Notes from PebbleBash session: Getting on to the Ladder
The session was guided by three questions:
- What strategies have proved useful in introducing learners early to the idea and the learning processes involved in developing an ePortfolio?
- How do you scaffold learning activities that engage students with the PebblePad environment from the outset in a meaningful way?
- What are the main traps or barriers to be aware of in the early (and risky) stages of learning PebblePad?
1. Useful strategies:
- Introduce PebblePad prior to classes beginning:
- useATLAS workspace as a hub with information and direct links to activities – see British Swimming example
- leverage early enthusiasm and interest
- initiate blog discussions between students and supervisors/tutors
- Find ways to reward early engagement – e.g. a ‘Pebble+ user’ badge; adaptive release of tasks as they are completed, followed by a ‘Pebble+ explorer’ badge (British Swimming example again)
- Make navigation easy for students to engage
- Show exemplars of students’ work (not too fancy though as some people can be intimidated)
- Use a ‘Read Watch Do’ approach in training (i.e. have people read before training, watch a video during training, then do a fun, immediately rewarding activity, such as changing the background)
- Use concrete examples of paper and digital portfolios
- Build instructions from a familiar base and relate to relevanttasks
- Explain why they are using PebblePad before showing them howto use it
- Bring in past students to talk about their experience and how it has helped them
2. Learning activities
- Show students a map of course-wide ePortfolio/Pebblepadactivities
- Show what a graduating ePortfoliomight look like
- Always scaffold activities that are relevant
- Introduce activities one step at a time
- Introduce tasks for the purpose of learning (and failing) with features of pebblepad
- Promote autonomy and self-directed learning
- Use the eportfolio as a primary scaffold for learning activities
- Find the ‘excitement point’ as a way in
- Capitalise on early adopters – they can be mentors for others
- Allow for co-discovery with your learners
3. Traps and barriers
- Students don’t always read instructions
- Beware using copy and submit for webfolios (they do not get the same ‘single use’ option)
- Students don’t always understand the live link between their submissions and what they are doing in Pebble+
- Don’t overuse the word ‘reflection’ – use language appropriate to the discipline
- Don’t make things overly complicated at the outset – keep things reasonably simple at first
- Don’t let students see you as the PebblePad‘expert’ – learn along with the students