Research data and e-learning: findings from the evaluation of eBank  Gráinne Conole Institute of Educational Technology [email_address] EBank/R4L/SPECTRa Joint Consultation Workshop London Metropole Hotel, 20 th  October 2006
EBank evaluation Focus Lessons emerging from eBank Comparison with related initiatives Implications for research, teaching and policy Method Documentary analysis Interviews with key members of the project team Observational analysis of and interviews with Southampton MChem students
Project findings Project aspirations Collaboration and inter-disciplinarity Links with related projects Key success factors and outcomes  Dissemination mechanisms Barriers and enablers Conceptual models and pedagogical issues The student experience Future directions and recommendations
Project findings Project aspirations Collaboration and inter-disciplinarity Dissemination mechanisms Links with related projects Key success factors and outcomes   Barriers and enablers Conceptual models and pedagogical issues The student experience Future directions and recommendations
EBank CombeChem EScience E-Pedagogy EMalaria The GRID ESocial Sciences EPrints Digital libraries  Repositories Standards LEX LXP R4L SmartTea Claddier StORe GRADE SPECTRa Reciprocal Net ARROW DARENET COD
Shared problem space Different perspectives Chemistry Information  Sciences Computer  Sciences
Towards a shared language There was the concept of thinking  about data as a collection –  collections of images, collections of books,  but thinking of data as collections  that you could describe and make available  And still I think there was an ambition  to more systematically cooperate  ..e-Science, digital library and IT people…  quite a hard thing to do…there are so many  different interests and conceptions ..  the terminology is so different.
Ingredients for success A meeting of cultures, which is quite an output in itself. Good to work at interface sometimes Triggers Shared visions Track record Stakeholders It was about making connections and seeing where activities that are happening in one area can be migrated, transformed and transferred into another area Culture Dissemination Vision Demonstrator
Barriers and enablers Main barrier is a socio-political one  its a matter of a change of cultures,  some people are embracing that as  I have said,  others are abit stand off-ish,  you know they like the mystique of publishing  and that sort of thing
Barriers Ownership Research practice Level of ICT skills Institutional infrastructure Technical Publisher attitudes Funding Competing agendas IPR
Aspirations To make data available through open access,  so that it could be disseminated more quickly To link data to derived references  and enable demonstration of provenance   To see research data available and  applied in the learning context as  a means of completing the  scholarly knowledge cycle
Data Publication Nascent  pedagogical  models Scholarly knowledge lifecycle model Research Teaching
The student experience Chemical informatics module (6016) Blackboard site + eBank + eMalaria Pedagogical benefits ICT skills Benefits Use of ICT
Its quite an interesting course, its quite different to a lot  of courses I’ve done… basically its comprised of …you  had set lectures, then you had workshops and you also  had this kind of an assignment which was very much kind  of do it yourself. Its like what was a project … at the time  when I first got given it I didn’t think it would take up as  much time s it did. I mean really it did take up a lot of time There were several parts to the course – We started  off with how to get 2D and 3D representations of  molecules onto a computer using a one-dimensional  format, a SMILE string …so just ways of like getting  data into a format so that it can be easily shared  between different computers or different people  without having to change lots of things Another quite nice section of the course, involved  databases … searching databases and getting  more use out of databases and how the best way  to go about this and also how to put information  into a database so if you come up with say a crystal  structure ..how to get that into a format that the  database will accept so that its easily accessible  by lots of other people
I think basically for me its being clarifying and really actually now understanding things I’ve been using for a while. Something like linear regression .. I used without really understanding, whereas now … I understand now its not complete magic … yeh hands on experience … now understand a bit about it, wouldn’t say I understand it completely, but given me a better understanding Before the course I hadn’t really considered how the  computer actually does it but … interesting to see how  that works and then there is a part of the course where ..  they taught you… how to interpret data and build models ..  and that’s probably quite a useful part of that project use  the model building … its all very well people telling you this is a  peptide but until you actually use it, you cant really visualise it. Well basically I’ve done nothing like it before, so it’s  the first time I’ve sort of delved into computing or  computational chemistry  … quite nice, quite  enjoyed starting off with just like a string of data and  pop it into say a database, just a flat string of numbers  basically  and then come out with a crystal structure,  which is exactly what it should represent which is  quite cool
I’m connected to broadband, constantly online, [that’s at home?] yeh. I mean it helps using the Internet, researching, finding stuff out … and I think you can, there was a stage when you could write up your lab reports by hand but now its basically presumed that people do it on the computer, so all assignments, all lab reports, everything is written up [on the computer] … which is good for me because I am pretty bad at spelling But also personally I like to make a good presentation where  I’ve got formulas and have a test…its quite sad.. as a test..  so I have one slide saying Hess’ law and the next slide ..  and I have to write it down [you use it to do your own tests?]  yes exactly it’s the only way I learn Being able to communicate with the lecturer, …  I emailed [the lecturer] on Saturday night at eight o’clock  and he replied at midnight…. I don’t know what that says  about him or me, but… certainly email.. easy to get in touch  with the rest of the class… and him Just started using that actually [MSN chat] [with friends?]  yes yes, I got told to use it … ‘I’ve had enough of phoning you  up its costing me a bomb get MSN its free’ I use the Internet a lot … to do … research, something I don’t  understand I might have a look on the Internet and see  the different explanations to help ….  …  Strathclyde university I think, one of their guys had done a basic  summary of like regression and … help you understand the basic  principles behind … not just for this course but for the course in general.  … .In Google, typed in… linear regression.
Learner Experiences Project LXP Student experiences Subject  discipline  differences Uses of  technologies Effective  e-learning  strategies Online survey Audio logs Interviews www.geodata.soton.ac.uk/eLRC/learner_survey
Mobile technologies Blogs  and Wikis Integrated, multi-faceted Social networking – Web 2.0 Harnessing the masses and Grid technologies Google, e-Journals Podcasts
Information   Communication Passive Interactive Individual Social
Shifting sands…. Pervasive and integrated Extensive use of tools for everything Personalised Adapted to personal needs Social Networked peer community Interactive Content not fixed Changing skills New skills needed, arising Transferability Boundaries blurring Working patterns Ways of thinking and doing changing Time The ‘now’ culture

EBank evaluation

  • 1.
    Research data ande-learning: findings from the evaluation of eBank Gráinne Conole Institute of Educational Technology [email_address] EBank/R4L/SPECTRa Joint Consultation Workshop London Metropole Hotel, 20 th October 2006
  • 2.
    EBank evaluation FocusLessons emerging from eBank Comparison with related initiatives Implications for research, teaching and policy Method Documentary analysis Interviews with key members of the project team Observational analysis of and interviews with Southampton MChem students
  • 3.
    Project findings Projectaspirations Collaboration and inter-disciplinarity Links with related projects Key success factors and outcomes Dissemination mechanisms Barriers and enablers Conceptual models and pedagogical issues The student experience Future directions and recommendations
  • 4.
    Project findings Projectaspirations Collaboration and inter-disciplinarity Dissemination mechanisms Links with related projects Key success factors and outcomes Barriers and enablers Conceptual models and pedagogical issues The student experience Future directions and recommendations
  • 5.
    EBank CombeChem EScienceE-Pedagogy EMalaria The GRID ESocial Sciences EPrints Digital libraries Repositories Standards LEX LXP R4L SmartTea Claddier StORe GRADE SPECTRa Reciprocal Net ARROW DARENET COD
  • 6.
    Shared problem spaceDifferent perspectives Chemistry Information Sciences Computer Sciences
  • 7.
    Towards a sharedlanguage There was the concept of thinking about data as a collection – collections of images, collections of books, but thinking of data as collections that you could describe and make available And still I think there was an ambition to more systematically cooperate ..e-Science, digital library and IT people… quite a hard thing to do…there are so many different interests and conceptions .. the terminology is so different.
  • 8.
    Ingredients for successA meeting of cultures, which is quite an output in itself. Good to work at interface sometimes Triggers Shared visions Track record Stakeholders It was about making connections and seeing where activities that are happening in one area can be migrated, transformed and transferred into another area Culture Dissemination Vision Demonstrator
  • 9.
    Barriers and enablersMain barrier is a socio-political one its a matter of a change of cultures, some people are embracing that as I have said, others are abit stand off-ish, you know they like the mystique of publishing and that sort of thing
  • 10.
    Barriers Ownership Researchpractice Level of ICT skills Institutional infrastructure Technical Publisher attitudes Funding Competing agendas IPR
  • 11.
    Aspirations To makedata available through open access, so that it could be disseminated more quickly To link data to derived references and enable demonstration of provenance To see research data available and applied in the learning context as a means of completing the scholarly knowledge cycle
  • 12.
    Data Publication Nascent pedagogical models Scholarly knowledge lifecycle model Research Teaching
  • 13.
    The student experienceChemical informatics module (6016) Blackboard site + eBank + eMalaria Pedagogical benefits ICT skills Benefits Use of ICT
  • 14.
    Its quite aninteresting course, its quite different to a lot of courses I’ve done… basically its comprised of …you had set lectures, then you had workshops and you also had this kind of an assignment which was very much kind of do it yourself. Its like what was a project … at the time when I first got given it I didn’t think it would take up as much time s it did. I mean really it did take up a lot of time There were several parts to the course – We started off with how to get 2D and 3D representations of molecules onto a computer using a one-dimensional format, a SMILE string …so just ways of like getting data into a format so that it can be easily shared between different computers or different people without having to change lots of things Another quite nice section of the course, involved databases … searching databases and getting more use out of databases and how the best way to go about this and also how to put information into a database so if you come up with say a crystal structure ..how to get that into a format that the database will accept so that its easily accessible by lots of other people
  • 15.
    I think basicallyfor me its being clarifying and really actually now understanding things I’ve been using for a while. Something like linear regression .. I used without really understanding, whereas now … I understand now its not complete magic … yeh hands on experience … now understand a bit about it, wouldn’t say I understand it completely, but given me a better understanding Before the course I hadn’t really considered how the computer actually does it but … interesting to see how that works and then there is a part of the course where .. they taught you… how to interpret data and build models .. and that’s probably quite a useful part of that project use the model building … its all very well people telling you this is a peptide but until you actually use it, you cant really visualise it. Well basically I’ve done nothing like it before, so it’s the first time I’ve sort of delved into computing or computational chemistry … quite nice, quite enjoyed starting off with just like a string of data and pop it into say a database, just a flat string of numbers basically and then come out with a crystal structure, which is exactly what it should represent which is quite cool
  • 16.
    I’m connected tobroadband, constantly online, [that’s at home?] yeh. I mean it helps using the Internet, researching, finding stuff out … and I think you can, there was a stage when you could write up your lab reports by hand but now its basically presumed that people do it on the computer, so all assignments, all lab reports, everything is written up [on the computer] … which is good for me because I am pretty bad at spelling But also personally I like to make a good presentation where I’ve got formulas and have a test…its quite sad.. as a test.. so I have one slide saying Hess’ law and the next slide .. and I have to write it down [you use it to do your own tests?] yes exactly it’s the only way I learn Being able to communicate with the lecturer, … I emailed [the lecturer] on Saturday night at eight o’clock and he replied at midnight…. I don’t know what that says about him or me, but… certainly email.. easy to get in touch with the rest of the class… and him Just started using that actually [MSN chat] [with friends?] yes yes, I got told to use it … ‘I’ve had enough of phoning you up its costing me a bomb get MSN its free’ I use the Internet a lot … to do … research, something I don’t understand I might have a look on the Internet and see the different explanations to help …. … Strathclyde university I think, one of their guys had done a basic summary of like regression and … help you understand the basic principles behind … not just for this course but for the course in general. … .In Google, typed in… linear regression.
  • 17.
    Learner Experiences ProjectLXP Student experiences Subject discipline differences Uses of technologies Effective e-learning strategies Online survey Audio logs Interviews www.geodata.soton.ac.uk/eLRC/learner_survey
  • 18.
    Mobile technologies Blogs and Wikis Integrated, multi-faceted Social networking – Web 2.0 Harnessing the masses and Grid technologies Google, e-Journals Podcasts
  • 19.
    Information Communication Passive Interactive Individual Social
  • 20.
    Shifting sands…. Pervasiveand integrated Extensive use of tools for everything Personalised Adapted to personal needs Social Networked peer community Interactive Content not fixed Changing skills New skills needed, arising Transferability Boundaries blurring Working patterns Ways of thinking and doing changing Time The ‘now’ culture

Editor's Notes

  • #2 It’s a rather a daunting proposition having to do an inaugural as it is difficult to know how to pitch it and it feels as if you are leaving your research philosophy very much bear. Also should one describe some in depth research or a broad overview? I have decided to opt for the latter. What I hope to do in this talk is three things. Firstly, I hope I can share with you my passion for this area of research and show you why I think it is such an exciting area to be working in. Secondly, I hope to be able to demonstrate why this is an important area, highlighting ways in which it is impacting on policy and practice. Thirdly, I would like to give you a snapshot of some of my current research interests.