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Sabine Reisas

[Paper] Dabbagh, Kitsantas (2012). Personal Learning Environments, social media, and se... - 0 views

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    Abstract: A Personal Learning Environment or PLE is a potentially promising pedagogical approach for both integrating formal and informal learning using social media and supporting student self-regulated learning in higher education contexts. The purpose of this paper is to (a) review research that support this claim, (b) conceptualize the connection between PLE, social media, and self-regulated learning, and (c) provide a three-level pedagogical framework for using social media to create PLEs that support student self-regulated learning. Implications for future research in this area are provided. © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Sabine Reisas

Personal Learning Environment - A Conceptual Study - 0 views

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    Abstract: "The influence of digital technologies as well as the World Wide Web on education rises dramatically. In former years Learning Management Systems (LMS) were introduced on educational institutes to address the needs both their institutions and their lecturers. Nowadays a shift from an institution-centred approach to a learner-centred one becomes necessary to allow individuality through the learning process and to think about learning strategies in general. In this paper a first approach of a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) is described. The technological concept is pointed out as well as a study about the graphical user-interface done at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz). It can be concluded that PLEs are the next generation environments, which help to improve the learning and teaching behaviour."
Christoph Richter

Interest and Self-Sustained Learning as Catalysts of Development: A Learning Ecology Pe... - 1 views

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    Adolescents often pursue learning opportunities both in and outside school once they become interested in a topic. In this paper, a learning ecology framework and an associated empirical research agenda are described. This framework highlights the need to better understand how learning outside school relates to learning within schools or other formal organizations, and how learning in school can lead to learning activities outside school. Three portraits of adolescent learners are shared to illustrate different pathways to interest development. Five types of self-initiated learning processes are identified across these case portraits. These include the seeking out of textbased informational sources, the creation of new interactive activity contexts such as projects, the pursuit of structured learning opportunities such as courses, the exploration of media, and the development of mentoring or knowledge-sharing relationships. Implications for theories of human development and ideas for research are discussed.
Sabine Reisas

7 Things You Should Know About Personal Learning Environments | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    (2009) Abstract: "The term personal learning environment (PLE) describes the tools, communities, and services that constitute the individual educational platforms that learners use to direct their own learning and pursue educational goals. PLEs represent a shift away from the model in which students consume information through independent channels such as the library, a textbook, or an LMS, moving instead to a model where students draw connections from a growing matrix of resources that they select and organize. The use of PLEs may herald a greater emphasis on the role that metacognition plays in learning, enabling students to actively consider and reflect upon the specific tools and resources that lead to a deeper engagement with content to facilitate their learning."
Sabine Reisas

[Journal] IGI Global: International Journal of Virtual and Personal Learning Environmen... - 0 views

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    (IJVPLE) "The journal publishes high quality contributions (papers, book reviews) on a range of fields associated with Course Management Systems (CMS), Learning Management Systems (LMS), Virtual Learning Environments (VLE), Social Networking Sites (SNS), Personalized Learning Environments (PLE), and 3D virtual worlds, including for example Second Life (SL)."
Sabine Reisas

[Blog] Michele Martin: The Bamboo Project Blog: Supporting Personal Learning Environmen... - 0 views

  • A personal learning environment is personal in the sense that WHAT is learned has to be based on what interests the learner.
  • the learner should have some ability to select the tools that work best for his/her learning style and needs. The learner should also have maximum flexibility in how he/she uses those tools.
  • there has to be an organizational culture of learning
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • People have to feel supported and nurtured as they try out new tools and ways of doing things
  • having access to the tools of PLEs
  • PLE isn't strictly about online learning. It also includes face-to-face interaction, reading real-world books and magazines, going to conferences, engaging in activities, writing in journals, etc.
  • I see PLEs as a strategy of empowerment that allows staff to become more self-directed in their learning.
Sabine Reisas

[Article] Rajagopal - Understanding personal learning networks: Their structure, conten... - 0 views

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    Abstract: "Networking is a key skill in professional careers, supporting the individual's growth and learning. However, little is known about how professionals intentionally manage the connections in their personal networks and which factors influence their decisions in connecting with others for the purpose of learning. In this article, we present a model of personal professional networking for creating a personal learning network, based on an investigation through a literature study, semi-structured interviews and a survey."
Sabine Reisas

[Master Thesis] Clint Lalonde: The Twitter Experience: The Role of Twitter in the Forma... - 0 views

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    Abstract: This qualitative phenomenological study involving in-depth interviews with seven educators in K-12 and higher education examines the role that the microblogging service Twitter plays in the formation and development of Personal Learning Networks (PLN) among educators. A double hermeneutic data analysis shows that Twitter plays a role in the formation and development of PLNs by allowing educators to; engage in consistent and sustained dialogue with their PLN, access the collective knowledge of their PLN, amplify and promote more complex thoughts and ideas to a large audience, and expand their PLN using features unique to Twitter. This research also examines the nature of a PLN and shows that participants believe their PLN extends beyond their Twitter network to encompass both face-to-face and other ICT mediated relationships. Secondary research questions examine how Twitter differs from other social networking tools in mediating relationships within a PLN, what motivates an educator to develop a PLN, how trust is established in a PLN, what the expectations of reciprocity are within a PLN, and what is the nature of informal learning within a PLN.
Christoph Richter

[Paper] Barron, B. (2004). Learning ecologies for technological fluency: Gender and ex... - 2 views

The concern with a "digital divide" has been transformed from one defined by technological access to technological prowess--employing technologies for more empowered and generative uses such as lea...

learning ecologies technology enhanced learning

started by Christoph Richter on 29 Sep 11 no follow-up yet
Sabine Reisas

[Blog] Mohamed Amine Chatti's ongoing research on Knowledge and Learning - 0 views

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    "A research oriented blog about Web Information Systems, Technology Enhanced Learning, knowledge Management"
Sabine Reisas

e-Learning Focus - Personal Learning - 0 views

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    e-learning programme, references, weblinks, articles
Sabine Reisas

[Blog] Observations about learning, knowledge and technology - 2 views

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    e.g. article: "Research publications on Massive Open Online Courses and Personal Learning Environments"
Sabine Reisas

Instructional-design theories and models - 0 views

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    Artikel "Open Learning Environments: Foundations, Methods, and Models" von Hannafin, Land und Oliver liegt vor in: Reigeluth (): Instructional-Design Theories and Models. A New Paradigm of Instructional Theory. Volume II. p115-140
Sabine Reisas

[Project] ROLE | Responsive Open Learning Environments - 0 views

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    "ROLE´s main task is to deliver and test prototypes of highly responsive Personal Learning Environments, offering breakthrough levels of effectiveness, flexibility, user-control and mass-individualisation."
Sabine Reisas

Resnick, Mitchel: Revolutionizing Learning in the Digital Age (pdf) - 0 views

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    p.45 - 64 Same article as "Rethinking Learning in the Digital Age", but more references.
Sabine Reisas

Personalized Learning Environment: Accommodating Individual Differences in Online Learning - 0 views

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    ple collection (Scoop.it)
Sabine Reisas

[Article] Stephen Downes (2005): elearn Magazine: E-learning 2.0 - 1 views

  • The e-learning application, therefore, begins to look very much like a blogging tool. It represents one node in a web of content, connected to other nodes and content creation services used by other students. It becomes, not an institutional or corporate application, but a personal learning center, where content is reused and remixed according to the student's own needs and interests. It becomes, indeed, not a single application, but a collection of interoperating applications---an environment rather than a system.
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    Interesting read since this is a bit dated, but great for comparing what has and has not changed. Thanks for sharing!
oscar pretel

Deliberations - 1 views

  • The structure, features and policies of most VLE implementations tend to perpetuate the traditional instructivist models of education. The primary purpose of the systems is to organise course content for transmission to enrolled students. Only some VLEs provide shared file areas and collaborative facilities like chat and discussion forums. In universities, VLEs often act as secure gateways to digital indexes and research journals. Unless students manually copy materials out of the VLE walled garden, all traces of their learning experience through the VLE are lost once they complete their studies.
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