The importance of a good opening line

This post asks the question, How does the order of questions in a test affects how well students do? The answer is “significantly.” The post points to a paywalled study that shows, fairly conclusively, that starting with simpler questions in a typical academic quiz (on average) i … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 4 days ago

And now in Chinese: 在线学习环境:隐喻问题与系统改进. And some thoughts on the value of printed texts.

Warm off the press, and with copious thanks and admiration to Junhong Xiao for the invitation to submit and the translation, here is my paper “The problematic metaphor of the environment in online learning” in Chinese, in the Journal of Open Learning. It is based on my OTESSA Jou … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 15 days ago

Slides from my SITE keynote, 2024: The Intertwingled Teacher

The Intertwingled Teacher These are the slides from my opening keynote at SITE ‘24 today, at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas. The talk was based closely on some of the main ideas in How Education Works. I’d written an over-ambitious abstract promising answers to many questions and … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 month ago

A conversation about generative AI with David Webster

A week or so ago, early (for me) on a Monday morning, Professor David Webster and I had a conversation about generative AI, which was recorded as the first of a podcast series on the topic, hosted by the University of Liverpool. Here is that podcast. In it we explore both the dar … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 month ago

New article from Gerald Ardito and me – The emergence of autonomy in intertwingled learning environments: a model of teaching and learning

Here is a paper from the Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education by my friend Gerald Ardito and me that presents a slightly different way of thinking about teaching and learning. We adopt a broadly complexivist stance that sees environments not as a backdrop to learning but as … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 month ago

▶ I got air: interview with Terry Greene

Since 2018, Terry Greene has been producing a wonderful series of podcast interviews with open and online learning researchers and practitioners called Getting Air. Prompted by the publication of How Education Works, (Terry is also responsible for the musical version of the book, … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 2 months ago

Journal of Imaginary Research, Volume 9 (including a piece by me)

Since 2015 Kay Guccione and Matthew Cheeseman have been editing the wonderful Journal of Imaginary Research (tagline “Writing Without Discipline”) that, once a year, publishes fictional research abstracts by fictional researchers. Each issue has a theme, and Volume 9’s is “Deal o … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 3 months ago

Educational ends and means: McNamara’s Fallacy and the coming robot apocalypse (presentation for TAMK)

These are the slides that I used for my talk with a delightful group of educational leadership students from TAMK University of Applied Sciences in Tampere, Finland at (for me) a somewhat ungodly hour Wednesday night/Thursday morning after a long day. If you were in attendance, s … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 3 months ago

Stories that matter and stories that don’t: some thoughts on appropriate teaching roles for generative AIs

Well, this was definitely going to happen. The system discussed in this Wired article is a bot (not available to the general public) that takes characters from the absurdly popular Bluey cartoon series and creates personalized bedtime stories involving them for its creator's chil … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 3 months ago

Presentation – Generative AIs in Learning & Teaching: the Case Against

Here are the slides from my presentation at AU’s Lunch ‘n’ Learn session today. The presentation itself took 20 minutes and was followed by a wonderfully lively and thoughtful conversation for another 40 minutes, though it was only scheduled for half an hour. Thanks to all who at … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 5 months ago

Published in Digital – The Human Nature of Generative AIs and the Technological Nature of Humanity: Implications for Education

A month or two ago I shared a "warts-and-all" preprint of this paper on the risks of educational uses of generative AIs. The revised, open-access published version, The Human Nature of Generative AIs and the Technological Nature of Humanity: Implications for Education is now avai … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 5 months ago

▶ How Education Works, the audio book: now with beats

My book has been set to music! Many thanks to Terry Greene for converting How Education Works into the second in his inspired series of podcasts, EZ Learning - Audio Books with Beats. There's a total of 15 episodes that can be listened to online, subscribed to with your preferred … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 5 months ago

Downes.ca ~ Stephen’s Web ~ How Education Works: Teaching, Technology, and Technique

Source: Downes.ca ~ Stephen’s Web ~ How Education Works: Teaching, Technology, and Technique I somehow missed this when it was first posted, despite fairly avidly following OLDaily and keeping my eyes wide open for commentary on How Education Works. My only excuse is that I was t … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 6 months ago

Slides from my ICSET 2023 keynote: Artificial humanity and human artificiality

Here are the slides from my keynote today at ICSET 2023 in Taiwan (I was online, alas, not in Taipei!). I will try to remember to update this post with a link to the recording, when it is available. The themes of my talk will be familiar to anyone who follows my blog or who has r … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 6 months ago

Preprint – The human nature of generative AIs and the technological nature of humanity: implications for education

Here is a preprint of a paper I just submitted to MDPI's Digital journal that applies the co-participation model that underpins How Education Works (and a number of my papers over the last few years) to generative AIs (GAIs). I don't know whether it will be accepted and, even if … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 6 months ago

10 minute chats on Generative AI – a great series, now including an interview with me

This is a great series of brief interviews between Tim Fawns and an assortment of educators and researchers from across the world on the subject of generative AI and its impact on learning and teaching. The latest (tenth in the series) is with me. Tim asked us all to come up with … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 7 months ago

Research, Writing, and Creative Process in Open and Distance Education: Tales from the Field | Open Book Publishers

Research, Writing, and Creative Process in Open and Distance Education: Tales from the Field is a great new book about how researchers in the field of open, online, and distance education go about writing and/or their advice to newcomers in the field. More than that, it is about … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 8 months ago

Cognitive prostheses and the future of the human race

I have lived in Canada for over 16 years so I was surprised when, a few months ago, a conference-friend whom I had not seen for many years contacted me to ask whereabouts in Malaysia I lived. I believe that they were misremembering a connection from a conversation long ago in whi … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 8 months ago

Bob Dron, 1955-2023

My beautiful, witty, talented brother Bob died unexpectedly in his sleep a week ago today. He was 67. I still cannot find the words to express the loss. From the day I was born Bob was always there, and he remains a huge part of me. He was variously my role model, my confidante, … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 9 months ago

The artificial curriculum

  “Shaping the Future of Education: Exploring the Potential and Consequences of AI and ChatGPT in Educational Settings” by Simone Grassini is a well-researched, concise but comprehensive overview of the state of play for generative AI (GAI) in education. It gives a very good over … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 9 months ago

Look what just arrived on my doorstep! #howeducationworks from @au_press is now available in print and e-book formats

Hard copies and e-book versions of How Education Works are now available, and they are starting to turn up in bookstores. The recommended retail price is CAD$40 but Amazon is selling the Kindle version for a bit less.Here are a few outlets that are selling it (or order it from yo … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 10 months ago

A decade of unwriting: the life history of "How Education Works"

About 10 years ago I submitted the first draft of a book called "How Learning Technologies Work" to AU Press. The title was a nod to David Byrne's wonderful book, "How Music Works" which, as my own book is about more than just education, is about much more than just music.Pulling … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 10 months ago

Technological distance – my slides from OTESSA ’23

Technological Distance Here are the slides from my talk today at OTESSA ’23. Technological distance is a way of understanding distance that fits with modern complexivist models of learning such as Connectivism, Heutagogy, Networks/Communities of Practice/Rhizomatic Learning, and … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 11 months ago

Can a technology be true?

  Dave Cormier is a wonderfully sideways-thinking writer, such as in this recent discussion of the myth of learning styles. Dave's post is not mainly about learning style theories, as such, but the nature and value of myth. As he puts it, myth is "a way we confront uncertainty" a … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

View of Speculative Futures on ChatGPT and Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI): A Collective Reflection from the Educational Landscape

This is a remarkable paper, pubished in the Asian Journal of Distance Education, written by 35 remarkable people from all over the world and me. It was led by the remarkable Aras Boskurt, who pulled all 36 of us together and wrote much of it in the midst of personal tragedy and t … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

My latest paper: Technology, Teaching, and the Many Distances of Distance Learning | Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning

I am pleased to announce my latest paper, published openly in the Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning, which has long been one of my favourite distance and ed tech journals. The paper starts with an abbreviated argument about the technological nature of education draw … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Athabasca University’s major unions condemn the sacking of Peter Scott. Meanwhile….

The undergraduate students union, Canadian Union of Public Employees, and Athabasca University professional and faculty association have now all come out with strongly worded public statements protesting the recent firing of Peter Scott and the process used to pick and hire the n … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Athabasca University bids a deeply reluctant farewell to Peter Scott in the vilest attack yet by the Albertan government

You may have heard that the president of Athabasca University, Peter Scott, was replaced yesterday with Alex Clark, erstwhile Dean of the Faculty of Health Disciplines at AU.This was a complete surprise to everyone at AU (apart from Alex), very much including Peter. None of the m … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

My keynote slides for Confluence 2023 – Heads in the clouds: being human in the age of cloud computing

 These are the slides from my keynote today (or, in my land, yesterday) at Confluence 2023, hosted by Amity University in India. It was a cloud computing conference, so quite a way outside my area of greatest expertise, but it gave me a chance to apply the theory of technology de … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Proceedings of The Open/Technology in Education, Society, and Scholarship Association Conference, 2022 (and call for proposals for this year’s conference, due January 31)

These are the proceedings of OTESSA '22. There's a good mix of research/theory and practice papers, including one from me, Rory McGreal, Vive Kumar, and Jennifer Davies arising from our work on trying to use digital landmarks to make e-texts more memorable. It was a great confere … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Two stories about learning to be human from machine

I asked ChatGPT to write me a story about a robot teaching children to be human. This is what it came up with...Once upon a time, in a far-off land, there lived a robot named Zephyr. Zephyr was unlike any other robot, as it had been programmed with the ability to think and feel l … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Hot off the press: Handbook of Open, Distance and Digital Education (open access)

This might be the most important book in the field of open, distance, and digital education to be published this decade. Congratulations to Olaf Zawacki-Richter and Insung Jung, the editors, as well as to all the section editors, for assembling a truly remarkable compendium of pr … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

My latest paper: On the Misappropriation of Spatial Metaphors in Online Learning

This is a link to my latest paper, published in the closing days of 2022. The paper started as a couple of blog posts that I turned into a paper that nearly made an appearance in the Distance Education in China journal before a last-minute regime change in the editorial staff led … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Some meandering thoughts on ‘good’ and ‘bad’ learning

There has been an interesting brief discussion on Twitter recently that has hinged around whether and how people are ‘good’ at learning. As Kelly Matthews observes, though, Twitter is not the right place to go into any depth on this, so here is a (still quite brief) summary of my … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Loab is showing us the unimaginable future of artificial intelligence – ABC News

This is an awesome article, and I don't care whether the story of Loab is real, or invented as an artwork by the artist (Steph Swanson), or whatever. It is a super-creepy, spine-tingling, thought-provoking horror story that works on so many different levels. The article itself is … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Brunel University’s Integrated Programme Assessment – a neat way to decouple learning and credentials

I have frequently written about the need to decouple learning and credentials, so I love this approach to doing so from Brunel University. It fully decouples learning and credentials by offering ungraded study blocks (in North America the equivalent of courses, in the UK the equi … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Slides from my ICEEL 22 Keynote, November 20, 2022

ICEEL 22 keynote Here are the slides (11.2MB PDF) from my opening keynote yesterday at the 6th International Conference on Education and E-Learning, held online, hosted this year in Japan. In it I discussed a few of the ideas and consequences of them from my forthcoming book, How … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

In a nutshell, this is everything that is wrong with the cloud

If you use an Adobe product (I don't know why you should - they are over-priced rubbish) you will find that some old Pantone spot colours in your own images (no matter how old) will be replaced with black when you load files using them, unless you pay Pantone US$21/month for the … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Communities we live in and serve: universities and places

Voluntourism, geoarbitrage, and digital nomadsReasons to be Cheerful is among my first ports of call for news most mornings because I hate to start the day on a negative or banal note. The news is mostly good, but it's never trivial, cute, or frivolous. This article from a few we … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

So, this is a thing…

Students are now using AIs to write essays and assignments for credit, and they are (probably) getting away with it. This particular instance may be fake, but the tools are widely available and it would be bizarre were no one to be using them for this purpose. There are already f … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

A beautifully expressed letter about the town of Athabasca, and Athabasca University's place within it

The staff and students of AU are currently on tenterhooks, awaiting the results of the AU Board of Governors' briefly postponed deliberations on how it responds to the Albertan government's demands on AU's future, so I have (personally) held back a bit on further commenting or ad … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Over 150 AU staff signed this letter to the Government of Alberta and AU’s Board of Governors

Today I sent this letter from staff at Athabasca University to the Albertan Advanced Education Minister and Board of Governors of the University, cc'd to various government & opposition politicians in Alberta, and a few selected journalists:I strongly support the university’s con … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Three reasons why Athabasca University’s leaders must never be made to live in Athabasca

I've said this before but it needs more emphasis. In the past week or so it has become increasingly clear that the real agenda of the Albertan government is not (directly) to forcibly move 500 unwilling AU staff to the town of Athabasca. That's just smoke and mirrors intended to … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

We shape our buildings and, afterwards, our buildings shape us: some lessons in how not to build an online university, and some ideas for doing it better

My heart briefly leapt to my throat when I saw Thursday's Globe & Mail headline that the Albertan government had (allegedly) dropped its insane plan to force Athabasca University to move 65% of its workforce to the town of Athabasca. It seemed that way, given that the minister fo … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Learning, Technology, and Technique

This is my latest paper, Learning, Technology, and Technique, in the current issue of the Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology (Vol. 48 No. 1, 2022). Essentially, because this was what I was invited to do, the paper shrinks down over 10,000-words from my article Educationa … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

Thanks @demetriosnAB for your generous offer. We completely misunderstood that you wanted to help us. Here’s what we need…

Dear Demetrios NicolaidesYou say,“I’ve offered to provide any kind of assistance that the university needs. They haven’t asked for any.”This is very kind! I am sorry for all the very, very, very bad thoughts I have been thinking about you and your party. So, all we had to do was … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

We need help: Athabasca University is facing an existential threat from the government of Alberta

This video from Peter Scott, president of Athabasca University, is a clear, eloquent, and passionate plea to save our university and the education of its students from imminent destruction at the hands of a brutal, self-serving, short-sighted government. Please watch it. Please a … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago

The limits and limitations of business requirements

Athabasca University's Digital Governance Committee recently got into a heated debate about whether and why we should support Zoom. It was a classic IT manageability vs user freedom debate and, as is often the way in such things, the suggested resolution was to strike up a workin … | Continue reading


@jondron.ca | 1 year ago