A phenomenographic research approach was used to gather the expressed experiences of e-learning and professional development for e-learning held by teachers and support staff from institutions across New Zealand. Five conceptions of e-learning (as tool and equipment; as a facilitator of interaction; as learning; as a reduction in distance; and as a collaborative enterprise) and four conceptions of professional development for e-learning (as training; as opening up possibilities; as collaboration; and as relevant and purposeful) were discovered.
enhance their learning experience with the use of some simple and low-cost digital tools.
She says tutors began to create a more effective, time-saving combination of text and audio. "They found they could write quick little annotations on students' essays and then elaborate more in the audio feedback."
The research also revealed that students appeared more willing to listen to feedback via audio than to commit time to reading written comments.
They also said that they put more effort into their audio submissions because they knew fellow students would be listening and they didn't want to appear stupid.