This course will become read-only in the near future. Tell us at community.p2pu.org if that is a problem.

Introduce yourself


Provide a brief introduction and include your experience with badges and course / curriculum design

Please respond to the following tasks in any way you see best. Be creative; write text, create a slideshare, record a video or podcast. Reflect and create responses to the following tasks... have fun! Add to this tasks discussion with links to your responses, or respond directly into the task discussion.

  1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.
  2. Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.
  3. Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.
  4. Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...

Task Discussion


  • Bobbartley said:

    Hello,

    I'm Bob.... I am a primary school teacher in Australia and I have no idea if I am in the right place or not!! I say this because I love the idea of using badges to enhance learning outcomes for students but on the flipside I am not exactly what you would call a programmer adn i am not sure what skills and experience you need to complete this challenge!!

    I have been enthusiastically exploring the web looking for the perfect badge system to gamify my class, but none have exactly what I want... SO here I am, trying to create one myself.

    I currently teach 8-9 year olds each with an iPad. We are currently getting wireless and I am excited about that. I have always wanted to use gamification in my class, but have not yet been able to dedicate enough time to make it happen. SO this is my goal... to understand what it is to create a badge system. One way or another, I will learn that it is either fantastic and manageable or way too difficult and will have to work out another way to get organised. 

    I wish everyone luck (but none more than myself!)

    on July 25, 2014, 3:12 a.m.
  • Susana Constante Pereira said:

    Good morning from Porto - Portugal. My name is Susana Constante Pereira and I am a learning facilitator. As such, I design and facilitate learning processes, in a learner centred approach. Looking into learning outcomes from the beginning, adapting them to the concrete profiles and expectations of the participants and looking into them under the integrated competence development model (knowledge, skills and attitudes) is something I've been doing for the past 10 years. From training referential based processes, to participatory learning formats.

    A concrete example of the learning facilitation I am usually involved in would be last weekends training of multipliers for badge issuers conducted in Lisbon - Portugal, within the UNIQUE Learning Badges project (www.learningbadges.eu). We started from the reflection about what it means to recognise learning, through learning to learn, passing by gamifying learning and finally designing badges and ecosystems. And in order to make it tangible to the participants we designed a rubrics of learning outcomes based on their expectations when apllying to the course. Those then turned into badges.

    So, again, my name is Susana Constante Pereira and I am looking into how far I want to use digital learning badges in the learning processes I am working on. And the only way I feel I would be able to consider doing do, is aproaching it in a macro perspective - meaning, from ecosystem to badge.

    This means I would really like to go through this challenge and be able to give myself a 'system architect' badge. :) Let's go for it in a peer to peer matter!

    on March 18, 2014, 5:43 a.m.
  • cvaufrey said:

    Hi, I'm Christine, I'm an educator and I live in France. I'm happy to take part in this course / challenge, because I plan to creat a badges system as an assessment system in the MOOC I'll manage with 3 other colleagues in next fall.

    I've a long experience of curriculum design, assessment (different types of assessment, in fact), beaucoup I'm a vocational trainer from more than 20 years. 

    Las year, I was involved in the creation of the first MOOC in french : ITyPA (Internet, tout y est pour apprendre : http://www.itypa.mooc.fr. It was a great experience, but we felt that participants wanted something to proof what they've learned. So, for the second edition, we decided to create 5 badges.

    I'm familiar with rubrics, learning outcomes and peer assessment. I wrote several "référentiels de compétences" (in french), to assess learning in the areas of digital culture and project management. 

    I'm not comfortable with certificates and diplomas fort lifelong learning. We don't need institutions when we want to learn a specific topic. A badge (or a collection of badges) looks much more powerful when it's important to show the detail of what we know.

    At the end of this challenge, I would like to be able to build a complete badge system and each badge, with the right meta-datas. 

    Sorry for my english ! May be I'll not write a lot during this challenge, because I'm not a good writer in english. But I'll both learn and make the job, definitely ! 

    on July 3, 2013, 1:03 p.m.
  • Laimonas said:

    1. Hi, I am Laimonas Ragauskas, recently involved in coordinating European project "Unique Learning Badges" (www.learningbadges.eu - the website will be soon updated with more stuff) and the whole idea of the project is to build badge based learning platform, that can be used by providers of non-formal education and youth work in Europe. Together with colleagues I did the training course for educators on gamification, badge based learning, learning to learn and recognition of non-formal learning. We used both digital and real badges to support or reward learning achievements.  I am about to create an online acccreditation course for educators how they could use our created online platform and Open badges for their educational programmes/ projects. Therefore my interest is deepen understanding about the good badge based learning system and actually create Badge system for that course while going through this P2PU course. 

    2. I'm working as trainer in the field of non-formal education and training and therefore curriculum development arround specific competences is kind of every day work. I don't call it 'curriculum' really, but it's about development of methodology and programme flow in order to achieve certain educational goals. More about my work can be found here

    3. In most of the case I define what learning outcomes are foreseen after the training or any other educational programme. However there is always a space for unexpected learning to happen (as informal learning - not planned, and unstructured). However there is no hierarchy in judging learning outcomes according to some grades or levels. Therefore each learner usually describes what he/she learned and able to do now, one this has been learnt. In terms of using badges for such learning, I believe learning outcomes and assessment process should be much more clear and structured. 

    4. I'm not sure if I understood the last point. I consider my learning goal (to create accreditation course with badge system integrated) already a good challenge for myself. 

    on June 21, 2013, 11:23 a.m.
  • Jason said:

    1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.

    I'm an elearning administrator at the community college level.  My badge experience is limited (I only managed the chemistry merit  badge).  I'm also new to digital badges, but believe that they will provide an important alternative learning path for many learners.

    2.   Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.

    I've redesigned French 1 about three times and Music Appreciation twice.  I'm unsure whether these need to be redone with badges or if badges are better for smaller learning tasks.

    3 Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.

    I'm on the committee at my institution that is drafting institutional SLO's.

    4  Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy..

    At this point I don't feel I know enough to help build challenges.

    on June 13, 2013, 9:56 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Jason,

    Welcome!

    Thanks for jumping in. Great to have another here with  experience at the college level. Biggest adult learning demographic IMO. Also the cohort who could benefit from the recognition and accrediting of alternative learning pathways, also IMO.

    I hope you will chime in regarding the mapping of learning outcomes to badge criteria. One of the keys to good badge system design. Also looking forward to discussing with you the use of badges beyond the smaller learning tasks... all good.

    Happy Friday.

    Peter

    on June 14, 2013, 9:38 a.m. in reply to Jason
  • Damian Ewens said:

    1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.

    My name is Damian Ewens. I am the Co-Founder of Codery. I was the Principal Investigator for one of the Digital Media Learning teams that was funded to develop badge systems through the DML Badge competition. I led the development of the first badges to provide graduation credit for high school students that were earned outside of school. I am developing a web platform to support the creation of badges and badge systems so I am interested in learning from people making badges so we can make a better platform.

    2. Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.

    I taought in grades 6th-12th in math and science. I combined middle school science and math curriculums, worked in a high school which was entirely rubric-based, and built a rubric that aligned out-of-school learning with in school standards.

    3. Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.

    As mentioned above, I have used rubric both in and out  of school and within traditional and wildly innovative school models. I have helpd build organizational logic models with specific student, programmatic and systems outcomes and used those to define, improve or align those outcomes to program operations, curriculum design and assessment.

    4.Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...

    I am using this class to build and refine my thinking about badge systems design. We are asked to consult for people building badges and badge systems regularly. I feel that Peter's work (and Jess, Doug, Erin etc)  around creating a shared badge system design rubric is really important for the growth of this ecosystem. I may or may not complete the course but I hope to help build a better tool to facilitate the design of higher quality systems, that are closely aligned with organizational needs, missions and outcomes. Though diversity of badges is important, high quality is key to nurture this nascent ecosystem of badges.

    on June 13, 2013, 1:41 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Damian,

    Great to have you here. I look forward to your contribution. I earned one of your codery bages a while back. I proudly display it as a part of my web development badges from within my mozilla backpack.

    http://backpack.openbadges.org/share/f701cb248f6b8acd167c7566e58d8c87/

    I believe I align well with your belief toward the use of rubrics. I was teaching into an undergrad teacher development program a few years back and we built rubrics together to evaluate each others blogging work. I think rubrics are very good learning tools.

    I hope this P2Pu challenge will further improve the badge system design rubric. I feel it can be an excellent tool to further peoples understanding in badge systems design. And anything I can do to help people develop an understanding of badge systems design the better.

    I hope you can contribute all the way through this challenge...

    Be Well...

    Peter

    on June 13, 2013, 9:04 p.m. in reply to Damian Ewens

    Damian Ewens said:

    Thanks Peter. I remember the lazy dog hack! I agree that the rubric could play a really important role in ensuring a higher percentage of high quality badges and badge systems. I am intentionally making an effort to play a role to learn and help the work evolve, especially since we are going to be helping people build these things. If we can provide really good, thoughtful tools at the beginning, then we'll see that much better adoption rates for badges. Best, Damian On Thu, Jun 13, 2013 at 9:04 PM, prawsthorne <
    on June 14, 2013, 2:12 p.m. in reply to Peter Rawsthorne
  • kathweaver said:

    Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.

    I have taught Computer Science for 21 years, and have taught Technology Applications since Webmastering was a course in Texas.  I have been at the same high school in Dallas, Texas those 21 years (Hillcrest High School).

    I consider myself a digital native, having had my hands on my first computer when I was in elementary school – a small 3 bit device we built from a kit that we obtained from the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.  The first electronic computer I got my hands on was a main frame at Jackson State, in Jackson Mississippi when I was in high school and I took my first programming class then.

    My first computer gigs was installing TRS-80’s for various businesses and individuals.  I was also a “Kelly Girl” and I specialized in new technologies. 

    I was a systems analyst before I was a teacher and I embrace each new technology as it comes out.

    1.    Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.

    I have my Master’s in CECS.  I write curriculum in both Computer Science and Tech Apps for Dallas ISD, and I mentor several other computer science teachers both in my district and others.

    I designed our Computer Science Fundamentals Curriculum, a Game Design curriculum that I am not happy with and a Web Design Curriculum.  Next year, I hope to design a Robotics curriculum.

    2.    Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.

    I love rubrics and learning outcomes.  I hate tests in every form though I wrote a multiple choice test for my district almost every year (skipped last year).  I will be writing our web design test this year. 

    I tried putting my own badges in Moodle this year, but my students didn’t like mine.  However, they really like the badges they earned in Code Academy so I want to give them “real” badges that they can earn and keep.  Thus this is why I joined the course.

    3.    Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...

    Hmmm, probably a little bit of both.  My goal is to come out with my own badges for my own students.

    on June 10, 2013, 12:22 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Kelly Girl ;) ... great to have you here, thanks for joining our small group of learners.

    I am in awe of your technology experience... my experience started with a tape driven commadore 64... and working with CPM (pre-DOS)... since that time much work as a software developer, teacher, database admin, faculty... my career has spanned both tech and teaching, love both. 

    I have designed this P2Pu challenge so people explore badge system design. Not so much from the graphic design side, but from the curriculum and learning objectives side, and how these fit within existing curriculum and badge systems...

    Looking forward to collaborating with you.

    on June 11, 2013, 10:46 a.m. in reply to kathweaver
  • Peter Pasque said:

    Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.

    • Hello, I’m Peter Pasque and am the lead for Instructional Technology at Skyline High School in Ann Arbor, MI.  I am also a School of Ed Instructor at the University of Michigan where I focus on helping teacher candidates integrate technology in the classroom in a meaningful way.

    • Thus far, most of my career in education has involved teaching design and communication technology where I was constantly involved with instructional and curriculum design.  

    • Currently, I spend most of my time helping students and teachers leverage different forms of technology to enhance teaching and learning.  

    • I believe in the power of constructivism and project/challenge/participatory based learning, but have not had the opportunity to teach in a school where these strategies are at the foundation of the school.  

    • I believe badging can be a catalyst to help cause a shift in thinking about course design and help inspire educators to view lessons from a non-traditional point of view.

    • I am currently leading a team of professors, graduate students, teachers, and business partners in badging courses at our high school.  We are starting with project based Magnet courses and our 1st Robotics Club and will expand to core curriculum areas next.  Our working website is located here.


    Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.

    • My most current work related to course design is really one component of many courses and the goal is to help students keep track of their online work/lives by using a Student Learning Network, here’s a link to my TEDx talk on the topic.  


    Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.

    • I believe that educating students on the how and why of rubrics and learning outcomes are important meta-conversation to have at the beginning of a project based course.  These early conversations should be designed as a springboard to future discussions of project goals, directions, and benchmarks that help keep the rational behind a course transparent.


    Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...

    • I am most interested in learning from each task within this challenge to better inform the system of badging that we are currently building.  I do however, find it exciting that I’m being invited to contribute to creating or expanding each task along the way.  This invitation has already engaged me with looking at this challenge from a teacher perspective while in the role of a student.  How about this, if I feel compelled to add to the tasks along the way I will let you know!

    • Thanks for taking the time to create this challenge, I look forward to working with everyone involved.

    on June 7, 2013, 2:07 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Peter, great to have you here. Looks like we are aligned in many ways with how we view learning and education. You may like my Personal Learning Ecologies post; http://criticaltechnology.blogspot.ca/2011/06/personal-learning-ecology.html

    I also have the same belief regarding the value of rubrics as a way for students to manage and understand their learning journeys. Particularly when they are mid-journey. I also like building rubrics with students at key moments within a course. As you say, it aligns well with projects.

    As we progress through the course you will see I have built in a flipped assessment, so I really hope to have people involved in contributing too and assessing each others work. All good.

    Looking forward to collaborating with you.

    on June 7, 2013, 7:29 p.m. in reply to Peter Pasque
  • jsn4d said:

    Introducing Me:

    My name is Jason and I am currently the instructional designer for a community college in South Carolina. My background is in graphic / web and media design. I love communicating visually with my clients whether they be businesses, consumers, faculty or students. I became an instructional designer to help bridge the educational gap between faculty and students. Times have changed...but many classrooms or the way we teach haven't. I like using my graphic/media skills to help faculty create engaging activities for students that have meaningful learning.

    Experience with badges

    None, but being a fan of game-based learning, I like the idea. We are wanting to experiment with it as a professional development tool and in a couple of orientation modules. I'm an art person with some coding experience as it relates to web and flash...but I still get lost in a lot of the technical jargon.

    Describe your experience with course and curriculum design.

    Before I was an instructional designer I was a full-time faculty at Lone Star College where I developed and taught course for graphic design, web design, multimed, video, 3D and game design and development. I've developed and taught traditional, blended (hybrid, flex), and online courses.

    The biggest challenge (story) I have for curriculum design was taking on the gaming program. Some issues arose and they needed someone to step in and take charge and I thought, "what the heck. Something new to learn." Knowing nothing about games, it required a lot of researching, talking to developers and gamers. It was a lot of experimentation at first because there wasn't really any solid classes on gaming elsewhere like there is now. Needless to say there was a log of reflection and revision within courses. 

    The cool thing for me was the migration of my thinking about teaching and learning. Games take a "noob" and turn them into an "expert" by the end of a game. All the learning is built into the game through achievements and objectives. Players aren't herded through the game the way we herd students through content. They travel through levels that are dependent upon the completion of the previous level...Sorry, this will take forever if I keep going.

    So yeah...

    Rubrics and learning outcomes

    I will be working on a course where I'm wwanting to put less emphasis on grades and more on the learning outcomes, similar to embedded objectives into a game. I find that when students focus in on a grade, they don't pay attention to how they got there or what it really means. I liked the idea of achievements and badges and hope to use them in a class as an experiment. That way at the end of the course, a student doesn't just see a grade, they see all the achievements (outcomes) they have earned.

    Sorry, I think while I type.

    I have used rubrics in many of my graphic design courses. I mainly use them to help students see where they are doing good and where they need need improvement. Most folks may look at the whole assignment, but my students have said the appreciate the detailed rubrics and comments. It let's them know the why to the grade they got. And, just like in video games, I give them a chance to see what they missed and then repeat the assignment (or level) to achieve a higher score to demonstrate a higher mastery of the content.

    Complete or Contribute

    I am more than happy to always share ideas and thoughts. I love learning and find that I learn best when engage socially with others. We all have different viewpoints and contributions that can help lend themselves to something bigger. So i'll be completing the tasks and contributing where I can.

    on June 5, 2013, 4:35 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Jason,

    Great to have you here. I like that you have a more arts background... and have spent time in design. I find one of the hard things for me is coming up with good badge designs. I believe the look of a badge is very important.

    Even though I am not a gamer... I see the value in a games based approach to some learning. I have two boys and they are very attracted to games, and seek to accomplish new levels. I do struggle with how game based learning can assist with hands-on real world skills development. But I'm not a gamer, yet I do see how it could apply in some learning situations. I would enjoy being engaged in discussion around how gaming can be applied to many different subject areas.

    I am glad you like the use of rubrics... I hope you have the time to provide feedback toward the rubric that is a part of this course.

    Welcome to the course...

    Do not hesitate to ask questions...

    Peter

    on June 6, 2013, 9:38 a.m. in reply to jsn4d
  • Jeroen said:

    1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you want to learn specifically about badge systems design.

    While I feel I am a youngster in the field of Learning & Development, I should probably start to admit that I have been around for quite a while. The last 13 years I have been working in L&D in International Non-profit organizations. The last 4 years in the humanitarian sector for Oxfam Great Britain, and before in conservation for WWF International. I have a MSc in Educational Science and Technology from the University of Twente in the Netherlands, and did not complete the PhD programme in Instructional Systems at Penn State University in the USA, where I did learn a lot in my four years there.

    I first learned about digital badges at the AECT conference in Jacksonville, Florida in November 2011. And in the Spring of 2012, I participated in David Wiley’s open course on Openness in Education , where one section was dedicated to open assessment.

    For me it made sense immediately. In professional development tracks, one often get the question ‘where does this lead to?’ or ‘do I get a Master’s degree at the end?’ The answer is ‘NO’.

    But what do they get? In my humble opinion, learners in on the job training develop skills that are first and foremost useful for the achievement of company goals. Sometimes staff members are strongly encouraged to develop these skills and luckily more often they are close to the interests of in beneficial to the individual staff members (am I sounding to British rather than Dutch now?)

    While I feel that participating in a training (programme) should at least enable them to explain how it adds value to their jobs and to them personally, I realise that some people are better at verbalising these things than others. And where (print your own) certificates and proof of participation does not mean much without a description of objectives and content (do we ever see proof of achieving those objectives?) digital badges provide a great opportunity to bake all that information into one simple graphic. I really like how it links to the criteria for earning the badge and the evidence of meeting those.

    What I want to figure out is how to actually start using them; what systems I can incorporate in Moodle to issue them, or how else I can start experimenting with them. I have kind of been waiting for the technology to crystallise, and it appears to be moving slow. What can I do to help advance this?

    I am particularly interested in testing if badges can play a motivational role in one of our distance learning courses, that is long (1 ½ years on average), consists of 7 units, and is generally considered difficult to complete by the target audience. Could badges given for each unit help motivate participants to continue with/complete the course?

    2.   Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.

    I am an instructional designer. I have studied Educational Technology from 1988. In my work and studies I have always been interested in integrating new media into the design of instruction. My focus has mostly been adult learners; in higher education, and professional development.

    In the WWF College for Conservation Leadership we developed an 18 months blended learning programme; a combination of two workshops with facilitated online modules as well as some self-study modules.

    In Oxfam we do a lot more face-to-face work, especially with local staff and partner organizations in the field locations. It is fun to think about integrating more elearning in these programmes, given the technological barriers that many of these locations bring.

    3.   Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.

    When I was studying at Penn State, a few of my fellow students were involved in research around rubrics. At the time they were building a computer-based rubric builder in Oracle. The research was amongst others aimed at looking at the value of the involvement of students in the creation of the rubrics. I must admit, I left Penn State before I learned more about the results. I was happy to discover recently that there is now a web-based version available: https://www.e-education.psu.edu/facdev/id/assessment/rubrics/rubric_builder.html

    I try to integrate rubrics in the facilitator guides for our facilitated online learning modules. Often internal experts are facilitating specialist courses, without having a background in training. Clearly defined expectations, a rating scheme and suggested feedback for common mistakes help to speeds up the process and makes sure different facilitators grade in a similar way.

    4.   Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...

    It depends … I would hope that my contributions would benefit more than just myself. And I hope to be able to participate in discussions and provide comments and feedback on peer students’ work. I am travelling a lot in the coming period and participation will depend on access and time, as usual :-)

    Looking forward to sharing ideas and experiences!

    Cheers,
    Jeroen

     

    on June 5, 2013, 3:56 a.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Great introduction Jeroen... thx.  I'll follow shortly with more detail.

    Wanted to post a video from a friend that discusses using badges with Moodle; http://youtu.be/FX_ggTZjn8I

    Looking forward to collaborating with you.

    Peter

    on June 5, 2013, 8:53 a.m. in reply to Jeroen

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Jeroen,

    I agree with your thinking around how badges can be used for many adult and professional development contexts. I also like the way badges comprehensively "bake" many of the elements towards recognizing learning within a single digital artefact. I believe using badges will assist people in completing longer (more rigorous) learning journey's.

    I admire the work you are doing with WWF and Oxfam. I wish my working life could move away from the more commercial and into that more focused on development. That time will come.

    I am familiar with the rubric work at Penn State. Dr. Kyle Peck used this rubric tool during the early discussions of the rubric used in this course. I see great potential for the Penn State rubric tool. I like how rubrics can be used as guides to assist in developing understanding and helping as a guide. It is why i felt a rubric would be helpful within this course.

    Having you here participating is a great contribution. If you can draw upon your experience as the course dives into the deeper look of badge system design, it would be most appreciated. 

    Be Well...

    Peter

    on June 6, 2013, 1:25 a.m. in reply to Jeroen

    Jeroen said:

    Thanks Peter, 

    It looks like I will have to wait until our admin finds 2.5 stable enough to upgrade to it ... And that is not in the planning for this year ... How can I influence that ... hmm ... :-) 

    on June 9, 2013, 8:10 a.m. in reply to Peter Rawsthorne
  • Mark Sheppard said:

    1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.
      • Hi there, I'm Mark Sheppard, a L&D guy currently working on contract for the Royal Canadian Air Force.
      • I am relatively new to the virtual badge concept (having completed Open Badges 101), but have lots of exposure to the physical ones through my time in the Army Reserve, and through Cubs, and other kinds of activities.
      • While I grasp the basic/tactical badge concepts, I want to build on the knowledge I have so that I can have a more strategic viewpoint and get a sense of the infrastructure needed to make things work (people, processm, technology)
    2. Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.
      • Most of my work over the past 10-12 years has been in instructional design, and I have put together assets, courses, and programs.
      • For example, I created a self-paced, downloadable learning asset for the David Suzuki Foundation about using grass-roots efforts in supporting and promoting Office sustainability.
      •  I have designed, and will be co-facilitating a course within a Graduate Certificate in Instructional Design that focuses on graphic design principles for instructional designers
    3. Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.
      • Both in my graduate work and in my day-to-day stuff for the Air Force, rubrics are an essential component. I have also leveraged them when I was teaching part of an adult education certificate delivered through the community college online consortuim
      • Mapping performance to learning outcomes was also a huge part of my own military training as well as the work I am currently engaged in for the air force.
         
    4. Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...
      • I am very interested in exploring the collaborative nature of this challenge.  Completing it solo would be OK, but I'm confident that there's strength in numbers. If nothing else, there are folks here who can help fill in some gaps and I'd like to think I can do the same for them.

     

    on Feb. 14, 2013, 3:05 p.m.

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Welcome Mark. Great intro...

    What I am wanting to create as part of the next task for this challenge is a rubric that identifies a good badge system. I was going to put together something in google docs and solicit input. Do you feel a rubric assessing / describing a good badge system design is a good next step for this challenge?

    Welcome and be well...

    Peter

    on Feb. 18, 2013, 3:45 p.m. in reply to Mark Sheppard

    Mark Sheppard said:

    If I read this correctly, you're looking to establish the "good" criteria for a badge system?  e.g. what makes a worthwhile/effective system or framework?

    on Feb. 20, 2013, 8:35 a.m. in reply to Peter Rawsthorne

    Peter Rawsthorne said:

    Yes, Mark...

    I'd like a rubric that could help guide a badge system designer toward a good badge system. A collection of criteria to think about and a way to assess how the designer is doing as they design the system.

    Thanks for asking... really clarifies it for me!

    Peter

    on Feb. 21, 2013, 5:14 p.m. in reply to Mark Sheppard
  • Peter Rawsthorne said:

    1. Please introduce yourself. And include information about your experience with badges (both traditional and digital) and what you are wanting to learn specifically about badge systems design.
      • My name is Peter Rawsthorne. I am creating this Badge System Design Challenge for P2Pu. The best way to get a sense of who I am is to view my blog and related links; http://criticaltechnology.blogspot.ca/ Particularly, the connect with me links top of the right column.
      • I have been involved with badges most of my life. I was a scout, I participated in a number of programs with the YMCA, I was a Canadian Sailing Association participant, and a number of other merit badge issuing organizations. The depth of my early experiences with badges is well described in my confessions of a badge addict post.
      • I have also been developing learning resources for the Open Badges project since Q2 of 2012. A summary of this work can be found in this post about agile learning and open badges.
      • My focus in creating this course and with badge system design in general is to deepen my understanding in how best to design a system of badges and to what granularity of criteria for each badge.
         
    2. Describe your experience with course and curriculum design. Don't be shy, tell us about a small lesson you created for yourself or a complete degree program. Or any possible descriptions of works in between.
      • I have been creating courses and curriculum for over 20 years. I have worked in small computer stores providing digital literacy workshops for parents, I have worked for Universities and created faculty workshops, courses and curriculum for students. I have built many online courses and curriculum. I enjoy building learning materials and most recently have enjoyed creating Open Educational Resources (OER).
      • Most recently I created a two week seminar series about badge systems design. The seminars were a combination of directed online discussion and two 1 hour lunch-and-learn screencasts. The wiki containing the all the artifacts from this seminar series can be found on the SCoPE site; http://scope.bccampus.ca/mod/wiki/view.php?id=9011
         
    3. Tell a story about rubrics or learning outcomes. And if or how you have you used them? and within what context? Do you know what a rubric or learning outcome is? And how they would apply to learning. If you don't know what a rubric or learning outcome is, describe a badge (traditional or digital) you have earned or someone you know has earned. Describe the requirements to earn the badge.
      • I have created rubrics for many different courses and learning tasks. One of my favourite experiences in building rubrics was when teaching into a B.Ed program at Memorial University. All the students collaborated and built a rubric for evaluating other students educational blog posts and their strategy for using blogging as a learning tool with K7 students. I believe rubrics are an excellent way of focusing the tasks along a learning journey.
      • I have used learning outcomes only a few times, and they were a part of a course description. The idea was to describe what the student would know or what they would accomplish through the course. It was a description of the outcomes of the course.
      • I believe rubrics and learning outcomes fit well, as a proven educational approach, when creating the criteria for an open badge.
         
    4. Consider your commitment to this challenge. Do you want to just complete each task within the challenge or do you want to contribute to creating each task within the challenge. Building this challenge as collaborative effort will make it way better. Either way, engage, contribute, enjoy...
      • I am committed to creating this challenge end-to-end. I will create a few tasks within the challenge and then complete each task as if I am also a learner taking the task.
      • I'd like to encourage others assist in creating this challenge and would enjoy working with other badge system designers in building this challenge. I believe we would all learn more, and create a better product, if we worked together.
      • I am wanting to implement a flipped assessment approach within this challenge. I see flipped assessment as an experiment. And P2Pu is the right place to conduct this experiment.
    on Feb. 14, 2013, 12:34 a.m.