by Katerina Schenke
This post describes a meeting at the National Science Foundation where sixty leaders in education and research from around the country gathered to discuss digital badges and education. Three of use presented the initial set of design principles from the Design Principles Documentation Project.Thursday, April 4, 2013
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Google Funds an Assessment Practices, Policies and Principles BOOC
by Dan Hickey
This post describe the Big Open Online Course on assessment that was recently funded by Google.
Monday, March 11, 2013
Initial Explorations in Digital Badges and Motivation
By Cathy Tran
This post introduces two of the newest members of the badges Design Principles Documentation Project and describes our efforts to examine the motivational practices and principles that we are uncovering across the 30 project funded to develop digital badges by the MacArthur Foundation's Digital Media and Learning initiative
Labels:
Design-Based Research,
digital badges,
motivation
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Introducing Digital Badges Within and Around Universities
Dan Hickey
Sheryl Grant from HASTAC recently
posted a detailed summary of resources about uses of digital badges in higher
education.[1]
It was a very timely post for me as I had been asked to draft just such a brief
by an administrator at Indiana University where I work. Sheryl is the director of social networking
for the MacArthur/Gates Badges for
Lifelong Learning initiative. Her
job leaves her uniquely knowledgeable about the explosive growth of digital
badges in many settings, including colleges and universities. In this post, I want to explore one of the
issues that Sheryl raised about the ways badges are being introduced in higher
education, particularly as it relates to Indiana’s Universities.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Initial Questions About Digital Badges and Learning
by Daniel Hickey
This post suggests some initial questions about learning that you might want to ask if you are considering using digital badges. A version of this post is being prepared for the November 2012 edition of EvoLLLution magazine. That article will consider how digital badges can be used to both enhance learning and recognize learning in ways that might help colleges and universities attract larger numbers of adult learners back to school. This post poses these same questions in a more general context.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Incorporating Open Badges into a Hybrid Course Context
By Dan Hickey
I recently incorporated digital badges into the
online aspects of my doctoral course on educational assessment (“Capturing
Learning in Context”). There are two aspects
of this effort that readers might find useful.
The first aspect concerns the way students award simple “stamps” to
highlight significant contributions or insights from classmates. I use those
stamps to award three “one-star” badges each week; I will use the one-star
badges to determine how to award three two-star badges at the end of the
semester. I will elaborate on this in a
later post. I also removed the section on using the Mozilla Open Badge backpack to another post as well. This post is already going
to be pretty long!
In this post I want to describe how I used ForAllBadges
(from ForAllSystems, a small
Chicago firm) to issue digital badges within a typical online course management
system (CMS). Anyone who wants to issue badges
that comply with Mozilla’s Open Badge Infrastructure (OBI) can easily sign up
for a free account at http://www.forallbadges.com/. The account can be used as a stand-alone site,
or it can be accessed from within any CMS that lets you access outside websites. I am using OnCourse, the Sakai-based open-source CMS that Indiana
University helped develop.
Pushing Badges from ForAllBadges to a Backpack and Beyond
By Dan Hickey and Andi Rehak
In a separate post, Dan explained he used ForAllBadges to issue OBI-complaint badges within the Oncourse course management system. This post explains how these badges earners can "push" their badges out of the class and into their open badges backpack and beyond to Facebook, Google+ and Twitter.
This post is intended to be a very concise explanation for using backpacks when using the ForAllBadges platform. In particular it highlights the fact that badge earners must have an open badges backpack before they can push their badges to it.
For more general guidelines, check out Mozilla's wiki on badges, information for badge issuers and the open badges FAQs. P2PU's Open Badges 101 sprint and Mozilla Open Badges google group are also very helpful. If the terms like "issuer" and "earner" are confusing, check out Carla Casilli's blog on the open badges lexicon
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Intended Purposes Versus Actual Functions of Digital Badges
By Daniel Hickey
On September 4th and 5th, there was a meeting at the National Science Teachers Association in Arlington, VA. Al Byers of NSTA and Kyle Peck of Penn State organized the meeting to discuss the online NSTA Learning Center for science educator professional development. I was only able to make it to the second day of the meeting where Kyle discussed the pilot work with the site and his use of digital badges from the Teacher Learning Journeys project. In the afternoon, Sunny Lee and Erin Knight (Mozilla Foundation) and Brian Mulligan (Sligo Institute of Technology, Ireland) and I did a panel on digital badges that Kyle moderated..
One of the questions about badges that came up seems like a crucial issue as we grapple with different ways of characterizing and describing badges. This post aims to add the category of badge functions to other badge taxonomies like the one by Carla Casilli. Because these issues are complex, this post ended up being rather long. You may wish to jump directly to the summary at the bottom. You may also wish to read a condensed version at the HASTAC website.
On September 4th and 5th, there was a meeting at the National Science Teachers Association in Arlington, VA. Al Byers of NSTA and Kyle Peck of Penn State organized the meeting to discuss the online NSTA Learning Center for science educator professional development. I was only able to make it to the second day of the meeting where Kyle discussed the pilot work with the site and his use of digital badges from the Teacher Learning Journeys project. In the afternoon, Sunny Lee and Erin Knight (Mozilla Foundation) and Brian Mulligan (Sligo Institute of Technology, Ireland) and I did a panel on digital badges that Kyle moderated..
One of the questions about badges that came up seems like a crucial issue as we grapple with different ways of characterizing and describing badges. This post aims to add the category of badge functions to other badge taxonomies like the one by Carla Casilli. Because these issues are complex, this post ended up being rather long. You may wish to jump directly to the summary at the bottom. You may also wish to read a condensed version at the HASTAC website.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Digital Badges and Games for Impact
By Daniel Hickey
It has been almost a year
since the 2011 kickoff
meeting of the MacArthur Foundation’s Badges for
Lifelong Learning Initiative. What a fascinating year. It finished off
with some really interesting meetings with some of the most innovative minds
in education and learning. I have
learned a lot about how digital badges and other new technologies might help
assess, motivate, recognize, and evaluate learning. In the next few posts, I want to share some of
the things I learned and discuss some of the issues that have come up. In this post, I want to consider the potential
of digital badges for re-igniting educational videogaming, and reiterate the
central affordance of digital badges. I
also want to tell everybody to go see The Art
of Videogames at the Smithsonian before it goes on tour.
White House OSTP Meeting on Games for Impact
Constance Steinkuehler and OSTP Leaders at Games for Impact Meeting |
On July 26th,
I attended a meeting where the groundwork was being laid for a multi-university
consortium that would focus on Games for Impact. The meeting was organized by Constance
Steinkuehler of the University of Wisconsin, who is on loan as a senior analyst
at the Office of Science and Technology Policy.
It was a fascinating meeting involving 20 university faculty, 40
other collaborators, and perhaps a dozen program officers for DOE, NSF, and
elsewhere. Digital badges were only tangentially related
to the meeting, as the educational gaming community faces numerous challenges
at this time. The obvious question for
me is how digital badges might help address these challenges, and if so, how
that might proceed.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
The Role of Artifact Reflections in Participatory Assessment
By Rebecca Itow and Dan Hickey
On June 7, 2012, we hosted Bloomington’s first Hackjam in
conjunction with the Monroe County Public Library. In our
initial recount of the day’s events, we mentioned that we used artifact
reflection and digital badges
as ways of gauging, evaluating, and rewarding progress in each activity. In
this post, we will explain how and why we chose to use reflection and badges as
forms of assessment. To read more about the theory of badges as Transformative
Assessment, read our June
10 blog post.
Assess Reflections
Rather than Artifacts
We have been struggling for several years to refine
practices for assessing artifacts that students create. It seems pretty clear that badges are going
to highlight a problem that teachers and proponents of portfolio assessment
deal with all the time: rubrics. If you
attach consequences to the quality of student artifacts, there is a natural tendency
to demand detailed rubrics and individualized feedback as to whether the
artifact matches what is demanded by the rubric. Most learning environments are more concerned
with the learning embodied by the artifact than by the artifact itself. So focusing so much on the artifact and the rubric
can be quite problematic.
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