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Service Learning Pedagogy at Your Institution

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Presentation on theme: "Service Learning Pedagogy at Your Institution"— Presentation transcript:

1 Service Learning Pedagogy at Your Institution
Jeffrey Spies COS | SHARE | UVA @jeffspies

2 Assumption Technology is important to us.

3 Assumption Technology continually evolves.

4 Therefore We must continually learn in order to keep up with technology.

5 Recommendation Do not learn new technology.

6 Recommendation Learn how to learn new technology.

7 Recommendation Do not teach new technology
Recommendation Do not teach new technology. Teach how to learn technology.

8 Assumption While something is being learned, that something may not be appreciated.

9 Recommendation Use pedagogy that considers motivations, both local and long-term.
What I care about now. I’ll probably get a job in the real world.

10 Assumption In the real world, we (mostly) work independently.

11 Assumption In the real world, we (mostly) learn independently.

12 Recommendation Create learning environments that emulate the real world and thus support independent learning.

13 Assumptions In the real world, we work on real-world projects.

14 Assumptions In the real world, we learn on real-world projects.
We problem solve We architect

15 Recommendation Learn using real-world projects.

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17 Recommendations Learn how to learn. Teach how to learn
Recommendations Learn how to learn. Teach how to learn. Consider motivations. Support independent learning. Use real-world projects.

18 Service learning Balances instruction with a pragmatic, real-life opportunity to serve in the community.

19 The Pedagogy Learning how to learn via big, meaningful, real-world projects in a supportive environment that fosters independence and ownership.

20 The Pedagogy Learning how to learn via big, meaningful, real-world projects in a supportive environment that fosters independence and ownership.

21 *gulp* “Big? Meaningful? Real-world? Mine?”

22 Learning is scary. Learning is lonely
Learning is scary. Learning is lonely. Responsibility is scary and lonely.

23 Learning how to learn Everyone feels this way
Learning how to learn Everyone feels this way. This is a supportive environment. You are no longer under-resourced.

24 Independent is not alone
Google Stack Overflow Mailing lists/forums/chat Read open source code (e.g., Github) Read local code Ask other interns Ask local experts Ask for help breaking down problems Code review

25 Learning is frustrating. Frustration undermines learning
Learning is frustrating. Frustration undermines learning. This is a cyclic process.

26 A Lot to Learn Knowledge Problem solving Breaking down problems
Evaluating solutions Comparing solutions Evaluating success

27 When learning how to learn Frustration is normal
When learning how to learn Frustration is normal. Everyone feels this way. Make it work for you rather than against you.

28 Repeat the following: Frustration is normal. Frustration is expected
Repeat the following: Frustration is normal. Frustration is expected. I am not different. Repeat this.

29 The role of frustration Frustration is a cue that we need help.
Repeat this.

30 Frustration as a heuristic Just starting out: 45-60 minutes Advanced: 90 minutes Novel: 180 minutes
Repeat this.

31 What doesn’t work: Too many questions. Not enough questions.
Repeat this.

32 Questions Don’t provide answers. Provide tips to find answers.
Repeat this.

33 The role of frustration: Frustration is a cue that we need help
The role of frustration: Frustration is a cue that we need help the problem is too big. Repeat this.

34 The Goal

35

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37 You are here. The problem is now consumable based upon where you are in your learning.

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39 Spiraling around the solution--being frustrated--helped you solve the next problem.

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43 Learning is Problem Solving
Break down problem into incremental, consumable problems Solve consumable problem Evaluate constraints of solution and interactions with future consumables Repeat

44 History In the classroom Introduced pre-COS Applied at scale at COS Total since May 2013: Hired full-time: Multiple semesters/summers: 52% 115 interns / hired 15 45 out of 86 have been with us

45 Internships & Independent Studies

46 COS Internship Program Total since May 2013: 115 Hired full-time: 19 Multiple semesters/summers: 52%

47 Independent studies and internships require learning.
Again mission…but the basic problem we solve is....

48 Common goals build trust in the pedagogy. Goals at COS…
This is not a means of getting free work without putting time into it.

49 Internship Goals Provide value to COS Provide value to interns

50 COS Goals To hire you Get stuff done Improve scholarship

51 Intern Goals Learn something Learn real-world skills Build resume
Change science

52 Common Goals You learn so you can build stuff
You build stuff to put it on your resume You build your resume so you’re more hirable (by us)

53 Your job To learn To be frustrated

54 Repeat the following: Frustration is normal. Frustration is expected
Repeat the following: Frustration is normal. Frustration is expected. I am not different. Repeat this.

55 Diversity

56 Meaningful, real-world projects attract diversity.
Repeat this.

57 Some people care more about
the problem helping the community that needs the solution than the technology used to solve the problem (but it still attracts them too)

58 Minorities in the space will still face different challenges than non-minorities. Be attentive to the signs. Repeat this.

59

60 Tips

61 How to choose tech Community Inclusivity Diversity
Learn-/Teach-ability Functionality

62

63 You don’t have to be technical to be a mentor to technical interns.
The Pragmattic Programmer ELIZA

64 Ask how it’s going and don’t accept a single word answer.
The Pragmattic Programmer

65 Practice Pitches “Every time we meet, I want you tell me why what you’re doing is the most important thing that anyone at the organization can be doing to improve scholarship.” You should believe this as well. If you don’t, the projects may not be big or meaningful enough. The Pragmattic Programmer

66 Compensate your interns With money or credits
Compensate your interns With money or credits. If you can’t give credits, find a faculty member who can that wants a very easy independent study mentoring experience (because you’re going to do all the work). Repeat this.

67 Open source is not only good for scholarship; it’s good for the interns.
Repeat this.

68 Good mentorship will sometimes feel mean.
The Pragmattic Programmer

69 Train Mentors It requires buy-in, but helps you scale.
Repeat this.

70 Saman Ehsan Talk to Saman while you’re here about her experience with the pedagogy.

71 @osframework, @jeffspies jeff@cos.io
Find this presentation at _share_pedagogy_spies.pptx Service Learning Pedagogy at Your Institution


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