Rethinking Ed Tech Research…

by | Friday, April 29, 2011

I have been a huge fan of Don Norman ever since I first ran into his book on the Psychology of Everyday Things (which he later renamed as The Design of Everyday Things, and the story behind that name change is worth reading as an excellent example of design). Don Norman also was the inspiration behind my collection of examples of good and bad design, something that ended up in the CEP817, Learning Technology by Design seminar.

Recently I got to read an essay by him titled “Why Design Education Must Change.” Essentially he argues that design education, as it is done today, does not prepare designers for the challenges of the present or the future. As he says:

Where once industrial designers focused primarily upon form and function, materials and manufacturing, today’s issues are far more complex and challenging. New skills are required, especially for such areas as interaction, experience, and service design. Classical industrial design is a form of applied art, requiring deep knowledge of forms and materials and skills in sketching, drawing, and rendering. The new areas are more like applied social and behavioral sciences and require understanding of human cognition and emotion, sensory and motor systems, and sufficient knowledge of the scientific method, statistics and experimental design so that designers can perform valid, legitimate tests of their ideas before deploying them.

Many of the things he wrote about resonated with me as an educator with an interest in technology. I have often argued for seeing education through the lens of design and in fact have written extensively about it (too lazy to list/link these publications here).

Over the past few years I have become somewhat disenchanted with the nature of educational technology research and its value to practitioners. The top journals seem to be biased towards specific kinds of research (quantitative, experimental, control group kinds of studies). The research and publication process just takes too long. It can take years from the start of a research study to its final publication (going through the stages of conceptualizing a study to collecting and analyzing data, to writing and submitting it for publication and responding to reviewers comments). This process was ok when the world we lived in was stable. But in a world where technology changes pretty much every day, a publication can be out of date even before it is published. The goals of this process were more to be “scientific” rather than to impact practice. Qualitative approaches have often been offered as a response but they have their own challenges of experimenter bias, generalizability and so on.

To cut a long story short, I have been struggling, in often an inchoate kind of way, with these issues. So it was with great pleasure that I read Don’s article – even though it did not deal directly with educational research. And somewhat towards the end a couple of paragraphs caught my eye – that seemed to offer, very broadly, a way forward. I have cut and pasted these paragraphs below, with one change – replacing the word “designer” with “educator.” Take a look…

Educators are practitioners, which means they are not trying to extend the knowledge base of science but instead, to apply the knowledge. The educator’s goal is to have large, important impact. Scientists are interested in truth, often in the distinction between the predictions of two differing theories. The differences they look for are quite small: often statistically significant but in terms of applied impact, quite unimportant. Experiments that carefully control for numerous possible biases and that use large numbers of experimental observers are inappropriate for educators.

The educator needs results immediately, in hours or at possibly a few days. Quite often tests of 5 to 10 people are quite sufficient. Yes, attention must be paid to the possible biases (such as experimenter biases and the impact of order of presentation of tests), but if one is looking for large effect, it should be possible to do tests that are simpler and faster than are used by the scientific community will suffice. Designs don’t have to be optimal or perfect: results that are not quite optimum or les than perfect are often completely satisfactory for everyday usage. No everyday product is perfect, nor need they be. We need experimental techniques that recognize these pragmatic, applied goals.

Education needs to develop its own experimental methods. They should be simple and quick, looking for large phenomena and conditions that are “good enough.” But they must still be sensitive to statistical variability and experimental biases. These methods do not exist: we need some sympathetic statisticians to work with educators to develop these new, appropriate methods.

What do you think? What would some of these new experimental methods look like? It seems to me that this is a design problem that should really be at the forefront of what we educational technology researchers do.

 

 

A few randomly selected blog posts…

The beautiful futility of art

Just came across this video about Milton Glaser. If you are interested in design you have to watch it for yourself. But here's a quote that stayed with me: The possibility for learning never disappears. Basically you have to admit you never learn it....

TPACK in Spanish

TPACK in Spanish

Back in 2013 we (Koehler, Mishra and Cain) published an updated version of an article on TPACK. Koehler, M. J., Mishra, P., & Cain, W. (2013). What is Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK)? Journal of Education (193)3, 13-20. This article was...

TPACK Vanity (v. 2.0)

Back in 2006 Matt and I took a bunch of work that we had been doing in the area of technology integration for teaching and pulled it together into one broad theoretical framework and published it in TCRecord. The TPACK framework as it has come to be known has been...

Complicating the idea of Design Thinking (in Education)

Complicating the idea of Design Thinking (in Education)

“Design thinking” is one of the latest buzzwords in education. Proponents argue that design thinking is a tried and tested process for fostering innovation in education while critics suggest that it is the latest fad to sweep through, and will, like others before it,...

ISTE 2010, TPACK Radio/Video Show!

I have never been able to make to the ISTE (formerly NECC) conference since it falls bang in the middle of my summer teaching. This year was no exception. The only problem is that, this year, Matt and I had been invited to a special forum by SIGTE (titled "Considering...

Obama’s gmail account

Did you know that any email sent to barackobama@gmail.com goes to an Indian software developer! Strange but true!

Good-Evil Ambigram in Pub Med!

Good-Evil Ambigram in Pub Med!

My Good-Evil oscillation ambigram design is easily one of my most popular designs - having made it to multiple publications, websites, covers of magazines, on the TV Show Brain Games... and now it has made its way into a medical research journal Frontiers of...

Number (non)sense & flatulence!

Numbers are a gas! (Image credit: Phillie Casablanca) Numbers are seen as being critical to developing our understanding of a subject. As Lord Kelvin, (1824-1907) said: ... when you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something...

6 Comments

  1. Israel Valenzuela

    Teachers as designers–what a concept! My experience as a grad student at Pepperdine’s MA in Ed Tech (now Learning Technologies) opened my eyes to being an educator and a designer of learning. We created a Design Library. And there was nothing wrong or weird about it. Today the program includes design challenges and design circles. Pretty awesome stuff. Thanks, Punya.

    Reply
  2. Punya Mishra

    @Suzanne Good point regarding shifts in mind-sets. I would like to see a more explicit approach to training educators in the design way of looking at the world. I do that in a master’s seminar I teach and the results are often fascinating to watch.

    @Bob The tension between “scientific” knowledge and “practitioner” knowledge is important – and finding a bridge between them is what I am (and I think Don Norman) is talking about.

    Reply
  3. Bob Reuter

    I have felt like you Punya for the last few years while working in our initial teacher training program at the University of Luxembourg, where an EMPHASIS on educational research has been introduced. I’ve been struggling to try to make my students (future teachers) understand why they need to have knowledge of and about scientific inquiry for their future teaching practice… and most of them did not really see the value of scientifically grounded knowledge for everyday teaching practice… and, reading your post, I somehow think they were right to be skeptical, because most of what scientific research on education has to give is not really that relevant for those everyday problems that they do have to address… I still think that it’s wiser to use scientific knowledge to ground our decisions than to go with personal wisdom… but I also do see the value of practitioner knowledge, because specific contexts require specific “solutions”, that general solutions, extracted from many specific contexts, cannot give us.

    Reply
  4. Suzanne

    Interesting post. I had one thought. Most individuals who would identify with being an educator (e.g. teachers) don’t also identify themselves as designers. If the did, and then applied the research tools of say action research with prototype development and then evidence-based practice, I think we’d see movement in mindsets and orientations.

    As ever more teachers are forced or asked to become “designers” with and without training and support, I think we’re seeing shifts already in mindsets. At our institution, SDSU, faculty who participate in our course design institute, in order to put course online, begin to think and work like designers.

    It’s an interesting process to observe.

    Reply
  5. Punya Mishra

    I think action research / teacher inquiry are surely part of the solution. The issue really is two fold. The first of valuing practitioner knowledge and the second of developing practitioners who can participate in this knowledge building. There are ways of representing our practice that goes beyond merely describing – in ways that connect to the larger scholarly conversation. ~ punya

    Reply
  6. Holly Marich

    Where does action research/teacher inquiry fit into the possible solution? Mini inquiries could be accomplished in days – although, the inquiry communities I’ve facilitated have been over the course of a school year. I don’t know that an appropriate method has not been developed, it’s more a question of the larger scientific community valuing such methods. What do you think?

    Reply

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