Web 2.0 and the RAT Model


I teach freshman biology at Dakota High School in the Chippewa Valley School District.  After reading the post on the RAT model, I can appreciate its simplicity as compared with the SAMR model.  The author brings up one of the exact sticking points with me when I read about SAMR this spring: I could never distinguish between augmentation and modification, and I did not see a single example that helped me tell the difference.  It seemed like a needless and vague distinction which I am glad to see was brought up.  So, out with SAMR and in with RAT: Replace, Amplify, and Transform.  In addition to this post provided in our unit 2 agenda, here is another helpful post on the RAT model.  Here is a post that provides a critical examination of the lack of evidence that the SAMR model works.

It is easy for a teacher- with all the best intentions- to replace one medium with another.  I’ve done this for most of my career, expecting that using technology to deliver content would somehow magically redefine or transform my teaching.  Superficially that seems like a valid expectation: everyone touts technology in education, especially fun, flashy stuff.  But thanks to the long-running discussion between Richard Clark proponents (Clark, 1983) and Robert Kozma proponents (Kozma, 1994), the distinction between simply replacing a medium of delivery and developing instruction with technology that transforms your teaching has been helpfully examined and discussed.  There are plenty of examples of replacement, in which one medium supplants another as a mode of instructional delivery.  Web 2.0 tools span the spectrum of the RAT model, but I have not used them extensively in my teaching because until recently I had not been convinced that they are worth the time.  One example I have used as a replacement for traditional classroom instruction is Office 365.  (Here is a useful review, which includes a continuing chronology of updates and improvements that Microsoft has been addressing up to June of 2017.)  Office 365 allows users to create, upload, and real-time modify documents online, and each user has his own account that he can use to share documents with other users.  Two or more users can even modify the same document simultaneously, meaning that collaboration can be more equitable.  Now, this suite of tools can easily extend into amplification and transformation, but upon reflection I think I have only taken advantage of its ability to replace media.  For the past 5 years I have done a river project with my students, in which they go out into a stream near campus, collect biological, chemical, and physical data, and work with partners to create a presentation that answers a question that each group developed on their own.  From 2012 through 2015 I had students keep their data and documents as hard copies in their folders, but these would constantly get lost and disorganized.  It was also a challenge to determine how evenly students contributed to the workload.  So last year I tried to use Office 365, with the aim of helping students work, stay organized, and collaborate.  Except for a lot of really annoying technical bugs, its use was very successful: students reported that they found collaboration easier, that they were more organized, and that they rarely “lost” any documents, because they were saved to the Office 365 server instead of their flash drive or student account, both of which somehow get lost sometimes.  Clearly the use of this tool constitutes replacement, because instead of using hard-copy papers to do their work, students were using an online medium.

I would also consider our use of Office 365 to be an amplification.  Amplification is when technology in education enhances certain capabilities of teacher or student in ways that are not possible without the technology (streamlined, more efficient, more organized), but the content and learning experience are not essentially transformed.  There are two main features that I think qualify this level of RAT in our river project.  The first feature of Office 365 that qualifies for amplification is that students can share work with others simply by opening the share tool and typing in their partner’s user name.  Once their partner has been tagged, he or she has the ability to view or edit the document, depending upon what permissions the creator user allows.  This click-and-share ability really streamlined communication and collaboration, because students do not have to labor over creating multiple copies of data, or worry about their partner losing something they have spent a lot of time on.  Students reported that collaboration was “much easier” using Office 365, mostly because of the share feature.  A second aspect that qualifies Office 365 for amplification is that students can simultaneously modify a document at the same time.  I watched up to 4 students editing a Word document at the same time: some were proofreading, some were creating new paragraphs and summarizing data, and some were making recommendations about layout and formatting.  I also witnessed multiple students editing data in Excel spreadsheets, which can also be shared and simultaneously edited.  Students really enjoyed being able to see what their partner was typing or calculating, and if a tech-savvy student was partnered with another that was not as comfortable with the technology, this simultaneity was helpful for the students to form an informal sort of tutor-learner relationship.  Some students reported that they learned how to use Excel primarily by watching their partner edit a spreadsheet.  Together, the sharing and simultaneous editing abilities provided by Office 365 qualify this tool as amplifying the learning during the river project.

Although we used Office 365 to tap exciting possibilities last year, upon reflection I do not think that the way we used it qualified as transforming the educational experience.  Students found collaboration easier and sleeker, but the essential way in which they collaborated was still the same as with traditional instruction: they either divided the workload into smaller pieces or each worked together on the same piece at the same time.  And although they ultimately used Office 365 to assist them in creating materials for a poster presentation later, the actual product was not the result of an essential instructional transformation.  I think we would probably want to move beyond Office 365 in order to transform, so I think that a Web 2.0 tools that would have qualified as transforming the experience is the use of student wikis in order to create the presentation.  I could have had students create pages on WikiSpaces, where they create, modify, and share introductory information, tables and spreadsheets, photographs and maps, and discussions and conclusions.   The product of student work would be essentially transformed from a traditional presentation to a collaborative website in which each student can upload, share, and modify content.  A discussion board or comment section in the wiki would also be an excellent opportunity to promote dialogue between different groups.  I think this would be preferable to something like a Facebook discussion wall, which O’Bannon (2014) found was not very helpful in learning class content, partly because of the leniency of discussion requirements.  Students could comment on several other projects while responding to comments made about their own.  I could even create a class wiki for each section in which students summarize big ideas about the river and can edit and discuss our work in a class-wide forum.  Siko (2016) describes some simple ways to promote equitable (if not equal) collaboration and contribution to group projects such as wikis, which I found helpful in thinking of assigning points for collaboration, such as reviewing time-stamp records and using self-evaluation surveys.  Collectively, using Web 2.0 tools such as Office 365 combined with a wiki to create, communicate, and collaborate would qualify as a genuine transformation of the learning experience.



Clark, R. (1983).  Reconsidering research on learning from media. Review of Educational Research, 53(4), 445-459.

Kozma, R. (1994).  Will media influence learning?  Reframing the debate.  Educational Technology Research and Development, 42(2), 7-18.

O’Bannon, B.W., Britt, V.G., & Beard, J.L. (2014).  The writing on the wall: Using a Facebook group to promote student achievement.  Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 23(1), 29-54.


Siko, J. (2016).  Assessing collaboration: More than just lip service.  MACUL Journal, 36(2), 8-9.

Comments

  1. Nolan,

    It appears you were able to accomplish as a teacher the tenets of RAT by way of Office 365. Thus, whatever the method as long as an enhancement is realized. Technology is here, and now, and we are all part of it, and might as well use it to the best of our abilities, and for what the goals of our projects.

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    1. I think I met the requirements for R and A, but I think T eluded me.

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  2. Your great ideas, especially the desire to make Office 365 transformative, are at one time both invigorating and saddening.

    Invigorating in that there is so much we can do with the technology at hand. I don’t know if every district is doing it (I’ve only taught in one), but we also have complete access to 365. I’ve already learned so much in this class about what is possible, I just now need to learn how to actually “do” it. I am especially in love with the ability to work on it from any computer. I get so many excuses about that, but if students have the media center before school, during lunch, and after school, the local library, a home computer, a friends computer, a phone, etc, etc, etc, they should really be able to get things done.
    Saddening in that, as I discussed early on about our digital natives, this stuff just isn’t exciting to students. No matter how cool Google makes an app, a PS4 will always blow it away. Heck, most games on a smart phone are way cooler. We can’t use technology as a carrot, which means we have to use the same old same old of grades and praise as both carrot and stick. It is ignorant to think a student feels like “oh, I don’t want to do this, I have to write an essay by hand,” but when given the option, “OH, I CAN’T WAIT TO DO MY HOMEWORK. Google docs makes me want to collaborate and be a better student.” I feel we need to use this RAT model for two main reason. First, to make our lives as teachers better. Second, to do as we’ve always done, which is prepare students for adulthood without them realizing they are learning ;)

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    1. Office 365 is not extremely difficult to use as far as these things go. I actually created a screen cast on the basics here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUTb5GujSbc&t=2s

      You can see the basic way it works. I love the simultaneous aspect, where all shared collaborators can work at the same time on the same doc. Very cool.

      I guess I would respond to your saddening comment by trying not to package educational technology as a "super fun, bells and whistles, all the cool kids are doing it" sort of thing. When I use technology to help my students learn, I describe it as exactly that: This technology will make collaboration EASIER and more STREAMLINED, give you greater ACCESS, and be FASTER than paper(in some ways). If you are just honest with the advantages and drawbacks, I don't think students require a hard sell on the technology. I have seen in this course in particular that the best way to encourage positive feelings about technology is to simply use it and require some sort of accountability (discussions, projects, etc) to gauge participation and genuine learning.

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  3. Good points. I think Google Apps will continue to dominate the K-12 market simply based on cost (as well as the OS neutrality; Office 365 kinda, but not always, binds you to Windows-based PCs. Given school budgets, many can no longer afford to update to newer versions of Windows...if they haven't moved on from XP yet, they're probably only on Windows 7 or 8, and the former doesn't play nice with 365, if I recall).

    Regardless, the ideas are the same. What instructional strategies are leveraged here, and what are their effects? I don't spend a lot of time on Hattie's research in this course, but some of the instructional strategies with the highest effect sizes are peer-editing, collaborative/cooperative teaching, and feedback...all of which are made possible/easier with GAFE or 365.

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