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  From conditioning to learning communities: Implications of fifty years of research in e-learning interaction design
 
 
Title: From conditioning to learning communities: Implications of fifty years of research in e-learning interaction design
Author: Ravenscroft, Andrew
Appeared in: ALT-J
Paging: Volume 11 (2003) nr. 3 pages 4-18
Year: 2003
Contents: This paper will consider e-learning in terms of the underlying learning processes and interactions that are stimulated, supported or favoured by new media and the contexts or communities in which it is used. We will review and critique a selection of research and development from the past fifty years that has linked pedagogical and learning theory to the design of innovative e-learning systems and activities, and discuss their implications. It will include approaches that are, essentially, behaviourist (Skinner and Gagne), cognitivist (Pask, Piaget and Papert), situated (Lave, Wenger and Seely-Brown), socio-constructivist (Vygotsky), socio-cultural (Nardi and Engestrom) and community-based (Wenger and Preece). Emerging from this review is the argument that effective e-learning usually requires, or involves, high-quality educational discourse, that leads to, at the least, improved knowledge, and at the best, conceptual development and improved understanding. To achieve this I argue that we need to adopt a more holistic approach to design that synthesizes features of the included approaches, leading to a framework that emphasizes the relationships between cognitive changes, dialogue processes and the communities, or contexts for e-learning.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 50 of 107 found articles
 
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