Are there picture closer to Athabasca that might be equally impressive?
Would be good - those are pics that I took on my iPhone so they not great.
Terry took a great pic of the Athabasca niversity sign the other day we might use -'the only thing missing is u' as a caption?
But I like the idea of cycling images on the front page and inviting people to submit their own. The only requirement would be that they are relevant to the Landing in some way and people wouldn't mind them being public. Maybe Friends of the Landing could pick their favourites and we could send out Landing gifts to the lucky winners?
Jon
If I have got this correctly, the doing itself facilitates the learning experience as it enables content absorption through bits of content attaching themselves to the dopamine flowing among neurons, metaphorically speaking.
To take this a little further, does this lead to the suggestion that providing a continuous series of learning activities would likely be more successful than the approach of a text with a couple of assignments?
Note that the researcher is concerned with how we can keep ourselves from being novelty-seeking zombies. I'm not denying the benefit of multiple activities in a course and of using various techniques to engage learners. I'm saying, though, that the 'discipline' part of academic disciplines does often require an act of the will to focus attention on something in a way that does not come naturally to us. I want to support learners in every way, including the understanding that many things worth pursuing do not come easily or naturally.
@Brian - I think so, for some things, in some ways, though the devil is in the detail. To engage in a learning experience is, by definition, to encounter the novel. I'm far from convinced that we should over-stress that in the learning process (see Mary's point) as another really important part of the process is to do with anchoring it in what we already know. Indeed, in vaguely Socratic mode, a lot of the process is not to do with learning things that are novel but in creating novel connections between things we already know, seeing how things fit together and constructing models in our heads/bodies. Plus, a lot of what matters in some forms of learning is to do with repetition (albeit with gradual change implied) to improve: practice in music and sports, say. My ambitions are a little lowlier here...
I think this research is potentially useful because it gives a bit more basis for ways we might encourage and motivate learners through simple design choices in the learning environment. One of the things that a linear book naturally provides, but a hierarchical hypertext doesn't, is continual change - a good book makes you want to move on to the next page. In a typical LMS implementation, where what we initially encounter on every visit is more often than not exactly what we encountered last time, we are often wasting an opportunity to capture the viewer's interest at exactly the point it would be most useful. Sure, we could think of its static form as being a little like a book's front cover, but it has the affordance to be more than that. It doesn't have to take much: apart from obvious techniques like my discussion forum edict, we can include stuff like random glossary entries, RSS feeds and announcements to help pique interest. I've always done that kind of thing because, intuitively, it seemed like a good idea to sustain a sense of involvement and engagement. This little bit of research suggests there's a good basis for doing it in brain science and, while deliberate manipulation of an addiction response might be touching on grey ethical ground, there are few things more motivating than withdrawal symptoms! Of course, taking Mary's point, it should be done with care: the novelty should be aligned with intended learning, not just to keep learners addicted to the site :-)
@Mary - yes, I like the zombie image! And I agree that this is only a tiny part of the story of how we should help learners. However, the whole point of teaching is to make learning easier than it would be without it. If we can reduce the need for willpower to engage in the first place, then the rest of the battle should be that much easier. Aiming for maximal novelty is probably not helpful and it has to be constructively aligned, but anything we can do to help people overcome inertia, fear or ennui is probably a useful thing.
Maybe also time to find out whether you're a Comic Sans criminal.
This is one study that I hope will suffer from the replication effects described in the New Yorker article cited by George . . .
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