Outline:
Intended audience:
Any lecturer or teacher interested in providing learners with
an engaging, fun and rewarding learning experience using role
play simulation. Required skill is the ability to browse the
Web and enter information using Web-based forms. Some knowledge
of HTML tags is useful but not necessary.
Clear statement of the objectives of the workshop:
At the end of the workshop, participants will
- Articulate
the pedagogical underpinning of,
- Deliver a role
play simulation using the Fablusi system.
Activities:
Simulations have been used as a tool for teaching in many
areas and disciplines. The idea behind using simulations as
pedagogical tools relies on the idea that experience is the
best teacher. If access to such experience in real-time is
impossible, an artificial environment may be, if not ideal,
at least sufficient.
The simulations described in this workshop are not rule-based
simulations of physical systems. Our simulations are role-play
simulation for modeling human interactions, such as those
encountered in political science studies or management studies.
One of the early pedagogical applications of the generator
was a dynamic goal-based scenario design in the study of world
politics at the Political Science Dept. at the University
of Melbourne. End of course evaluation showed positive experience
of the students (http://www.roleplaysim.org/papers/polsim.htm).
In the first part of this workshop, the pedagogical underpinning
of role play simulation (based on our experience in running
political science and other professional development courses)
is explained to illustrate how role-play simulation can be
used to create an engaging learning experience for the students.
Techniques in using role-play simulation in educational and
organizational environments will be discussed. The simulation
is in fact generated using Fablusi, a RPS generator,
which is based on the abstraction that human interactions
are communicative events requiring information exchange (http://www.roleplaysim.org/papers/rpsg.htm).
Fablusi greatly reduces the routine task of creating
simulation. The second part of the workshop will engage the
participants in an online role-play simulation based on a
simulation generated by Fablusi. This will help the
participants to gain a first hand experience from a student's
point of view in working through a simulation in the learning
process.
A brain storming session then follows at which participants
can attempt to design learning scenarios. Participants are
asked to come to the workshop after reading the papers cited
above to get an idea of what sort of ideas can be used. This
part of the workshop will assist the participants to create
their own online simulation using the generator and test run
the collective creative work.
Finally, we shall discuss the issues and needs of skills in
moderating a simulation, the joy and woe from a lecturer's
point of view. Selected simulations will be available online
for use in the participants' own classroom (worth over AUD500
depending on the number of seats in their simulations).
Biographies: Mr. Ip has a long history of working in
learning technology. In 1986, he designed MonNet, which was
able to broadcast the image from a teacher's computer to the
students' workstations using a low cost overriding mechanism.
In 1986, Albert and his students designed, and built a Local
Area Network for Apple II computers. He later shifted his
focus towards software implementations. In 1994, he had designed
TeleNex, an English language teacher support system for the
University of Hong Kong incorporating hypertext database,
automatic generation of test items, online asynchronous conferencing
and English corpus database. Mr. Ip's latest work is on the
Role-Play Simulation Generator, which is based on his research
on scalable learning architecture for Internet. He is currently,
the Managing Director of Digital Learning Systems P/L, a company
that provides online learning solutions to educational and
training institutions.
Mr. Linser was lecturer in the Political Science Department
at the University of Melbourne where he has been running simulations
on the Internet since 1992. He has published a number of papers
on the use and pedagogical foundations of simulations on the
Internet. In the last 3 years, he successfully ran several
large-scale web-based simulations (some with over 40 roles
each and generating over 5000 messages each) in International
Relations, Russian Politics, Middle East Politics, Politics
of the Asia-Pacific region and Australian Foreign Policy.
More recently he set up and is conducting web-based simulations
for professional training of teachers from several South Australian
TAFE institutes using Fablusi. He is currently the Managing
Director of Ausis P/L - a company that provides commercial
online shopping to business clients and online professional
training solutions to educational and training institutions.
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