Education at the
University of Joensuu. Currently he is leading the Educational
Technology Unit of the University of Turku and coordinating a
multidisciplinary national doctoral program on R&D of learning
environments. He chaired an expert group carrying out a large evaluation
for the Finnish Parliament on the impact of information technology on
teaching and learning in Finland and has been a member of the research
expert team in OECD carrying out a large international evaluation study
on the effects of ICT based learning environments. He has been organizer
and invited speaker in several international conferences and acted as an
expert in various projects of international organizations. He is the
president of European Association for Research on Learning and
Instruction (EARLI).
Keynote
Abstract: In the public information
society discourse, the arguments for the use of ICT in education are
typically based on various self-evident benefits of information and
communication technology. One source of the expectations of ICT's impact
originates in the current learning research. The adaptation of
constructivist epistemological principles, in particular, has encouraged
learning scientists to analyse how technology-based environments would
provide learners with new opportunities for exploratory activities which
are beneficial for knowledge construction. Many learning scientists have
assumed that information technology can be used to mediate real life
problems for schools in a form that makes it possible to connect the
practical problem solving with the learning of theoretical ideas and
general thinking skills. Most of the recent research on the use of
information and communication technology in education is more or less
explicitly considering technology's possibilities to facilitate social
interaction between teacher and students and among students. Thousands
of experimental studies on the educational impact of ICT have been
carried out since the first attempts to assess the educational use of
information technology in the early 1970's. All together, the reviews
and meta-analyses of the experiments show that ICT students have learned
more and faster than students in control groups. It is, however, an open
question how much the optimistic desires are based on general enthusiasm
or limited experimental
evidence. Large evaluation studies in everyday classroom situations do
not
fully support the positive conclusion rising from theoretical
considerations of laboratory type experiments. In this paper I summarise
some findings of the recent research on the impact of ICT, give
explanations for observed obstacles in applying ICT in regular
classrooms,
and present some ideas of effective implementation of ICT tools in
regular
classrooms.
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EDUCATION
AND SKILLS DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Dr Michelle
Selinger
Cisco Systems
mselinge@cisco.com |
Bio:
Dr Michelle Selinger is employed by Cisco Systems as an Education
Specialist for Europe, the Middle East and Africa providing specialist
educational knowledge to the Cisco Networking Academy Program team and a
number of other educational initiatives including elearning development.
She began her involvement with Cisco in May 2000 when she was seconded
to Imfundo Partnership for IT in Education, based at the UK Department
for International Development, as the education consultant on the first
phase of this initiative. Until January 2001 she was a senior lecturer
in ICT education at the Institute of Education, University of Warwick
and Director of the Centre for New Technologies Research in Education, a
research and multimedia centre dedicated to research and development in
ICT
Keynote Abstract:
If Africa is to
compete in the Knowledge Economy and is to see real economic growth then
developments in the use of technology in education are imperative.
Therefore, the UK Prime Minister set up a millennium initiative, Imfundo
Partnership for IT in Education, to consider ways in which technology
could be used to support education, particularly teacher education, in
developing countries, with aspecific focuson sub-Saharan Africa. The
view taken was that technology extends knowledge and education to poor
and marginalised people, but it should not be seen as a panacea to the
challenges facing education, but as a tool to deliver better education
outcomes more efficiently. Secondees from the private sector including
Cisco Systems, worked on the first phase of this initiative based at the
UK Department for International Development (DFID). Imfundo’s unique
contribution is the way in which it combines the skills and
contributions of a wide range of different partners to help African
governments achieve the international development targets of gender
equality and universal primary education. With DFID funding, the
hardware, software and management expertise of the private sector, the
research skills of universities, and the local expertise and involvement
of civil society organisations, Imfundo is helping to create innovative
and sustainable solutions.
Alongside the development of the
use of technology for education are the requirements for a supporting
infrastructure and the human capital needed to develop and maintain it.
Cisco, with the support of US funding agencies including USAID and UNDP,
has provided a solution to the lack of networking expertise through the
LDC initiative of the Cisco Networking Academy Program, a global
instructor-led, web-based curriculum that is now taught in 140 countries
worldwide.
This keynote will explore the
challenges in providing appropriate and sustainable solutions for
improving education and skills that will support development. |
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MAXIMIZING
EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE THROUGH EDUCATION AND TRAINING
Mr Ray
Price
Ford Motor Company, Australia
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Bio:
Ray currently holds the position of Learning and Development Manager for the Ford Motor Company, Australia. As such he has overall strategic responsibility for all learning and development activities, for all employees and at all levels within the organisation.
Ford has an extensive range of formal and informal personnel development activities and programs which may be delivered internally or externally utilising all delivery methodologies including: coaching, mentoring, face to face, flexible delivery, e-learning, combined on/off job, etc. These activities range from Certificate Level 1, (as in VET in schools and work experience) through to Masters Level programs. Ford also has formal agreements and alliances with a number of educational institutions in the areas of research, scholarships and auspicing of educational activities.
Ray's career commenced in the engineering industry. He then spent 17 years in TAFE, where he held various positions as a lecturer, specialist teacher trainer, educational manager, and as a human resource development and management consultant. In this last role he managed a specialist team that focused on creating interfaces and partnerships between industry and educational institutions.
Ray develops, implements and manages systems and processes in areas relating to Organisational Change, Human Resource Development and Management, and Training Reform. His particular expertise is in integrating Off and On Job Training with work-place performance and measurement to ensure real improvements in organisational and personal performance, and in service/product delivery.
Ray has worked extensively across many private and public industry sectors within Australia, China, Malaysia and South Africa. He has completed major organisational/transformational projects for companies including QANTAS, National Rail Corp, Australian Submarine Corp, the Lion Group, AusAID and a number of government departments. His work has led companies to gain "Best Practice" and Employer of the Year" awards.
Ray speaks regularly at national and international conferences with a focus on learning systems, and on measuring and maximising employee performance.
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UNTANGLING
THE CONFERENCE!
Ms Carol
Daunt
Managing Director, LearnTel
cdaunt@learntel.com.au
Carol's Summary (100K PDF) |
Bio:
Carol is Founder and Managing Director of LearnTel Pty Ltd, a company
that helps organisations improve their business operation by providing
practical advice and training in skills for effective use of
communications technologies. Carol is an experienced educator and
businesswoman who has been involved in the design, application and
effective use of communications technologies for education and business
applications for over 15 years. She works with lecturers, teachers,
trainers, health workers and management from government departments and
private organisations throughout Australia, New Zealand, USA and Europe.
Carol is a recognised expert in her field and is a frequent speaker at
international conferences, having most recently given papers in seven
countries both in person and via videoconferencing. (Several of her
papers can be accessed at http://www.learntel.com.au/)
Carol is a mentor and active member in the Women in Business Program
administered by the Department of State & Regional Development, NSW
and conducted by the Australian Business Women’s Network. Carol’s
qualifications include studies in teaching & learning, instructional
design, distance education & interactive communications
technologies. |
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