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Florence Dujardin

A constructionist learning environment for teachers to model learning designs - Laurill... - 0 views

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    The use of digital technologies is now widespread and increasing, but is not always optimized for effective learning. Teachers in higher education have little time or support to work on innovation and improvement of their teaching, which often means they simply replicate their current practice in a digital medium. This paper makes the case for a learning design support environment to support and scaffold teachers' engagement with and development of technology-enhanced learning, based on user requirements and on pedagogic theory. To be able to adopt, adapt, and experiment with learning designs, teachers need a theory-informed way of representing the critical characteristics of good pedagogy as they discover how to optimize learning technologies. This paper explains the design approach of the Learning Design Support Environment project, and how it aims to support teachers in achieving this goal.
Dianne Rees

AJET 22(4) Brickell and Herrington (2006) - scaffolding learners in authentic, problem ... - 0 views

  • situated learning theory of knowledge acquisition where the problem context and tasks require thinking strategies that are appropriate in 'real life' situations and the learning develops as a function of the activity, context and culture in which they occur (Lave & Wenger, 1991; Brown Collins & Duguid, 1989; Herrington & Oliver, 2000).
Florence Dujardin

Unrestricted student blogging: Implications for active learning in a virtual text-based... - 0 views

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    Realizing the potential for web-based communication provides a challenge for educators. The purpose here is to report students' behavioural and cognitive strategies for active learning when using an unrestricted blog in an academic context. This provides insight into how students are making sense of the incorporation of Web 2.0 technology into higher education. An analytical framework was created to investigate the willingness and competence of students to engage in the social and virtual construction of knowledge. The analysis indicated that, while the students appear to have wanted to complete the task efficiently, the process of critically constructing knowledge was not pursued with vigour. The main implication is therefore that students need to either prepare themselves or be prepared by educators to combine their informal experience of communication technology with academic requirements for actively constructing knowledge in virtual environments.
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