52,610 research outputs found
Video corrections of undergraduate teaching lab reports
Comunicació presentada a INTED2019, 13th International Technology, Education and Development Conference. (March 11-13, 2019, Valencia, Spain).Here it is presented a new methodology based on using video recordings for the evaluation and marking of lab reports in the undergraduate teaching labs. Students are typically requested these reports at each lab session. The reports are partly (or fully) used for the determination of the students mark related to the teaching labs. These reports do not always have the quality expected, since undergraduate students frequently experience different difficulties. Video recordings of the marking process of the reports, with the inclusion of a detailed identification and explanation of the mistakes found, have been performed for the Materials Technology subject in the 4th course of the Industrial Technology Engineering degree. These video recordings, unlike the typically adopted corrections using text comments, were more warmly welcomed by the students, increased the comprehension of the mistakes they performed, and helped them to learn how to prepare higher quality reports. In addition, most of the students considered that these video corrections should be generally implemented in all the teaching labs. Finally, it was also found that marking through this method saves a significant amount of marking time to the lecture
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Knowledge Cartography: Software tools and mapping techniques
Knowledge Cartography is the discipline of mapping intellectual landscapes.The focus of this book is on the process by which manually crafting interactive, hypertextual maps clarifies one’s own understanding, as well as communicating it.The authors see mapping software as a set of visual tools for reading and writing in a networked age. In an information ocean, the primary challenge is to find meaningful patterns around which we can weave plausible narratives. Maps of concepts, discussions and arguments make the connections between ideas tangible and disputable.
With 17 chapters from the leading researchers and practitioners, the reader will find the current state–of-the-art in the field. Part 1 focuses on educational applications in schools and universities, before Part 2 turns to applications in professional communitie
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Experimental Methods in IIR: The Tension between Rigour and Ethics in Studies Involving Users with Dyslexia
Designing user studies in the interactive information retrieval (IIR) paradigm on people with impairments may sometimes require different methodological considerations than for other users. Consequently, there may be a tension between what the community regards as being a rigorous methodology against what researchers can do ethically with their users. This paper discusses issues to consider when designing IIR studies involving people with dyslexia, such as sampling, informed consent and data collection. The conclusion is that conducting user studies on participants with dyslexia requires special considerations at all stages of the experimental design. The purpose of this paper is to raise awareness and understanding in the research community about experimental methods involving users with dyslexia, and addresses researchers, as well as editors and reviewers. Several of the issues raised do not only apply to people with dyslexia, but have implications when researching other groups, for instance elderly people and users with learning, cognitive, sensory or motor impairments
How people find videos
At present very little is known about how people locate and view videos 'in the wild'. This study draws a rich picture of everyday video seeking strategies and video information needs, based on an ethnographic study of New Zealand university students. These insights into the participants' activities and motivations suggest potentially useful facilities for a video digital library
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