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Facilitating Students' Critical Thinking in Online Discussion: An Instructor's - 0 views

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    This paper reported using the practical inquiry model as discourse guide to facilitate students' critical thinking in online discussion. It was found that almost all the postings of the students who had no knowledge of the inquiry model fell into exploration phase except three postings in triggering events phase and two in integration phase. In comparison, the postings of the students who used the model as the guide included more instances of integration than the postings of those who did not know about the model. No instance in resolution phase was found. The findings indicated that providing students inquiry model raised their awareness of critical thinking and helped them intentionally engage in reflection and higher-order thinking when responding online.
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Critical Thinking in Asynchronous Discussions - 0 views

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    Critical Thinking in Asynchronous Discussion
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How to Promote Critical Thinking with Online Discussion Forums | online learning insights - 0 views

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    "Critical thinking is an expected learning outcome of higher education along with mastery of a studied discipline. Yet several studies including one outlined in Academically Adrift, suggests that a significant percentage of students are graduating after four years of college with little intellectual growth; critical thinking gains barely budging from the 'before' to 'after' assessment."
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IMPLEMENTING THE SEVEN PRINCIPLES - Chickering and Ehrmann - 1 views

  • The biggest success story in this realm has been that of time-delayed (asynchronous) communication. Traditionally, time-delayed communication took place in education through the exchange of homework, either in class or by mail (for more distant learners). Such time-delayed exchange was often a rather impoverished form of conversation, typically limited to three conversational turns: The instructor poses a question (a task). The student responds (with homework). The instructor responds some time later with comments and a grade. The conversation often ends there; by the time the grade or comment is received, the course and student are off on new topics. Now, however, electronic mail, computer conferencing, and the World Wide Web increase opportunities for students and faculty to converse and exchange work much more speedily than before, and more thoughtfully and “safely” than when confronting each other in a classroom or faculty office. Total communication increases and, for many students, the result seems more intimate, protected, and convenient than the more intimidating demands of face-to-face communication with faculty.
    • anita z boudreau
       
      Addresses how to avoid ineffective threaded discussions
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    Chickering and Gamson's Seven Principles of Good Practice in Undergraduate Education, provide a meaningful lens for thinking about online teaching and learning.
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http://eac595b.pbworks.com/f/macknight+2000+questions%5B1%5D.pdf - 0 views

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    MacKnight - Teaching Critical Thinking Through Online Discussion
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Critical Thinking Index Page - 0 views

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    socratic
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A different way to think about technology in education: Greg Toppo at TEDxAshburn - You... - 0 views

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    "When did Technology become a tool in our lives? A quick synopsis of technology as adopted throughout history."
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ELI3013-mofba3.pdf - 0 views

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    How Authentic Learning is Transforming Higher Education
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Five Basic Types of Questions - 0 views

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    Wiloson, 2002
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