Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 3. A Mixed Methods Look at Self-Directed Online Learning…and the Design of Online Activities for Successful Online Experiences (Two-part talk) Abstract: On April 4, 2001 (i.e., “441”), Charles Vest, then president of MIT, made an historic announcement. He set a goal of having most of his university’s courses freely available on the Web in a decade. While some thought this to be a rather bold proclamation, today more than 2,000 MIT courses are available for self-directed learners around the globe to explore, download, use, and share. Suffice to say, we are in the midst of an incredible array of changes across all sectors of education that would have been unthinkable just a decade or two ago. People in remote parts of the world are learning from well-known professors at Princeton, Rice, Harvard, and MIT; typically, without a fee. Countless millions of individuals are engaged in self-directed, informal, and solitary learning experiences with open educational resources (OER) and OpenCourseWare (OCW). In response, this study explores the learning experiences of self-directed learners, including the common barriers, obstacles, motivations, and successes in such environments. It also explores possibilities for life change from the use of OER, OCW, and MOOCs. The findings not only capture the motivational variables involved in informal and self-directed learning experiences through informal education channels, but also provide a set of stories of life change that might inspire others into MOOCs, open education, and beyond. What can be done to foster these forms of self-directed learning in formal learning environments? In response, Professor Bonk will describe his popular TEC-VARIETY framework which stands for a well-known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products). He will also detail his Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2) model for addressing diverse learners. In the process, he will detail dozens of ways to motivate and engage learners, while fostering critical and creative thinking in highly engaging, generative environments. Attend this talk and become highly engaged yourself!
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 4. A Silver Lining for Learning?: Using Shared Online Video to Engage Online Learners Abstract: Shared online video offers a unique knowledge portal to an assembly of the most adventurous and productive pioneers in the field. From a macro perspective, shared online video interviews of leaders in a field serve as an historical roadmap of the progress that has been made in the discipline as seen firsthand by people with decades of experience working in the trenches of it. Need a research or teaching idea? No problem. Just get some popcorn, watch a few of these videos from the giants of the field, and use your imagination. But, wait…there’s more. There is always more.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 5. Active Learning with Technology: Myths, Magic, and Mucho Motivation Abstract: Myths and debates abound about the benefits of technology integration in higher education; especially with the explosion of online course enrollments. Based on extensive research, Curtis Bonk will dispel the myths and reveal a few technology magic tricks to help instructors and course designers focus on effective teaching and learning with technology. Dr. Bonk will highlight instructional technologies and pedagogical strategies currently emerging to meet diverse student needs. Within several contexts such as face-to-face classrooms, e-learning and blended learning, he will illustrate effective applications of technology to address different student learning styles and motivation. He will also provide dozens of active learning ideas and solutions that motivate students and creatively engage them in deeper learning experiences. Instead of relying on magic, these techniques will be based on ten motivational principles related to tone or climate, feedback, engagement, meaningfulness, choice, variety, curiosity, tension, interactivity and collaboration, and goal setting.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 6. Adding Some TEC-VARIETY for Online Motivation and Retention (shorter…newer)
Abstract: Ever see bored student faces? Are you looking for some spice in your classes? Curt Bonk’s new instructional design model for online learning -- TEC-VARIETY -- will break online instructors and students out of the mind-numbing online learning too often witnessed by bored learners. To simplify Web-based learning possibilities, each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well known motivational principle listed below. Near the end of this talk, Professor Bonk will also share a second innovative model called Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2), and detail numerous examples on how to use R2D2 make your blended and fully online learning activities more engaging, empowering, and exciting. This includes a new type of learning apprenticeship, using pedagogical innovations that extend the classroom to the world community and where instructors and peers come from different institutions and organizations. Fortunately, Bonk’s popular and free e-book highlighting this framework is available to download at: http://tec-variety.com/.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 7. Addressing Diverse Online Learner Needs and Motivation with the Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2) and TEC-VARIETY Models Abstract: Motivation is a key issue in online and blended forms of learning. Another concern relates to developing interactive and collaborative activities and environments. Many online students drop out of courses or do not participate since they do not address their learning preferences. Others complain of the highly mechanized online instructional approaches that bore, or, worse still, insult them. Simply put, there is a dire need to creatively engage online students in deeper and more varied approaches to online learning. A new model called Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2) is detailed in Curt Bonk’s book, "Empowering Online Learning: 100 Activities for Reading, Reflecting, Displaying, and Doing." This model for online and blended learning can address different student learning strategies or preferences. Bonk will discuss how the R2D2 method can be expanded or altered to fit your particular needs. He will also highlight his most recent instructional design method for online motivation and retention called TEC-VARIETY. Each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, yielding products, etc.). Bonk has hundreds of activities examples and of how to use either of these models. His 2014 book, Adding Some TEC-VARIETY: 100+ Activities for Motivating and Retaining Learners Online is free to the world in both English and Chinese; see: http://tec-variety.com/. When combined, R2D2 and TEC-VARIETY can enhance, elevate, and even transform the quality of fully online and blended courses to meet diverse learner needs around the planet. Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 8. Are You Flipping Out or Flipping In?: The How’s, Why’s, and What’s of the Flipped Classroom Model Abstract: There is an intense movement today toward the notion of a flipped classroom. Budgets, technology development, media hype, free and open educational resources, and advances in learning theories have all accelerated the experimentation with the flipped classroom model. Yet, there remains much debate and resistance. And there is also much confusion about what it means; many educators, in fact, are flipping out over all the changes and expectations. In this session, Curt Bonk will address these issues by reviewing some of the history leading to flipped classroom models of learning. He will then document the benefits of flipped classrooms in terms of infrastructure, time, pedagogy, and learning. In addition, several examples of flipped classrooms will be provided along with a series of guidelines on use. Across this session, many of the how’s, why’s, and what’s of the flipped classroom will be discussed. In the end, instructors will begin to envision their own flipped classroom possibilities. Instead of flipping out, they will be flipping in.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 9. Best Practices for Online and Blended Learning: Introducing the R2D2 and TEC-VARIETY Models Abstract: There are dozens of new technologies emerging each year and endless ways in which they can be used for teaching and learning. So many technologies and pedagogical uses, in fact, that most instructors of higher education are overwhelmed. One solution for this problem is to locate and share best practices. As part of this "best practices" movement, Curt Bonk offers two simple yet powerful frameworks that can be used to understand hundreds of Web-based pedagogical ideas that can motivate students to high success in online learning environments. Bonk will provide these best practices in online teaching based on two decades of his research. Such ideas can creatively engage students into deeper and better learning. He will reveal dozens of practical examples using his widely acclaimed R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do) framework for instructional design with technology. Not done, he will showcase his TEC-VARIETY model for student motivation with Web technology. Each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products. See his free e-book “Adding Some TEC-VARIETY” with 100+ activities at: http://tec-variety.com/). While detailing best practices he has seen around the globe, Bonk will also discuss how his two methods can be expanded or altered to fit one’s particular preferences and needs. No matter what galaxy or planet you are on, these ideas and techniques can be linked student motivation, collaboration, interaction, and general engagement in the learning process. Those attending this session will walk away with many practical strategies that can be incorporated directly into face-to-face, blended, and virtual classes, events, or programs. Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 10. Blend but Don’t Break: Introducing the TEC-VARIETY and R2D2 models Abstract:
In the age of the pandemic, everyone is talking about the need to motivate and engage their online and blended students. In dealing with COVID-19, online instructors throughout the world are seeking to integrate technology in more effective and creative ways, while remaining cognizant of the disparity in student Internet access, basic digital learning competencies, and time, space, and hardware availability. In spite of these challenges, some have found ways to push the edge of the online teaching and learning envelope in new and innovative ways, whereas others have striven to find low risk, low cost, low time activities; in effect, they blend but don’t break. In response, Professor Curt Bonk will detail two of his designs for how to engage and empower learners and move them from bland online content and unimaginative activities to offering flexibility, choice, and creativity. In part, Bonk believes that learners want more variety, or more specifically, they want ‘TEC-VARIETY’. Fortunately, his “Adding Some TEC-VARIETY: 100+ Activities for Motivating and Retaining Learners Online” book is free to download in both English and Chinese at:
http://tec-variety.com/. Hence, you can creatively blend without breaking the bank!
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 11. ChatGPT and Generative AI as a New Partner in Language Teaching and Learning: Views from YouTubers Abstract:
Dozens of YouTube channels focusing on a diverse array of language learning topics have sprung up since November 2022 with the announcement of ChatGPT. In this talk, Curt Bonk will discuss his recent research on 140 YouTube videos related to ChatGPT for language learning that were identified and analyzed in the first few months after the launching. More importantly, he will share stories of how 20 YouTubers that he and his team interviewed are creatively employing ChatGPT to teach languages online. He will highlight their successes and what these YouTubers see as deemed advantages of ChatGPT for language learning as well as the many challenges and hopes for the future. He will also discuss how YouTubers self-direct their learning to learn about new and emerging technologies like generative AI. This talk should lend insights into understanding the possible roles and areas of impact for ChatGPT and other generative AI tools in language education. Importantly, he will share his two recent (summer of 2023) open access publications on this research.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 12. Education 20/20: En“vision”ing the LAST Principles You’ll Ever Need Abstract: Learning is changing. During the past few years, learning has become increasingly collaborative, global, mobile, modifiable, modular, massive, informal, immediate, self-directed, open, blended, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, and personal. And this is just a start! We are entering “Education 20/20;” an age of educational resource abundance where passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn take precedence over the more mind-numbing traditional information reception models of education. The instructors and experts whom we meet and interact with along the way are most effective as curators, counselors, consultants, concierges, and cultivators of our learning. In this talk, Curt Bonk will detail 20 such new roles. Naturally, such new roles require a unique and evolving set of guiding principles. As such, Professor Bonk will detail his 20 “LAST” principles of instruction from his “Learning Activation System Template” (LAST) including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of High Expectations, the Principle of Nontraditional Learning, etc. In addition, Bonk will provide two simple yet powerful frameworks that can be used to motivate diverse learners in face-to-face classrooms as well as blended and fully online learning environments. Bonk will reveal dozens of practical examples using his widely acclaimed R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do) model as well as his highly acclaimed TEC-VARIETY framework (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products.). Those attending this session will walk away with many practical strategies that can be incorporated directly into face-to-face, blended, and virtual classes, events, or programs.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 13. Education 20/20 meets Education 3.0: Visions of Our Changing Learning World! Abstract: In the third decade of the 21st century, learning has become increasingly collaborative, global, mobile, modifiable, open, online, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, personal, and much much more. Suffice to say, learning is changing. This is the age of Education 3.0 where learning is more informal, resource rich, and self-directed and where learner creation of products is the new norm. In this time of educational resource abundance, passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn take precedence. Instructors and experts are most effective as curators, consultants, and cultivators of our learning. And now such mentors and instructors can appear instantaneously on a mobile device. Naturally, such new roles require a set of guiding principles. As such, Professor Bonk will detail a set of 20 “last” principles of instruction including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Spontaneity, and the Principle of High Expectations. He will discuss these in light of three megatrends related to learning technology today: (1) technologies for engagement; (2) technologies for pervasive access; and (3) technologies for the personalization and customization of learning. He will also take a moment to gaze into the future of learning as each of these megatrends evolve.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 14. Education 20/20 meets Education 4.0: Visions of Our Changing Learning World!
Abstract: The pervasive boredom of rote learning seen in Education 1.0 yielded to a more learner-centered age of Education 2.0 a few decades ago. Today instructors are confronted with the possibilities and dilemmas of Education 3.0. But now with climate change, economic unrest, the rise of robotics and AI, world population shifts, and so on, the innovation age of Education 4.0 is coming.
This is the age of Education 3.0 where learning is more informal, resource-rich, and self-directed and where learner creation of products is the new norm, often with the use of digital media. During the past few years, learning has become increasingly collaborative, global, mobile, flipped, modifiable, open, online, blended, massive, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, instantaneous, on-demand, adaptive, and personal. We are living in an age of educational resource abundance where passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn to take precedence over the traditional information reception models of learning. The best instructors and experts today are most effective as curators, counselors, consultants, concierges, and cultivators of our learning. And now they can appear instantaneously on a mobile device. That is a sign that Education 4.0 is not far away.
New instructor roles require a unique and evolving set of guiding principles. Professor Bonk will detail a set of 20 “last” principles of instruction with his “Learning Activation System Template” (LAST) including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Cheerfulness and Optimism, the Principle of Spontaneity, the Principle of High Expectations, the Principle of Nontraditional Learning, etc.
Suffice to say, there is immense change around the world today related to new forms of learning typically involving technology. In fact, there are three megatrends related to learning technology today: (1) technologies for engagement; (2) technologies for pervasive access; and (3) technologies for the personalization and customization of learning. To better understand these new forms of learning delivery, Professor Bonk will discuss these three megatrends as well as his recent research on the personalization of e-learning. Along the way, insights will be offered into how one might teach in this new learning age.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
15. Education 20/20: Toward a Vision of Blended Learning Ideas and Beyond Abstract: In the third decade of the 21st century, humankind has entered the dawn of a new learning age. Learning is more problem-based, inquiry-driven, self-directed, informal, collaborative, global, open, visual, digitally rich, online, and so much more. In such transformational times, the role of the instructor or teacher is no longer as firmly cemented in the direct instructional and authoritarian past. Today, savvy instructors are at times a coach and cultivator of talents, and, at other times, a concierge, orchestra conductor, or curator finding the golden nuggets from the open educational world and offering learners a diverse and exciting array of learning paths and opportunities. Still other times, the instructor offers timely scaffolds and sage guidance as an on-demand consultant or counselor. There is also the increasingly vital role of course ambassador who excites the world into an emerging idea, event, or concept, or perhaps an entire course, program, or discipline through a massive open online course or “MOOC.” In this talk, Curt Bonk will detail 20 such new roles of instructors that all start with the letter “C.” He will explain the different mindsets and the associated rationale for each instructional metaphor. Naturally, such new roles require a unique and evolving set of guiding principles. As such, Professor Bonk will detail a set of 20 principles of instruction including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Cheerfulness and Optimism, the Principle of Spontaneity, the Principle of High Expectations, the Principle of Nontraditional Learning, etc. In a tongue-in-cheek play on David Merrill’s esteemed “First Principles of Instruction,” Bonk labels his “The Last Principles of Instruction.” Finally, Bonk will outline 20 issues or problems of teaching and associated solutions that when combined spell, “Blended Learning Ideas.” Attend this talk and walk away with your personal 20/20 vision of a highly exciting educational future that looms on the horizon.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 16. Education 20/20: Visions of a New Learning World Abstract: Pick up any bestselling book in the field of education these days and you will find proclamations and visions of how education can be enhanced. For a change, the authors of these books, reports, and news stories are right; we are in the midst of a learning revolution or transformation. During the past few years, learning has become increasingly collaborative and communal, global, mobile, modifiable, modular, informal, immediate, self-directed, open, blended, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, and personal. And this is just a start! We are entering “Education 20/20;” an age of educational resource abundance where passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn take precedence over the more mind-numbing traditional information reception models of learning. The instructors and experts whom we meet and interact with along the way are most effective as curators, counselors, consultants, concierges, and cultivators of our learning. In this talk, Curt Bonk will detail 20 such new roles. Education 20/20 instructors are the ones who foster our autonomy and self-directed learning pursuits while, simultaneously, offering insightful guides and timely scaffolds where and when appropriate. Naturally, such new roles require a unique and evolving set of guiding principles. As such, Professor Bonk will detail his 20 “LAST” principles of instruction from his “Learning Activation System Template” (LAST) including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Cheerfulness and Optimism, the Principle of Spontaneity, the Principle of High Expectations, the Principle of Nontraditional Learning, etc. In addition, Bonk will provide a plethora of examples of these principles in action along with critical and creative thinking strategies to liven up your lectures and motivate and engage your students in their learning. Suffice to say, there is immense change around the world today related to new forms of learning. Attend this talk and get a new vision for how Education 20/20 will impact you too and how you can, in turn, significantly impact it.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 17. Education 3.0: The Learning World of Middle Earth is Fast Changing!
Abstract: In this keynote speech, Curt (the Red) Bonk returns to take refuge after a remarkable 20 year pilgrimage traversing the globe in search of best e-learning practices. What he has discovered during his absence will amaze you. He will take you on a captivating journey across distinctly different, and, at times, quite dangerous aspects of digital-based teaching and learning made possible by the affordances of the 21st century technology. Before attending this talk, Professor Bonk recommends that you read a bestselling book or two found these days in the all-too-charming field of education. In it, you’re likely to encounter stories about long ago days where wizardly educators like John Dewey and Sir Ken Robinson slayed giant misconceptions about how best to learn in this digitally enchanted world. Come to this talk and let Bonk walk you through many hidden passageways and through several secret doors.
Along the way, you will encounter somewhat magical visions of how education is being transformed into a new type of fellowship for all learners no matter how small their physique or how pointy their ears. Suffice to say, the present learning revolution is affecting all the people of Middle Earth. During the past few years, learning has become increasingly collaborative, global, mobile, modifiable, open, online, blended, massive, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, instantaneous, and personal. And that is just the start of the journey! This is the age of Education 3.0 where learning is about playful and highly engaged design and where learner creation of products is the new norm, often with the use of digital media. We humans tinker, invent, and express ourselves. We find meaning in our playful pursuits. Fortunately, we are living in an age of educational resource abundance where passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn take precedence over the more mind-numbing traditional information reception models found in the land of Mordor. The instructors and experts whom we meet and interact with along the way are most effective not just as wizards but as curators, counsellors, consultants, concierges, and cultivators of our learning; while off to the silent and deep abyss are other instructional “C” words like learner coercion, credit management, and fixed notions of correctness. Education 3.0 instructors, many of whom have sought advice from the Council of Elrond, are the ones who foster learner autonomy and self-directed learning pursuits while, simultaneously, offering insightful guides and timely scaffolds as keen as elven kings where and when appropriate. Attend this joyful adventure of a talk and find out how Education 3.0 will impact on you and how you can, in turn, significantly impact it.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 18. Embracing the Disrupted Language Teaching and Learning Field: Analyzing YouTube Content Creation Related to ChatGPT Abstract: YouTube is a platform that enables people from diverse cultural backgrounds to both contribute to and benefit from. It provides a space for individuals to share their unique perspectives and practices in various fields. Since late 2022, dozens of YouTube channels rapidly emerged focusing on a diverse array of topics related to language learning with generative AI tools such as ChatGPT. This study explores the implementations and perspectives of YouTube content creators who now constitute an increasingly important segment of the ecosystem of language teaching and learning. A mixed-methods netnographic approach is employed, combining qualitative and quantitative techniques. A total of 140 videos were identified, and after initial review of all, an in-depth content analysis was conducted on selected videos to uncover underlying themes. This session will provide attendees with practical knowledge, insights, and best practices for leveraging ChatGPT and AI technologies in language education within diverse language and cultural contexts. The study identified four main categories of creators were identified: educators, learners, technology professionals, and e-learning providers. Building upon the technical affordances of ChatGPT, this study further explores the perceptions of educational affordances when incorporating ChatGPT across languages discussed by language communities on YouTube and identifies best practices for its effective use in language education. By examining how YouTube content creators utilize ChatGPT or similar AI technologies, attendees can understand the potential benefits and challenges of incorporating AI from diverse languages and cultural backgrounds.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience. 19. Engage, Number One: This is the Next Generation Abstract: With his now famous directive, “Engage, Number One,” Jean-Luc Picard reminded us in nearly every episode of Star Trek Next Generation of the need to engage. The problem is that engagement has not been the number one concern of educators; instead, the top concern is survival. The result is that learners are too often bored with course resources and requirements. However, it is clear that they no longer are willing to look the other way as they might have in the early days of the Web. This next generation of learners is different. They want to be empowered. They seek learning innovation and variety. As such, they yearn for interaction, autonomy, and choice. They also long to “do” or produce something. They want to interact and collaborate with foreign peers. In response, he will discuss ways to use Web and videoconferencing to foster cultural interactions with distant peers. Free and open global education possibilities are exploding today. It time to take advantage of them. Gone are the days of read and respond. It is the age of “try it out” and make a contribution. Using his popular TEC-VARIETY and R2D2 models, Curt Bonk will detail dozens of ways to motivate and engage learners, while fostering critical and creative thinking in highly engaging, generative environments. Attend this talk and become hyper-engaged yourself! When done, learning engagement will truly be Number One again.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 20. Engaging Teaching with Technology: Introducing the TEC-VARIETY and R2D2 Models Abstract: Everyone is talking about the need to motivate and engage students. This is true in face-to-face classrooms and is even more true in online environments. Blended learning environments offer clues on just how to engage the learners and move them from bland online content and unimaginative activities to offering flexibility, choice, and creativity. Some learners are bored since they want their instructors to utilize their smartphones, tablets, and other wireless and mobile technologies. Some feel that the instructors have not addressed their preferred learning approaches. They want hands-on activities where they produce something meaningful as well as time to explore the resources that they find the Web. In response, instructors throughout the world are seeking to integrate technology in effective and creative ways. Not surprisingly, many are turning to the notion of blended learning. One option Professor Bonk will detail for blended and fully online learning is to use the TEC-VARIETY framework. Each letter of the TEC-VARIETY framework stands for a well known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products. Fortunately, his “Adding Some TEC-VARIETY” book is free to download in both English and Chinese at: http://tec-variety.com/. In addition, he will discuss his model called Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2) from his book, "Empowering Online Learning: 100 Activities for Reading, Reflecting, Displaying, and Doing." This model for online and blended learning can address different student learning strategies or preferences. When combined, R2D2 and TEC-VARIETY can enhance, elevate, and even transform the quality of technology-enhanced FTF classrooms as well as fully online and blended courses to meet diverse learner needs around the planet.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 21. Engaging Online and Blended learning: Introducing the TEC-VARIETY Model Abstract: Everyone is talking about the need to motivate and engage students. This is true in face-to-face classrooms and is even more true in online environments. Blended learning environments offer clues on just how to engage the learners and move them from bland online content and unimaginative activities to offering flexibility, choice, and creativity. Some learners are bored since they want their instructors to utilize their smartphones, tablets, and other wireless and mobile technologies. Some feel that the instructors have not addressed their preferred learning approaches. They want hands-on activities where they produce something meaningful as well as time to explore the resources that they find the Web. In response, instructors throughout the world are seeking to integrate technology in effective and creative ways. Not surprisingly, many are turning to the notion of blended learning. However, there is both extensive confusion and much optimism about blended learning due to multiple blended learning definitions and approaches. Some might blend to take advantage of face-to-face and virtual learning opportunities. Others might blend to combine synchronous and asynchronous technologies to best meet student needs. In this session, Professor Bonk will clarify just what blended learning is and the describe dozens of exciting ways to blend your classes using different frameworks and models that he has designed. One options that he will detail for blended and fully online learning is to use the TEC-VARIETY framework. He believes that learners simply want more variety, or more specifically, they want ‘TEC-VARIETY’. Fortunately, his “Adding Some TEC-VARIETY” book is free to download in both English and Chinese at: http://tec-variety.com/. To simplify Web-based learning possibilities, each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well-known motivational principle, including:
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 22. Exploring Life Changes from Open Education, MOOCs, and Beyond Abstract: On April 4, 2001 (i.e., “441”), Charles Vest, then president of MIT, set a goal of having most of his university’s courses freely available on the Web in a decade. Today, millions of self-directed online learners around the globe are learning from OpenCourseWare (OCW) as well as thousands of courses taught by well-known professors delivered via massive open online courses (MOOCs) and similar experiments with open education. Most such informal learners simply want to explore a topic that they are intrigued by or yearn to learn something new. They are not interested in obtaining a certificate or degree. Unfortunately, much of the media and countless educators and politicians seem focused on retention and drop-out rates instead of actual learning and personal growth and development. At the same time, administrators salivate for assessing and credentialing such learning with “signature courses,” badges, and certificates of completion. For untold numbers of potential learners, such approaches are distractive, or, worse, demotivating. In response, the ideas and research presented in this talk explore the learning experiences, preferences, and expectations of self-directed learners, including the common barriers, obstacles, motivations, and successes. It also highlights the possibilities for life change from the use of OER, OCW, and MOOCs. These stories of identity and life change might inspire other learners to venture into MOOCs, open education, and beyond. And it may also shift us from a culture of learning assessors to learning assisters. Time will tell.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 23. A Silver Lining for Learning: Tapping into History while Tapping into the Future Via Video Abstract: Sharing online video interviews with experts, such as the AECT Legends and Legacy series, can offer a unique knowledge portal to an assembly of the most adventurous and productive pioneers in one's field. At the start of the COVID-19 disruption, we were provided with an opportunity to reimagine teaching and learning so as to create an equitable and humanistic learning ecosystem for all. Barriers and structures that have resisted much needed change are now in disarray, offering the chance for transformative improvements. Silver Lining for Learning began reimagining through a series of interactive conversations of emerging trends, disruptive policies, programs, and initiatives, and often controversial, murky, and unspoken topics. Begun in March 2020, Silver Lining for Learning is a weekly live Webcasted conversation and interactive discussion among a panel of visionary experts and their guests about the future of education. To date, some 203 episodes have been recorded, and, like the AECT Legends and Legacy videos, they are now available for myriad educational uses by educators and learners around the world. In this session, Curt Bonk will discuss his favorite episodes this far of Silver Lining for Learning and detail a range of innovative pedagogical uses. With such live webcasted events in YouTube and the later archived recordings, learners can be apprenticed by thought leaders around the planet, while the instructor role shifts from content provider to one of learning concierge and course curator who continually augments and expands his or her courses with open access content and course activities in an accelerating apprenticeship process. If you come to this session, be sure to bring a bag of popcorn and your imagination.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 24. From R2D2 to the Matrix: A Galaxy of Online Learning Style, Motivational, Blended Learning, and Learner-Centered Examples Abstract: Retention is a key issue in online learning. Another is developing interactive and collaborative activities and environments. Creating a motivational and interactive online environment can enhance student retention, completion, and overall enthusiasm for this new type of learning arena. Part of the solution that institutions of higher learning are adopting relates to blended learning and part relates to becoming more learner-centered. As part of this movement, in this talk, Curt Bonk will provide dozens of pedagogical ideas and solutions that motivate students in the online learning environments. Bonk will provide best practices in online teaching, based on two decades of his own research as well as many others, that creatively engage students into deeper and better learning. Using his new R2D2 learning style framework for online instructional design as well as his TEC-VARIETY model for online student motivation, he will also present engaging strategies that relate to different student learning strategies or preferences. He will also discuss how the R2D2 method can be expanded or altered to fit your particular needs. He will also highlight his most recent instructional design method called the MATRIX. No matter what galaxy or planet you are on, these ideas and techniques can be linked student motivation, collaboration, interaction, and general engagement in the learning process. Bonk will offer many such linkages. More importantly, specific steps will be provided for each technique described in this entertaining and informative talk. As a result, this session will include many practical strategies that can be incorporated directly into one's virtual classes, events, or programs.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 25. How Faculty Can Harness Generative AI for Enhanced Learning: Part 1 Abstract: For the past year, with every turn of the page someone seems to be shouting AI, AI, AI and still more AI. For many educators, this has meant drastically rethinking their traditional instructional ideas and approaches. However, far too many others have yet to recognize or admit to the pedagogical possibilities and necessities. Perhaps they may need a little prompting or prompt assistance. Or perhaps they just need understandable models, examples, and frameworks to guide them. In response, in this session, Curt Bonk will reveal dozens of the ways educators are already employing Generative AI in their instruction. For many of these examples, he will detail how they relate to his powerful Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (i.e., R2D2) model for addressing the diverse learners of this planet as well as his TEC-VARIETY framework for online motivation; the latter of which he will make available two free and open books for the participants. With these frameworks in hand, instructors can feel more confident in utilizing AI to foster learner curiosity, autonomy, interactivity, engagement, feedback, meaningful learning, and much more. Participants will also have the tools and resources to address and hopefully overcome the limitations of Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT. Attend this session and begin contemplating your next steps into the fast-expanding world of AI in education.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 26. How Faculty Can Harness Generative AI for Enhanced Learning: Part 2 Abstract: AI continues to gain significant attention in higher education, prompting faculty and instructors to rethink their traditional teaching methods. Although many have embraced AI's potential, educators need practical examples to help with implementation and assessment. In Part 1, Curt Bonk presented dozens of ways of utilizing ChatGPT and other generative AI platforms and tools in one’s instruction while situating their use in two of his widely used psychological frameworks, TEC-VARIETY and R2D2. In building on that previous session, in Part 2, Curt Bonk will showcase additional ways post-secondary educators are utilizing AI to reflect on and improve their teaching. In particular, he will feature dozens of unique activities intended to foster critical and creative thinking as well as learner collaboration and motivation. In this webinar, you’ll learn how to address and potentially overcome the limitations of AI tools such as ChatGPT in the context of higher education.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 27. How Faculty Can Harness Generative AI for Enhanced Learning: Part 3 Abstract: The launching of ChatGPT in November 2022 also launched countless conversations about how it and other Generative AI tools and platforms might transform teaching and learning in higher education. With each passing month since then, instructors and instructional designers in higher education institutions and organizations around the world have continued to experiment with Generative AI for innovative pedagogy. Now is the time to compile, compare, and categorize some of their instructional ideas and methods. In Part 1 of this series of AI pedagogy in higher education Webinars, Curt Bonk presented dozens of ways of utilizing ChatGPT and other generative AI platforms and tools in one's instruction while situating their use in two of his widely used psychological frameworks, TEC-VARIETY and R2D2. In building on that session, in Part 2, Curt showcased additional ways post-secondary educators are utilizing AI to reflect on and improve their teaching. In particular, he featured dozens of unique activities designed to foster critical and creative thinking as well as learner collaboration and motivation. Those attending this webinar for Part 3, will walk away more comfortable with Generative AI since they will learn dozens of simple and quite generic ways to integrate Generative AI seemingly on the fly as well as many other pedagogical activities that have more layers of specificity and depth. There promises to be something for everyone who attends this session.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 28. How Faculty Can Harness Generative AI for Enhanced Learning: Part 4 Abstract: During the past year, Curt Bonk has provided three webinars filled with pedagogical ideas and frameworks related to innovative pedagogy with Generative AI. Part 1 focused on numerous examples of strategies and instructional approaches involving AI that aligned with one of Dr. Bonk's prominent models and frameworks for motivating learners and addressing learner diversity, TEC-VARIETY and R2D2. In the second webinar (Part 2), he highlighted even more ways that instructors and instructional designers in higher education could foster critical and creative thinking while integrating Generative AI tools and platforms. Some of ideas of the second webinar also addressed learner collaboration and motivation. In the third webinar, he went back to the basics with simple or generic ideas and templates, while also moving forward with several strategies that entailed more layers of specificity and depth. In this fourth Generative AI for enhanced learning webinar, Curt Bonk will select what he feels are the most powerful and potentially effective ideas of the first three. Of course, he'll get the audience to offer their suggestions. Join us for this "Best of Bonk" webinar.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 29. How to Enhance, Extend and Even Transform Your Teaching with Hyper-Engaging Strategies Abstract: Are you interested in active, engaging learning? What about hyper-engaging learning? Do you want to know how to foster critical and creative thinking as well as collaboration and technology integration? Do you focus too much on the risks and not enough on the opportunities? Do you want to be inspired by other innovative educators and rich examples?
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 30. Ideas, Approaches, and Strategies for DEI in the Learning, Design, and Technology Curriculum Abstract: Addressing issues of learner diversity, equity, and inclusion are front and center in higher education and across every educational sector today. One of the disciplines that is attracting a highly diverse audience today is the field of learning, design, and technology (LDT) as learners today come from nearly every discipline. Poll any online LDT class and you will find that the learners come from not just the field of education, but from radiology, speech pathology, nursing, operations management, communications, agriculture, fashion design, language education, and dozens more disciplines. With online and blended learning technologies, such learners can attend from nearly anywhere within the inhabitable parts of the planet. Of course, their experiences, backgrounds, expectations, and needs are widely diverse as well. And when they finish their degrees or certificates, many of them will be designing and refining instruction for future leaders and innovators around the globe with widely disparate internet access, equipment, and financial resources. In this session, Curt Bonk will discuss ways he has successfully fostered a learning community in diverse LDT classes rich in interaction, engagement, and inclusion of all voices. Drawing on an abundance of open educational resources and knowledge of OER practices, he utilizes instructional techniques rich in choice, flexibility, autonomy, and multiple forms of representation. By the end of this session, there will be dozens of methods that you can use to motivate and engage the diverse learners of this world.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 31. Learning is Changing: A (TEC-) Variety of Strategies for the Open Educational World Abstract: Make no mistake, learning has changed. It is now more mobile, collaborative, online, blended, ubiquitous, massive, informal, open, video-based, and personal. It is also more flipped, gesture-based, global, modifiable, comfortable, shareable, and flexible. The utopian visions of voice and finger controlled tablet computers, interactive online databases, and on-demand videoconferencing of Apple Computer’s “Knowledge Navigator” video from 1987 are now common today. Fast forward more than a quarter century and the education world is now highly open for learning. In the midst of this openness, instructors are taking on roles of learning concierges, consultants, curators, and cultivators, instead of credit managers. Thousands of organizations and scholars are sharing their course materials, expertise, and teaching ideas globally, thereby expanding learning opportunities and resources even further. But this is only part of the open education story. There are so many technologies and pedagogical opportunities, in fact, that most instructors of higher education are overwhelmed. In response, Curt Bonk offers two simple yet powerful frameworks that can be used to understand hundreds of Web-based pedagogical ideas that can motivate students to high success in online learning environments. Bonk will provide these best practices in online teaching based on two decades of his research. He will reveal dozens of practical examples using his widely acclaimed R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do) framework for instructional design with technology. Not done, he will showcase his TEC-VARIETY model for student motivation with Web technology. Each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well-known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products.). Those attending this session will walk away with many practical strategies that can be incorporated directly into face-to-face, blended, and virtual classes, events, or programs.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 32. Living in Tech City: 50+ Learning Technology Trends and Innovations Transforming Work and Our Lives Abstract: This session is geared toward learning and development professionals in a broad sense including trainers, training managers, human resources personnel, instructors and educators, learners, practitioners, and government officials who share an interest in contemporary advances in learning technologies that are shaping education for today’s and tomorrow’s learner. In this session, Professor Curt Bonk of Indiana University will discuss dozens of technologies and Web resources that have emerged over the past few years to transform corporate training as well as higher education and most other learning settings. Among these technologies tools are smartphones and smart watches, digital course resources, social books, social media, online talking dictionaries, video walls, virtual assistants, and Web conferencing. Also exploding at this time is enrollment in online or virtual learning, blended learning, massive open online courses (MOOCs), and the use of collaborative tools in such e-learning courses. While these 50+ technology trends and innovation are exciting and highly transformative, each has pros and cons in how they are used in different training and education spaces. To make it more personal, this session will, in part, be a presentation, and, in part, a conversation about learning technology trends and innovations.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 33. Manufacturing Motivation in Online Language Teaching and Learning with Variety: TEC-VARIETY Abstract: Given the recent COVID-19 disruption, we are now provided with an opportunity to reimagine teaching and learning across all education sectors, subject areas, and age levels including English language classrooms. The time has come to awaken the creative talents of learners long dormant in traditional instruction and then celebrate these talents when they are on display. As imagination and inventiveness are fostered in different online learning tasks and activities, learner motivation is explicitly on display when learners suggest authentic projects and possibilities and then work nonstop to meet the highest standards of success. Motivation is apparent when English language learners don’t simply write a paper but generate and annotate multimedia books and open educational resources for their global peers. And motivation is nonstop in global collaborations and cultural exchanges with peers from other countries and cultures with events that are rich in perspective taking, empathy, sharing, critical thinking, debate, and varied forms of social exchanges. And when done, these same learners are asking for yet more such relevant and meaningful projects and problems to engage in. Some might suggest such activities are simply part of a decades long dream for more personalized and individualized instruction, when, in fact, they signify the myriad educational transformations occurring around the world right now. In this session, Professor Curt Bonk of Indiana University will detail dozens of ways that English language teachers can manufacture such pedagogically-rich transformations with his TEC-VARIETY framework. With this framework, any teacher can create learning environments filled with a warm and comfortable tone that fosters a sense of belonging and wellbeing. In such classrooms, there is also extensive encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, and sufficient tension, intrigue, and controversy, yielding innovative products never previously dreamt of. In this talk, Professor Bonk will highlight dozens of examples and ideas for English language instructors related to the TEC-VARIETY. Fortunately, his popular free e-book highlighting this framework is available to download at: http://tec-variety.com/. In addition, Curt Bonk and his colleague Dr. Elaine Khoo from New Zealand recently created a free online course for “Motivation and Supporting Online Learners” that highlights and updates their TEC-VARIETY framework at https://www.colvee.org/. Keywords Selected References:
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 34. Meaningful Medical Instruction in the Digital Age: When Evolution Stumbles into a Revolution
Short Version: Meaningful Medical Instruction in the Digital Age: Curtis J. Bonk, Professor, Indiana University Abstract: Meaningful medical instruction is all around us. A move towards more active and engaging learning environments has finally occurred with innovations and experimentations in community-based medical education, flipped classrooms, peer-based instruction and collaborative teams, and inquiry-based learning. Combine such learner-centered pedagogies with the assorted emerging learning technologies, and you have transformed what was once a slow-moving educational evolution into a dynamic and ceaseless revolution. No doubt most educators cannot keep up. In this high-energy and visually rich talk, Curt Bonk will detail a set of 20 “last” principles of instruction with his “learning activation system template” (LAST) and describe new roles for the healthcare educator. You must decide, is this an evolution or a revolution?Long Version: Meaningful Medical Instruction in the Digital Age: Curtis J. Bonk, Professor, Indiana University Keynote Abstract: Meaningful medical instruction is all around us. We see this movement toward authentic learning on full display, whether it is enrolling in a blended problem-based learning dentistry program, using machine language models specific for diagnosis and prognosis of certain diseases, embarking on service learning in Kenya or Honduras in a global health program, engaging in high fidelity birthing simulations in a nursing program, or using integrative cases, animated clinical scenarios, or visual mapping to teach critical reasoning skills in optometry, physiology, and pharmacy courses. Of course, that was not always the case. For far too many decades, walking into most college classrooms, medical or not, was like watching a slow-motion video replay system of some nostalgic memories of the past. Nothing changed. However, a gradual nudging to toward more active and engaging learning environments has finally occurred with innovations and experimentations in community-based medical education, flipped classrooms, peer-based instruction and collaborative teams, and inquiry-based learning. Combine such learner centered pedagogies with the assorted emerging learning technologies of the past few decades such as audience response systems, blogging and other social media sharing sites to reflect on student healthcare training, mobile applications for anatomy lessons, interactive medical and healthcare games and simulations depicting the spreading of viruses, global interaction via videoconferencing in a public health course, three-dimensional animation and modeling of human organs, virtual reality chemistry and biology lessons, and massive open online classes and open courseware on the fundamentals of neuroscience, dementia, urology, and Parkinson’s disease, and you have transformed what was once a slow-moving educational evolution into a quite dynamic and ceaseless revolution. No doubt most medical and healthcare educators cannot keep up. In response, in this high-energy and visually rich talk, Curt Bonk will detail a set of 20 “last” principles of instruction with his “learning activation system template” (LAST). Such principles hover around making learning more meaningful and engaging for the learners of this digital age. Professor Bonk will also lay out the new roles for the medical instructor and healthcare educator. You must decide, is this an evolution or a revolution?
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
35. My Our Learning World has Changed: Now WE-ALL-LEARN with R2D2 and Beyond
Abstract: Make no mistake, learning has changed. It is now more collaborative, blended, ubiquitous, massive, informal, open, video-based, and personal. The utopian visions of voice and finger controlled tablet computers, interactive online databases, and on-demand videoconferencing of Apple Computer’s “Knowledge Navigator” video from 1987 are now common today. Fast forward a quarter century. In his book, the “World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing Education,” Curt Bonk offers an intriguing look at ten technology trends which he calls educational openers. When combined, the first letter of each opener spells the acronym: "WE-ALL-LEARN." This model helps make sense of the role of various technologies in open education, including open courseware, open access journals, open educational resources, and open information communities in Wikipedia, Facebook, YouTube, TED, and Twitter. In the midst of this openness, instructors are taking on roles of learning concierges, consultants, curators, and cultivators, instead of credit managers and camp commandants. With such technologies, thousands of organizations and scholars are sharing their course materials, expertise, and teaching ideas globally, thereby expanding learning opportunities and resources even further. But technology is only part of the open education equation. In this talk, Bonk provides two other frameworks or models which connect these never-ending waves of novel learning technologies to engaging pedagogy and robust psychological principles. One model for addressing diverse learner needs and preferences, namely R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do), will be highlighted first. Next, Bonk will end with his new TEC-VARIETY model for online student motivation and retention (i.e., Tone or climate, Encouragement or feedback, Curiosity, Variety, Autonomy, Relevance, Interactivity, Engagement, Tension, and Yielding products or goal setting). He will present several highly engaging online strategies that relate to different parts of this framework thereby linking nature (i.e., technology) to nurture (i.e., pedagogy).
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
36. Self-Direct to Learn, Self-Direct to Live: Exploring Learner and Instructor Experiences in a Self-Directed Learning World Abstract: Open, online, and distance learning have always relied on a large percent of learners to self-direct their own learning. During the past decade, the emergence of open educational resources (OER) and massive open online courses (MOOCs) made self-directed learning (SDL) more prominent, essential, and celebrated. As would be expected when in a pandemic, the percent of people engaging in self-directed learning pursuits has multiplied. In response, Professor Curt Bonk at Indiana University has conducted a series of studies related to SDL in MOOC and OER environments. His studies with his advisee, Zixi Li, include how South American MOOC instructors design and deliver their courses to foster SDL. With surveys and interviews, they also have researched how tango dance instructors obtained their professional development in an online and self-directed fashion during the pandemic. On the learner side, Bonk and Li’s research includes interviews with MOOC learners regarding their perceptions of SDL when learning from MOOCs. For instance, during the past two years, Bonk and his team interviewed 13 high school students in Nepal about their SDL practices as well as seven Nepali teachers. During the pandemic, these students had received certificates after completing MOOCs to learn English and dozens of other topics from prestigious universities in the United States. The focus of that study was on the three key components of SDL, namely, self-management, self-monitoring, and motivation. In addition, Professor Bonk and Li recently conducted a study of online language learning using the popular platform Duolingo where they are investigating how this system supports and facilitates student self-directed learning (SDL). That study included a survey of 84 Duolingo learners and follow-up interviews with 10 such learners from around the world. Implications for instructional designers and educators will be discussed, including specific features that can be embedded in open, online, blended, and distance learning to foster notetaking, self-reflection, time management, and other strategies found to be beneficial for self-directing one’s learning. The findings of each of these four studies will lead to a set of 15 instructional design guidelines and strategies to foster SDL. Key words: self-directed learning, MOOCs, open educational resources (OER), online language learning, motivation
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
37. Self-Direct to Learn, Self-Direct to Live: Exploring Learner Choices, Experiences, and Possibilities in a Self-Directed Learning World Abstract: Open, online, and distance learning have always relied on a large percent of learners to self-direct their own learning. During the past decade, the emergence of open educational resources (OER) and massive open online courses (MOOCs) made self-directed learning (SDL) more prominent, essential, and celebrated. As would be expected when in a pandemic, the percent of people engaging in self-directed learning pursuits has multiplied. In response, Professor Curt Bonk at Indiana University has conducted a series of studies related to SDL in MOOC and OER environments. His studies with Dr. Meina Zhu include how MOOC instructors design and deliver their courses to foster SDL. On the learner side, Bonk and Zhu’s research includes interviews of 15 MOOC learners regarding their perceptions of SDL when learning from MOOCs. The focus of that study was on the three key components of SDL, namely, self-management, self-monitoring, and motivation. In addition, Professor Bonk recently conducted a study of online language learning using the popular platform Duolingo where they are investigating how this system supports and facilitates student self-directed learning (SDL). That study included a survey of 84 Duolingo learners and follow-up interviews with 10 such learners from around the world. Currently, Bonk and his team are interviewing high school students in Nepal about their SDL practices. During the pandemic, these students have received certificates after completing MOOCs to learn English and dozens of other topics from prestigious universities in the United States. Implications for instructional designers and educators will be discussed, including specific features that can be embedded in MOOCs and OER to foster notetaking, self-reflection, time management, and other strategies found to be beneficial for self-directing one’s learning. Key words: self-directed learning, MOOCs, open educational resources (OER), online language learning, motivation
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
38. Self-Direct to Learn, Self-Direct to Live: Exploring Learner Choices, Experiences, and Possibilities in a Self-Directed Learning World Abstract: Open, online, and distance learning have always relied on a large percent of learners to self-direct their own learning. During the past decade, the emergence of open educational resources (OER) and massive open online courses (MOOCs) made self-directed learning (SDL) more prominent, essential, and celebrated. As would be expected when in a pandemic, the percent of people engaging in self-directed learning pursuits has multiplied. In response, Professor Curt Bonk at Indiana University and Meina Zhu at Wayne State University have conducted a series of studies related to SDL in MOOC and OER environments. Their numerous studies include how MOOC instructors design and deliver their courses to foster SDL. On the learner side, Bonk and Zhu's research includes interviews of 15 MOOC learners regarding their perceptions of SDL when learning from MOOCs. The focus of that study was on the three key components of SDL, namely, self-management, self-monitoring, and motivation. In addition, Professor Bonk has also conducted a study of online language learning using the popular platform Duolingo where he has investigated how this system supports and facilitates student self-directed learning (SDL). That study included a survey of 84 Duolingo learners and follow-up interviews with 10 such learners from around the world. Bonk and his team have also interviewed high school students in Nepal about their SDL practices. During the pandemic, these students have received certificates after completing MOOCs to learn English and dozens of other topics from prestigious universities in the United States. Most recently, he has explored SDL in generative AI environments for online language learning. He will detail that research at the end. Curt Bonk and Meina Zhu will discuss implications for instructional designers and educators, including specific features that can be embedded in MOOCs and OER to foster notetaking, self-reflection, time management, and other strategies found to be beneficial for self-directing one's learning. Key words: self-directed learning, MOOCs, open educational resources (OER), online language learning, motivation
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
39. Self-Direct to Learn, Self-Direct to Live: Fostering Successful Learning in a Self-Directed Learning World Abstract: Open, online, and distance learning have always relied on a large percent of learners to self-direct their own learning. During the past decade, the emergence of open educational resources (OER) and massive open online courses (MOOCs) made self-directed learning (SDL) more prominent, essential, and celebrated. As would be expected, during the recent pandemic, the percent of people engaging in SDL pursuits multiplied and it continues to grow. In response, Professor Curt Bonk at Indiana University has conducted a series of studies related to SDL in online learning and massive open online course (MOOC) environments. These studies have recently led to a set of 15 SDL guidelines and a 24 item SDL checklist. In this talk, some of the implications for instructional designers and educators will be discussed, including specific features that can be embedded in open, online, blended, and distance learning to foster notetaking, self-reflection, time management, and other strategies found to be beneficial for self-directing one’s learning. More specifically, the SDL checklist features include content chunking, progress indicators, estimated time frames, course reminders, gamification techniques, and application exercises and much more. In terms of the recently published SDL guidelines, when educators and instructional designers encourage online learners to make course related plans and goals as well as embed quizzes for self-assessment, craft visuals showing work progress and tasks completed, and provide timely and relevant reflection questions, they can directly support learner SDL and ultimate course satisfaction and success. Attend this session and be inspired by the many opportunities you now have to foster SDL with your learners as well as learners around the world that you never previously reached.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
40. Slaying “I” Monsters: The Pros and Cons of Using SSCI as a Benchmark of Productivity Abstract: There are drums beating in higher education settings around the world for higher rankings and the prestige that comes with it. Every university is gunning for top rankings and respect. Many universities are fixating on publications as their route to worldwide acclaim. Specifically, they want publications that are prominently listed in SSCI (Social Science Citation Index), SCI (Science Citation Index), and A&HCI (Arts & Humanities Citation Index) journals. Governments and institutions of higher learning have backed this effort up with hefty pay raises and bonuses, distinguished titles, and monumental perks. Publishing in SSCI denotes status and success. For many, especially those in east Asia, it is the coin of the realm. Could it be that this three-headed “I” monster or beast has totally slayed the merit and value systems for scholars and researchers of these countries? Some universities in Taiwan, in fact, have even adopted an “I” point system for promotion and merit. And doctoral students there are not able to graduate without accumulating enough “I” points or publications. In this talk, Curt Bonk will describe 12 pros (e.g., goals, benchmarks, pride, and improved quality) and 27 cons (e.g., rats in a cage, greed, narrow focus, limited creativity, elitism, etc.) of the use of SSCI publications as a measure of researcher productivity. Those in attendance should gain the courage needed to slay any “I” monsters hiding their bed or in their closet.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
41. Stretching the Edges of Technology-Enhanced Teaching: From Tinkering to Tottering to Totally Extreme Learning
Abstract: Look left, look right, look back, and then look dead-on straight ahead...what do you see? Of course, the air is filled with e-learning opportunities as well as talk of learning and education transformations. So much news. So much progress. The world of technology-enhanced learning is looking up, up, up. But wait a minute. Far too many in corporate training and higher education are content to tinker with blended forms of learning. They dip their toes into the technology change movement by embedding e-books, shared online videos, simulations, timelines, collaborative groups, mobile activities, and open access articles in their online training events and courses. Others might take greater risks with flipped classrooms, accessing experts for live demonstrations, having learners themselves generate content, or finding creative ways of reusing MOOC and open education content. At some point, we need to enter deeper waters and push toward the edges of what is possible while teeter-tottering on the brink of transformation. We need frameworks for doing so. In this talk, Curt Bonk provides two other frameworks or models which connect these never-ending waves of novel learning technologies to engaging pedagogy and robust psychological principles. One model for addressing diverse learner needs and preferences, namely R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do), will be highlighted first. After that, Bonk will end with his new TEC-VARIETY model for online student motivation and retention (i.e., Tone or climate, Encouragement or feedback, Curiosity, Variety, Autonomy, Relevance, Interactivity, Engagement, Tension, and Yielding products or goal setting). He has written a new book on the TEC-VARIETY framework which is free as an e-book that anyone attending the conference can download at http://tec-variety.com/. With these two models and frameworks, we can stretch toward the edges of learning from those of us tinkering on the shores to those whose learning approaches are tottering in new directions and even landing in totally extreme or alien lands. This talk will showcase examples from all three worlds - the world of the tinkerer, the totterer, and the totally extreme. In which world would you like to find yourself?
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
42. Technology Today, Technology Tomorrow: Might Learning Evolutions lead to Learning Revolutions?
Abstract: Change is inevitable. Technology change is pervasive; especially in the age of ChatGPT. Yesterday's technologies wiped entire industries and occupations. Today's technologies are accelerating these changes, and are, in particular, transforming the field of education. Learning is definitely changing. There is now a pervasive need for innovations in how we teach and how we learn. In response, Professor Bonk will detail a set of 20 "last" principles of instruction including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Spontaneity, and the Principle of High Expectations. He will also highlight new roles for instructors in light of these principles. Next, he will discuss these in light of three megatrends related to learning technology today: (1) the technologies for engagement; (2) the technologies for pervasive access; and (3) the technologies for the personalization and customization of learning. He will also take a moment to gaze into the future of learning as each of these megatrends evolve. In the third decade of the 21st century, learning has become increasingly flipped, social, collaborative, global, game-like, mobile, modifiable, open, online, visually-based, hands-on, ubiquitous, personal, and much much more. Without a doubt, ChatGPT and other Generative AI platforms have richly expanded and dramatically transformed all these forms of learning. Is this an evolution or a revolution? Professor Bonk will let the audience decide.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
43. The HyFlex of Blended Learning: Popular Frameworks for Powerful Learning
Abstract: There is both extensive confusion and much optimism about blended learning due to multiple blended learning definitions and approaches including the popular HyFlex model for these tense pandemic times. To addresses these issues, in this talk, Curt Bonk will lay out several different models and definitions of blended learning. Using his own “Handbook of Blended Learning: Global Perspectives, Local Designs” as a backdrop, the session will detail many of the advantages as well as the various disadvantages of blended learning as related to the different models. Perhaps, most importantly, Dr. Bonk will offer two simple yet powerful frameworks that can be used to understand hundreds of Web-based pedagogical ideas that can motivate students to high success in blended learning environments. Bonk will provide these best practices in blended learning based on two decades of his research. Such ideas can creatively engage students into deeper and better learning. He will reveal dozens of practical examples using his widely acclaimed R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do) framework for instructional design with technology. Not done, he will showcase his TEC-VARIETY model for student motivation with Web technology. Each letter of the TEC-VARIETY model stands for a well-known motivational principle (e.g., tone, encouragement, curiosity, variety, autonomy, relevance, interactivity, engagement, tension, and yielding products.). While detailing best practices he has seen around the globe, Bonk will also discuss how his two methods can be expanded or altered to fit one’s particular blended learning preferences and needs.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
44. The Learning World has Changed: Now WE-ALL-LEARN with R2D2 and Bit of TEC-VARIETY
Abstract: Make no mistake, learning has changed. It is now more collaborative, ubiquitous, massive, informal, open, video-based, and personal. The utopian visions of voice and finger controlled tablet computers, interactive online databases, and on-demand videoconferencing of Apple Computer’s “Knowledge Navigator” video from 1987 are now common today. Fast forward a quarter century. In his book, the “World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing Education,” Curt Bonk offers an intriguing look at ten technology trends which he calls educational openers. When combined, the first letter of each opener spells the acronym: "WE-ALL-LEARN." This model helps make sense of the role of various technologies in open education, including open courseware, open source software, open access journals, open educational resources, and open information communities. As part of this talk, he will discuss e-books, podcasts, streamed videos, online learning portals social networking tools like Facebook and Ning, YouTube videos, wikis, and virtual worlds. With such technologies, thousands of organizations and scholars are sharing their course materials, expertise, and teaching ideas globally, thereby expanding learning opportunities and resources even further. But technology is only part of the open education equation. In this talk, Bonk provides two other frameworks or models which connect these never-ending waves of novel learning technologies to engaging pedagogy and robust psychological principles. One model for addressing diverse learner needs and preferences, namely R2D2 (Read, Reflect, Display, and Do), will be highlighted first. Next, Bonk will end with his new TEC-VARIETY model for online student motivation and retention (i.e., Tone or climate, Encouragement or feedback, Curiosity, Variety, Autonomy, Relevance, Interactivity, Engagement, Tension, and Yielding products or goal setting). He will present several highly engaging online strategies that relate to different parts of this framework thereby linking nature (i.e., technology) to nurture (i.e., pedagogy).
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to
your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations
can be altered for almost any audience.
45. The G3 of Writing and Publishing: Gentle Guidelines, Great Stories, and Gigantic Gains
Presenter: Focus and Audience Session Takeaways and Objectives
Journal outlets in the field of online and distance learning are exploding. Yet, the first few years as a researcher, faculty member, graduate student, and scholar can be overwhelming. Your first priority might be preparing lecture notes and new courses and then getting a research program initiated with new grants and projects. In response, this session will offer a wealth of suggestions and insights on organizing research teams, revising articles, corresponding with journal editors, and finding and selecting the appropriate dissemination outlet. In effect, this session offers a practical set of advice and insights into the processes and structures of writing that will help establish an academic writing program and lead one to a series of writing successes. Attempts to publish your research results or disseminate information on your course innovations is often pushed off far away into the distance. In response, Professor Curt Bonk has designed a simple writing guide or set of writing tips. He has also gathered writing advice and handouts from many others. Professor Bonk’s advice is based on more than 420 publications and 20 books (including one that was self-published and has been downloaded more than 260,000 times; see http://tec-variety.com/). Curt has published dozens of articles during the pandemic, which he has termed pandemic publishing. While today writing can be conducted just about anywhere, successful academic writers often find that creating a designated writing space – both physically and digitally – can be helpful in orienting the mind to begin, progress, and ultimately complete an assortment of academic writing projects. In this session, Curt Bonk will journey through stories about their own personal writing spaces, describing key elements of the writer’s desk that contribute to inspiration, motivation, and organization for academic writing. He will also discuss the writing habits and strategies that he typically employs to create highly attuned spaces for writing amongst competing scholarly and personal demands. Along the way, he will highlight some of their most definitive successes as well as how he navigated through the various disappointments, failures, and challenges of academic writing. Keywords
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 46. The World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing Education. Abstract: According to Thomas Friedman's book, The World is Flat, worldwide economic trends are flattening. In education, however, opportunities for learning are actually expanding or opening up through a myriad of emerging distance technologies. These opportunities can be seen in ten technology trends that spell the acronym: "WE-ALL-LEARN." Online content in the form of e-books, podcasts, streamed videos, YouTube videos, social networking, wikis, and alternate reality worlds continues to open new learning pathways. At the same time, more instructors are sharing their course materials and teaching ideas globally, thereby expanding learning opportunities and resources. And the software used to deliver such online learning contents and experiences is increasingly available as open source. Curt Bonk will address these issues while enticing participants to think of implications for their organizations, countries, and regions of the world as well as for themselves as leaders and learners. Note that the WE-ALL-LEARN model is described in Curt Bonks latest book, "The World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing Education." This book is published by Jossey Bass in July 2009 and has a coinciding e-book with different content. The e-book and all book references and resources can be found at WorldisOpen.com. Extensive examples and advice will be provided.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 47. Time to Wake Up from Our Innovative Learning Dreams and Make Smarter Learning a Reality Abstract: For a half century, educators, psychologists, and researchers have been predicting that highly intensive, innovative, and individualized learning formats are only a few years away. Learners of all ages would enter enticing microworlds, highly engaging learning experience holodecks, fully immersive hands-on scenarios, high fidelity simulations and games, AI-based adaptive microlearning snippets, and completely free and open educational resources and courses on any topic. Massive open online classes were promised one day and then on demand microlearning snippets were delivered in the next. The learning related dreams we had in past decades were quickly forgotten as the next wave of learning technology came along. But all those dreams will prove pointless if they fail to address true problems or issues that some aspect of society is struggling with. It is time to wake up from such dreams of a glistening technological future and have our dream machines help us envision a world filled with open, informal, adaptive, nontraditional, and self-directed learning opportunities. When that happens, we will truly have arrived in the age of smarter and more innovative forms of learning where the learner is finally in charge of the dreams.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 48. Transformative Teaching Around the World: Stories of Cultural Impact, Technology Integration, and Innovative Pedagogy. Curtis J. Bonk, Indiana University and Meina Zhu, Wayne State University Abstract:
Are you interested in active and engaging learning? Do you want to know how to foster critical and creative thinking as well as collaboration and technology integration? Do you want to be inspired by innovative teachers? Well you’re in luck. A new book from Professor Curtis J. Bonk and Professor Meina Zhu contains 41 short stories from award winning Fulbright teachers around the globe who enrolled in a course at Indiana University on instructional strategies for thinking, collaboration, and motivation, including technology integration. These outstanding teachers write their stories about education in India, Morocco, mainland China and Taiwan, Thailand, Singapore, Finland, Botswana, New Zealand, Mexico, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Cyprus, Korea, Rwanda, Costa Rica, Kazakhstan, Israel, Uzbekistan, Bhutan, Papua New Guinea, and the USA. The book authors tell emotional, educationally powerful, and highly impactful stories of transformative changes in their classrooms, communities, and countries. Many of their stories relate to the use of innovative technology during the pandemic as well as global technologies for international exchanges and collaboration among K-12 students in different countries. Attend this talk and find out how teachers around the planet are motivating and engaging their learners and transforming education as we know it. If you are you looking to foster creativity, critical thinking, cooperative and collaborative learning, motivation, or technology integration, you will have come to the right session.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 49. Ultra-Engaging Online and Blended learning: Introducing the TEC-VARIETY and R2D2 Models
Two-Part Breakout/Workshop on Ultra-Engaging Learning Breakout/Workshop Session # 1: Ultra-Engaging
Learning with Technology: Curtis J. Bonk, Professor, Indiana University Abstract: Everyone is talking about the need to motivate and engage students. Blended and fully online learning environments offer clues on just how to engage the learners and move them from bland online content and unimaginative activities to offering flexibility, choice, and creativity while still strengthening essential knowledge, skills, and ability. Some learners are bored since they want their instructors to utilize their smartphones, tablets, and other wireless and mobile technologies. Many want hands-on activities where they produce something meaningful as well as time to explore the resources that they find on the Web. Your students are likely no different. In response, in this first of two breakout talks, Professor Bonk will detail one of his designs for engaging instructional approaches with technology across a range of fields using the “TEC-VARIETY” framework (i.e., the motivational principles of: Tone or climate, Encouragement or feedback, Curiosity, Variety, Autonomy, Relevance, Interactivity, Engagement, Tension, and Yielding products or goal setting), from his free online book Adding Some TEC-VARIETY. In addition, Professor Bonk will discuss his model called Read, Reflect, Display, and Do (R2D2) from his “Empowering Online Learning” book. This model for online and blended learning can address different diverse student learning strategies or preferences. When combined, R2D2 and TEC-VARIETY can enhance, elevate, and even transform the quality of technology-enhanced FTF classrooms as well as fully online and blended courses to meet diverse learner needs. Breakout/Workshop Session # 2: Ultra-Engaging
Online, Blended, and FTF Learning: Curtis J. Bonk, Professor, Indiana University Abstract: Are you new to teaching; be it, face-to-face (FTF), blended, or fully online? Perhaps you find yourself disappointed or even a bit bored with your instructional approaches and activities. Or perhaps you are concerned with your students. Are they losing interest or not getting anything out of what you thought were quite unique and seemingly “innovative” techniques? Are you frustrated but feel that new approaches simply take too much time or are too risky? Do you not have enough money, time, energy, risk muscle, or resources to make any changes in your activities, instruction, or pedagogical approaches? In this talk, Dr. Bonk provides more than 50+ proven ways to liven up your face-to-face classes, blended activities, and online training across a wide range of fields that are low in time, low in risk, and low in cost; many of which have decades of psychological research that attests to their high impact. There will be dozens of methods and practical examples in medicine, nursing, business, education, engineering, computer science, psychology, pharmacy, health sciences, and a range of other disciplines that you can use to motivate and engage your students in their learning. Importantly, many of these strategies and activities will relate to creativity, critical thinking, cooperative and collaborative learning, and motivation. In addition, using his own “Handbook of Blended Learning: Global Perspectives, Local Designs,” Professor Bonk will detail several different models and definitions of blended learning as well as the various advantages and disadvantages of blended learning. In addition, Dr. Bonk will provide labels for each strategy or idea mentioned while offering his advice for getting started with these tools and techniques. Attend this talk and become ultra-engaged yourself! Breakout Interactive Giveaways: At different moments in these breakout talks, Professor Bonk will give away around 40-50 copies of his book, “Adding Some TEC-VARIETY: 100+ Activities for Motivating and Retaining Learners Online,” which is related to motivating learners with interactive and online technology. Attendees can also download this book online for free before, during, or after the session at: http://tec-variety.com/; in fact, more than 200,000 people have downloaded part or all of this book since 2014. The person asking the best question after the breakout sessions will receive a signed copy of his “Empowering Online Learning” (i.e., R2D2) book with 100 more activities and ideas for addressing learner diversity in building interactive and engaging learning. Don’t miss out! Learning Objectives: By the end of this session, you should be able to:
Active
Learning Activity (activities):
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. 50. Using AI for Academic Writing and Publishing Success Abstract: The first few years as a researcher, faculty member, graduate student, and academic scholar can be overwhelming. There might be little time to write up one's research and academic ideas. This session will offer a wealth of suggestions and insights on organizing research teams, revising articles, corresponding with journal editors, and finding and selecting the appropriate dissemination outlet. In effect, this session offers a practical set of advice and insights into the processes and structures of writing that will help establish an academic writing program and lead one to a series of writing successes. Dr. Curt Bonk, who has more than 425 publications with over 200 collaborators including 20 books, 67 book chapters, and over 165 peer reviewed journal articles, will explain his writing approaches and strategies. Importantly, he will explain how using Generative AI tools and platforms can help establish a more productive and positive writing experience. He will summarize various AI advice articles and guidelines that will provide you with more writing confidence, strategies, and options. He will describe some of the methods scholars are using around the world to enable generative AI to augment one's writing in minor ways as well as more significant ways. Different AI tools and prompting approaches will be highlighted as well as free and open AI resources that those attending this session might want to explore and utilize after the session. Using these guidelines and tips, everyone can become a better and more successful writer. And, when AI is thoughtfully and ethically utilized, their successes can reach new horizons.
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations 51. Using Shared Online Videos, Podcasts, and Webcasts to Apprentice and Engage Online Learners Abstract: With advances in emerging learning technologies, we are now provided with an opportunity to reimagine teaching and learning so as to create an equitable and humanistic learning ecosystem for all. Barriers and structures that have resisted much needed change are now in disarray, offering the chance for transformative improvements through more authentic learning and apprenticeship with experts in the real world. Shared online videos, webcasts, and podcasts offer a unique knowledge portal to an assembly of the most adventurous and productive pioneers in most any field or discipline. From a macro perspective, shared online video, webcast, and podcast interviews of leaders and emerging scholars in a field serve as an historical roadmap of the progress that has been made in a discipline as well as exciting current trends as seen firsthand by people with decades of experience working in the trenches of it. In this session, Curt Bonk will detail a range of innovative pedagogical uses for shared online video, webcasts, and podcasts; including his own award winning podcast show, Silver Lining for Learning. With live webcasted events in Facebook, YouTube, and other synchronous platforms that can also be archived and discussed asynchronously, learners can be apprenticed by thought leaders around the planet, while the instructor role shifts from content provider to one of learning concierge and course curator who continually augments and expands his or her courses with open access content and course activities in an accelerating apprenticeship process. As such, the teaching-learning process of today is an increasingly global one, rich in cross cultural interaction and engagement. Key Takeaways. In this webinar, you’ll discover:
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations 52. What is the Future of Learning?: Visions of Education 20/20 in Our Changing Learning World! Abstract: These days seem ripe for gazing into a crystal ball and pondering what human learning will look like 10, 20, or even 40 years into the future. How will we learn? Where will we be learning? And who, if anyone, will we be learning with? It’s time to put away your crystal ball for a moment and listen in as Curt Bonk details his visions of the future of learning. We all have witnessed the numerous ways learning has been changing during the past few years–learning is more open, flipped, mobile, global, online, blended, massive, visual, game-like, immersive, digital, free, tactile, modifiable, comfortable, adventurous, and perhaps even more personal–but that is just a brief glimpse of what the exciting adventure known as human learning will look like in the decades to come. In this talk, Professor Bonk will offer his predictions of the future of learning such as robot partners on collaborative teams, world knowledge refreshment stations, Professor Einstein PDAs, the rise of super e-mentors, classrooms as cafes, learning environment engineers, and much more. Technologies only tell a part of this story, however. As technologies come and go, Bonk suggests a more important need is to create learning ecologies using a set of 20 “last” principles of instruction including the Principle of Flexibility, the Principle of Meaningful Learning, the Principle of Choice and Options, the Principle of Spontaneity, the Principle of High Expectations, The Principle of Convenience, and so on. Importantly, these principles are most effective when married to another set of 20 related to the evolving roles of instructors from resource curators who continually augment and expand the course with open access content to learning concierges who provide multiple pathways to learning depending on the situations of the day to personal consultants, learning cultivators, timely counselors, and inspirational coaches. When combined, it is clear that we are entering “Education 20/20;” an age of educational resource abundance where passion, play, purpose, and freedom to learn take precedence over the more mind-numbing traditional information reception models of education. Learning is changing. It’s time to join the movement!
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience. What is the Future of Learning?: Visions of Education in Our Changing Learning World! 53. What is the Future of Learning?: Visions of Education in Our Changing Learning World! Abstract: These days seem ripe for gazing into a crystal ball and pondering what human learning will look like 5, 10, or even 25 or more years into the future. How will we learn? Where will we be learning? And who, if anyone, will we be learning with? It’s time to put away those crystal balls, magic lamps, and astrology charts for a moment and listen in as Curt Bonk details his visions of the future of learning. We all have witnessed the numerous ways learning has been changing during the past few years–learning is more open, flipped, mobile, global, online, blended, massive, visual, game-like, immersive, digital, free, tactile, modifiable, comfortable, adventurous, and perhaps even more personal–but that is just a brief glimpse of what the exciting adventure known as human learning will look like in the decades to come. In this talk, Professor Bonk will offer his predictions of the future of learning as influenced by innovations in learning technology, instructional approaches, and the spaces and places for learning to occur. Learning is changing. It’s time to join the movement!
Keep in mind that Dr. Bonk will gladly tailor any of his presentations to your specific needs. With enough lead time, most talks or presentations can be altered for almost any audience.
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