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Learning to Communicate in a Virtual World: The Case of a JFL ClassroomYamazaki, Kasumi January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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572 |
The Impact of Course Management Systems Like Blackboard on First Year Composition Pedagogy and PracticeSalisbury, Lauren E. 29 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Determining the Extent to Which Information Literacy Online Learning Objects Follow Best Practices for Teaching and Assessing Critical ThinkingGoodsett, Mandi 01 June 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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574 |
A Phenomenological Study of Learner Autonomy in Less Commonly Taught Languages (Swahili)Mose, Patrick O. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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575 |
Critical Thinking in a Gifted Education Blended Learning EnvironmentCopp, Susan E. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Ghana's Educational Policymakers and Their Impact on Information and Communication Technology Education: A Case Study of a Ghanaian Model Senior High SchoolMalcalm, Ebenezer 18 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Disabling Composition: Toward a 21st-Century, Synaesthetic Theory of WritingYergeau, Melanie 03 November 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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<b>From Theory to Practice: Learner Centered Instructional Design in Higher Education</b>Shivani Ramoutar (19194694) 24 July 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">In higher education environments, instructional design plays a pivotal role in creating user experiences and fostering learner-centeredness. The purpose of this three-manuscript dissertation is to explore the intersection of learner-centered instruction and instructional design through a theory to practice approach within higher education.</p><p dir="ltr">The first study in this dissertation establishes how learner-centered pedagogy, using geospatial tools, can be effectively translated into practice in higher education. Findings reveal that higher education instructors are confident in their technological knowledge (TK) and can adapt geospatial tools across various disciplines, enabling self-directed, project-based, and problem-solving oriented learning experiences. This approach is supported by strategies such as adaptation and flexibility, integration and use of culturally relevant examples, and cultivating a comprehensive understanding of GIS. The findings emphasize the importance of culturally relevant pedagogy, scaffolding, and fostering learner autonomy, which are crucial for preparing industry-ready learners across diverse disciplines and cultural contexts.</p><p dir="ltr">The second paper in this dissertation makes a conceptual contribution by focusing on culturally relevant pedagogy (CRP) within learner-centered pedagogy. The research highlights the salient literature in CRP as it pertains to instructional design and provides a working definition of CRP from an instructional designer's perspective. To mobilize CRP in practice, we offer the intersection of two approaches; Merrill’s First Principles of Instruction (Merrill, 2002; 2012). The study explores potential connections between CRP and instructional design, suggesting the adoption of a learner-centered approach that integrates CRP with Merrill’s First Principles of Instruction. This integration aims to guide higher education instructors in creating instructional materials that promote academic success, cultural competence, and sociopolitical consciousness.</p><p dir="ltr">The third study, a systematic review of literature, examines cases where instructors implemented learner-centered pedagogies that are culturally relevant, responsive, and sustaining. The results indicated that instructors in these studies place focus on embodying the purpose of these asset-based pedagogies and emphasize the unique needs of learners and instructional goals. The complexity of CRP instruction necessitates ongoing reflection and adjustment by the instructor, with curricular enactments aiming to challenge established norms while promoting student agency and relevance. Various spaces were identified for implementing these pedagogies, including community engagement, connecting concepts to students' lives, creating safe and caring spaces, and fostering critical discussion. Examples illustrating the conceptualization and implementation of these pedagogies in higher education offer instructors practical insights into bridging the gap between theory and practice within learner-centered instruction.</p>
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Changing practices and systems: Implementing the online learning community at the University of South AfricaHeydenrych, Jacob Frederik 15 June 2003 (has links)
This study reports on the use of action research methodology to generate a critical reflective collaborative setting. The aim was to infuse the institution with the results of this study in order to stimulate debate on the issues regarding change in practice and systems.
The suitability of Internet communication technologies, more specifically the online learning community, is evaluated as a delivery mode that would address today’s learning needs. This required the collaborative construction of knowledge in a community setting with the teacher enabling communication and interaction, and facilitating and stimulating the sharing and testing of ideas and constructs. But such a learning scenario was found to be significantly challenging to the current print-based learning experience. It implied a challenge to teaching and support staff as well as the questioning of the efficiency and legitimacy of current instructional design staff and procedures used.
The teaching responsibilities and commitment in the online community was outlined as against current print-based teaching practice. The current development and production culture, which restricts innovation and change in practice and systems significantly, came under pressure. The success of the online learning community in the Unisa context was nevertheless significant and it has the potential to serve as an opportunity to re-examine print-based production and delivery and to devise strategies and solutions to increase the quality significantly. / Faculty of Education / D. Ed.
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Towards developing a web-based blended learning environment at the University of BotswanaThomas, Pelleth Yohannan 05 1900 (has links)
Extant literature indicates that web-based blended learning will become the most accepted mode of delivery in the near future as an alternative to traditional face-to-face instruction particularly in the higher education landscape due to its potential to provide increased access to education for more people, increased student engagement with the tutor, rich learning resources, peers, and external experts, and flexibility beyond the limits of classrooms without compromising quality. The study focused on developing a web-based blended learning model that could help reap the benefits of blended learning at the University of Botswana (UB).
With this in mind, the research question, "How can a web-based blended learning environment be designed, developed and implemented at the University of Botswana?" was formulated.
In order to address the research question, a six-dimensional model called LAPTEL was developed. The six dimentions are: Digital Leadership, Equitable Access, Active Participation, Authentic Tasks, Intellectual Engagement and Learning (LAPTEL); the first five dimentions are requisites to enable studnets to progress towards successful learning which is the sixth dimension.
The LAPTEL model depicts guidelines on how to ensure equitable access for students to learning contexts, motivate and enable them to participate in meaningful educational processes, design and develop effective online as well as classroom learning materials (tasks), and engage students in active 'communityes of practice' in order to help them construct their own knowledge (learning) collaboratively under proper leadership. The Researcher considers it essential to have a complex interplay between the three components - active participation, authentic tasks and intellectual engagement to facilitate active, non-linear learning, and it will be catered for in the design, development and delivery of courses based on the LAPTEL model. The fact that these three dimensions have got features of both face-to-face and onlilne learning, integrated seamlessly, makes the LAPTEL a Web-based learning model. The overall aim was to develop a model of curriculum (re)design based on the student-centred pedagogical approaches that combine synergistically the effectiveness of traditional classroomwith technologically enhanced socialization and active learning oppotunities of the online environment in order to support student learning more effectively than what is possible in a typical lecture room.
In a case study to evaluate the effectiveness of the LAPTEL model in the context of UB, the Researcher found that it could provide students with opportunity for increased interactive engagement (more than that is normally possible in 'face-to-face-only' or 'online-only' environments), flexibility and cognitive scaffolding that enhanced their learning experience. The Researcher concludes that the LAPTEL model fits well in the UB context, and it may be adopted by other institutions working under similar contexts. / Teacher Education / D. Ed. (Didactics)
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