Peer Motivation Through Content Curation
Design Pattern Tags : Academic Skills, Active learning, Community of Practice, Online Collaboration, Personalisation
Peer Motivation Through Content Curation March 2016
Peer Motivation Through Content Curation encourages students to find and analyse information, organize it, share it with each other. Students learn from each other through social interaction around content. The curation can be viewed via a browser or a mobile app and alerts of new content are made via email.
Rationale Peer Motivation Through Content Curation gives students the opportunity to critically collate and evaluate information resources.
Learners/Context Peer Motivation Through Content Curation enables students to collect artefacts over time in their own online spaces and curation platforms, such as Scoop.It , Pinterest and Storify . These spaces are called magazines or boards. They are suited for designing longer learning activities that happen outside of face-to-face events. However, the results of the curation process can be used for in class activities, group work or other learning activities. As such it can work well as part of a project or assessment activity.
Alignment Peer Motivation Through Content Curation activity gives students the opportunity to acquire digital literacy for future readiness and employment.
Instructions/Processes
Prior to Semester
Decide on the most appropriate social curation tool for the student cohort
Google Slides (formerly known as Presentations). The benefit is that Google Slides is accessible for all RMIT students. The slide deck can be shared privately via a link or an embed code, and does not need to be shared on a public platform. You can organise the activity by setting up a template or limiting the number of slides you want students to use
Scoop.It ( www.scoop.it ) is a popular curation platform that lets users create magazines of curated content and immediately share a link via Twitter, Facebook or other platforms. Scoop.It benefits from having a large crowd of dedicated human curators who maintain highly specialised topics. A nice feature is its added functionality of serving information to the user based on their topics and previous curation. You can subscribe to this as a news streams and it can be a powerful information discovery tool. Scoop.It is accessible via the browser and has a browser add-on. It also offers an app but this isn’t very user-friendly.
Pinterest (www.pinterest.com ) is a curation platform that is suited to visual content. It lets users collect artefacts like websites, videos, graphics or other media content but represents by showing them as one image—known as a pin. Collections are known as pinboards. In learning situations, Pinterest is highly suited to working with visual content, such as business diagrams or models. It is one of the few curation platforms which will not charge for collaboration functionality, so it is suitable for group or project team work. Pinterest is accessible via a browser and has its own apps. It has a browser add-on for easier pinning.
Storify ( www.storify.com ) is a curation tool that in its own words “helps users tell stories by curating social media”. It lets a user set up a “story” into which they can drag and drop or add information from anywhere on the web as well as facilitating direct search access to social media outlets like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Helpfully, and different from other curation tools, Storify lets users provide context to their collection story by allowing the insertion of text and headings around different parts of the story. Storify’s ability to do this has made it a popular tool for journalists. Storify is accessible via the browser and has a browser add-on for easier collection of artefacts. It also has a very good tablet app. You can create a dynamic list of relevant news items for your course.
Class Activity
Google Slides
Assign students the task to create a slide deck. This slide deck can be themed along the content of your course, for example “Top 10 Business Tools Created Since 2000” or it can be about study support for example “3 Ways To Organise Your Notes” or “3 best places to study in SAB building”. Students can share the presentations online in Blackboard forums, in a Google community you set up or as part of a tutorial
Scoop.It
Ask students to set up a Scoop.It board on a company, person of interest or aspect of business and begin collecting information
After 6 weeks ask them to demonstrate their board and their curation strategy and present their top 5 artefacts in a tutorial session or in an online reflection. Ask them to set their own criteria for quality of artefacts and to reflect on their own curation practice
Pinterest
Ask students to set up a Pinterest board on business models suitable to a particular business goal
By the end of course, ask students to use their top three pins in an essay, describe how they might employ one of these three models and include a link to the board in their references
Throughout the course, encourage students to connect with each other’s Pinterest boards and to share pins via the course communication tools
For a group assessment, ask students to maintain a Pinterest board of resources for their assessment, such as diagrams, videos or websites. The group can leave comments on each artefact that describes how it ties with their project
Storify
Ask students to curate a business news story of interest to them in Storify at the beginning of the course to be completed within a set time
Once they’ve set up the Storify; ask the students to share the link with their tutorial group or with smaller peer groups for feedback
In class, create a rubric to share the criteria for the digital story assignment and perhaps develop a Storify exemplar.
Conditions/Critical Success Factors Knowledge of curation tools: Scoop.It, Pinterest and Storify
Knowledge of Blackboard forum or Google tools
Sometimes the ability to co-curate is restricted to premium accounts.
Resources/ Technology Scoop.It ( http://www.scoop.it/ )
Pinterest ( https://www.pinterest.com/ )
Storify ( https://storify.com/ )
Garrison, D. R. (2009). Communities of inquiry in online learning: Social, teaching and cognitive presence. In C. Howard et al. (Eds.), Encyclopedia of distance and online learning (2nd ed., pp. 352-355). Hershey, PA: IGI Global
Mihailidis, P., & Cohen, J. N. (2013). Exploring Curation as a core competency in digital and media literacy education. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2013(1), 2. ( http://doi.org/10.5334/2013-02 )
Palomo, B., & Palomo, B. (2014). New information narratives: the case of Storify. Hipertext. Net, 12. ( http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bella_Palomo/publication/262673340_New_information_narratives_the_case_of_Storify/links/00b495385ea7bd3e07000000.pdf )
Seitzinger, J. (2014). Curate Me! Exploring online identity through social curation in networked learning. In 9th International Conference on Networked Learning (pp. 7–9). ( https://www.networkedlearningconference.org.uk/abstracts/pdf/seitzinger.pdf )
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