286,769 research outputs found

    Using Learning Management Systems to Support Students' Collaborative Learning in Higher Education

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    Learning Management Systems (LMS) are web-based systems for the distribution, management and retrieval of course materials, and to support communication between students and instructors. A LMS can also support peer collaboration by providing students with the capacity to create their own project sites. In this paper we present data from system logs, surveys, and interviews to investigate how one such system, CTools, is used by students at a large public university to facilitate peer learning.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108483/1/CSCL_2007_Project_Sites.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108483/2/CSCL_2007_Project_Sites_Poster.pdfDescription of CSCL_2007_Project_Sites.pdf : Main articleDescription of CSCL_2007_Project_Sites_Poster.pdf : Poster Fil

    Collaboration in an Online Course is Comparable to Collaboration in a Face-to-Face Course

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    Remote learning through various communication systems has been available as a teaching strategy for many years. During the COVID-19 pandemic, remote learning has become an important method of educational delivery available for K-12 and higher education as leaders follow the health and safety guidelines. However, in remote learning environments, active learning collaborative team projects are more complex. Many institutions of higher learning around the country began using a Hybrid-Flexible (HyFlex) instructional model in response to the current global pandemic where students can choose to take online or face to face sections of their course. The flexibility in the model allows students and school systems to follow social distancing guidelines while providing quality educational experiences. Dumford and Miller (2018) contend ā€œa user-friendly design and adequate technological support must be considered differently within online educationā€ (p. 453) since online students sometimes feel isolated from professors. We offered an online only version of our traditionally face-to-face design thinking course during the fall of 2020. Students participated from different parts of the world and various time zones. Course materials were available in the learning management software and students worked as individuals and in small groups asynchronously and synchronously. Active learning in small groups requires collaboration, which is potentially more difficult in online environments. This research brief reports on our comparison of collaboration between the two modes of participation

    Expectations for success: auditing opportunities for students with print disabilities to fully engage in online learning environments in higher education

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    The rapid digitalisation of learning has had demonstrable impacts on access to education for students with a print disability. In higher education contexts, learning management systems (LMS) have become the predominant method for distributing content. This conceptual article addresses how students with print disabilities such as vision impairment, blindness, dyslexia, and visual fatigue experience their education through online engagement. Using Redmond et al.ā€™s (2018) online engagement framework for higher education, the authors analyse the cognitive, social, emotional, behavioural, and collaborative needs and expectations of these learners. This article provides a contemporary picture of the barriers students with print disabilities currently encounter and the possibilities for access available through the use of accessible and assistive technologies. Recommendations for equitable access, including a range of actionable strategies, are provided to assist teacher educators, higher education providers, higher education disability support advisors, and LMS designers

    Do students and lecturers actively use collaboration tools in learning management systems?

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    In recent years there has been a large emphasis placed on the need to use Learning Management Systems (LMS) in the field of higher education, with many universities mandating their use. An important aspect of these systems is their ability to offer collaboration tools to build a community of learners. This paper reports on a study of the effectiveness of an LMS (BlackboardĀ©) in a higher education setting and whether both lecturers and students voluntarily use collaborative tools for teaching and learning. Interviews were conducted with participants (N=67) from the faculties of Science and Technology, Business, Health and Law. Results from this study indicated that participants often use BlackboardĀ© as an online repository of learning materials and that the collaboration tools of BlackboardĀ© are often not utilised. The study also found that several factors have inhibited the use and uptake of the collaboration tools within BlackboardĀ©. These have included structure and user experience, pedagogical practice, response time and a preference for other tools

    ALT-C 2010 - Conference Proceedings

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    Anglia Ruskin University

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    A Study on the Impact of ICT on Collaborative Learning Processes in Libyan Higher Education

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    This paper presents the conclusions of a study on the impact of ICT on collaborative learning processes in Libyan Higher Education (LHE). The quantitative analysis of the answers to a questionnaire (completed by Libyan full-time lecturers at the universities of Tripoli, Garyounis, Gharian and Ezawia) shows the necessity to design and develop more classroom activities and interactive online applications, enabling the development of team-building skills required by employers. The influence of limited Internet bandwidths in Libya on collaborative learning processes in HE is then presented. It is obvious that HE institutions need to develop proactive strategies that envisage and anticipate learnersā€Ÿ future learning needs and requirements in this transition period of moving towards an increasingly digitalized, networked and knowledge-based society. The paper also contains the analysis of a SWOT model considering the factors that must be considered in relation to collaborative learning within the university teaching process, such as intelligent multimedia, Internet technologies, and knowledge management. The employment of modern technology will enable the development of innovative and inspiring collaborative learning environments where lecturers are expert designers of intellectual experiences for students, who become active participants to the learning processes

    Audit of collaborative provision : University of Derby

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    Audit of collaborative provision : Open University

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