On the up: student produced Mahara tutorials

As our Mahara portfolio pilot continues to gain momentum, it’s clear that most users are getting quite comfortable with the product. What has been really surprising is that so little support has been required through this process. Whether the support is in product functionality, or in coaching users through the cultural challenges associated with a new facilities, there is usually a considerable amount of supporting activity going on. In my experience, this particularly low demand for support is almost unheard of when introducing a new product.

Of course, I’m really pleased that the uptake has been so swift and the response so positive. It really has encouraged me to continue promoting Mahara to other staff as a product that we could work with in the longer term.

Today, one of the teachers assisting with the pilot let me know that her group had been making screen casts using Screenr. It was communicated to me as a practice exercise – a first attempt. But hang on, I’ve watched these videos – and they are really good!

What’s great about watching these tutorials is observing the immediately obvious differences between the media I have already produced, and these new tutorials produced by our students. Each student (or group of students) has used their own initiative with the tools available, taking a different creative approaches. I’m looking forward to sharing some of these tutorials – made by students for students – in the Mahara Guide blog we have established to support our pilot.

A video from Luke and Sophie demonstrates how the contributions of two students can be used to enhance the content. This really is their first effort, but I think with a little more work, they could be on to something good. More dialogue between the two narrators would take the tutorial to a new level – each contributing to the overall message, but also adding their own commentary or opinion. Overall, the content is very good and really does illustrate just how easy it is for anyone to create materials of this quality. Take a look at their tutorial on uploading files to Mahara.

One thing that Katie did was to move a small Screenr capture window around the screen to provide more focus than would otherwise be found with a fixed aspect (and therefore a clearer image too). You have to be careful with this approach though – too much movement and you might lose your viewer (or nauseate them). Check out Katie’s first video about creating a blog.

I hope the next steps for the students in our pilot groups is to produce more materials like this, broadening the subject content and in doing so extending their own understanding of Mahara. Engaging these same students in producing more video materials could be really beneficial, and will support some of the objectives of our learning model. There is just as much opportunity for reflective thought, feedback, discussion and commentary in video material as there is in written content.

Nervously publishing.

I find it nervewracking when publishing materials for consumption online – particularly so when publishing content for consumption by learners who don’t hesitate to give you their opinion! Publishing tutorials for Mahara online is no exception. I’m not overly experienced in some of the publishing techniques involved, but have taken the plunge in publishing Mahara resources online to support our organisation’s exploration of e-portfolios.

What a relief it is when the community in which you work not only accepts the content you publish, but also give their compliments on those materials. Better still that the extended community in beyond your immediate peers also responds positively and you realise that the value from your efforts might be found among distant groups! Comments like these add so much value to the process, and are immensely uplifting for the creator(s).

Thank you to those who have made supportive comments. I am motivated to continue creating these materials, and writing about my experiences doing so!

Mahara; it might just be a success

I’ve spent quite some time during this first term of the academic year working to get an e-portfolio pilot up and running. We tried last year and it didn’t get very far. This time around, I’ve taken it upon myself to personally see the project developing into something that can be of great benefit to our learners.

To ensure we have a quick uptake, I’ve been working closely with our Advanced Practitioners in ILT; each has responsibility for developing our use of learning technologies beyond current standards and raising the aspirations and skills of staff to new levels. Both are fantastically enthusiastic about their roles, and one in particular has been a key supporter of establishing e-portfolios as a standard provision.

We’ve setup a supporting web site to collate our Mahara resources, Mahara Guide. At the present time, this includes only a number of screencasts swiftly produced by me in order to help users get started quickly. However, my ambition for the site is to extend the content to include that produced by our students and other staff from within – and perhaps outside – our organisation. Publishing these resources via WordPress and not tucking them away in an Intranet site will, I hope, provide a useful resource for a wider community than ours alone.

In a short space of time, we’ve registered over one hundred users from several subject groups. What I’ve been most surprised by – and pleased about – is the really positive response from students. Mahara really does provide a platform that our students have been entirely comfortable with from the outset. I’ve already seen a couple of admittedly basic examples of this comfort, and equal willing to support each other. Having asked her group of students to watch the screencast that explains how you register your user account in Mahara. One confident student replied ‘why do we have to to watch the video; you could have just told us to register!’, whilst another duly followed the tutorial and commented that without it she would not have understood how to register. In another class, a student was asking me how to change the regional settings associated with their profile; before I had time to answer, another had approached and began to demonstrate how this can be changed.

These early indications of positive adoption and peer support are really encouraging and signs that for us, Mahara might be a really successful e-portfolio platform!