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Author Kuo, R., Hsieh,A., Chang, M., & Heh, J.-S.
Title (down) Sending the Most Appropriate Feedbacks to Students Type Journal Article
Year 2007 Publication WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications Abbreviated Journal
Volume 4 Issue 3 Pages 584-591
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Publisher Place of Publication Editor
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Series Volume Series Issue Edition
ISSN 1790-0832 ISBN Medium
Area Expedition Conference
Impact Factor Approved no
Call Number AU @ pinkyshres @ Serial 695
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Author Lin, T, Kinshuk, & Graf, S.
Title (down) Semantic Relation Analysis and Its Application in Cognitive Profiling Type Conference Article
Year 2007 Publication Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 683-685
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Publisher IEEE Computer Society Place of Publication Niigata, Japan Editor
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Area Expedition Conference
Impact Factor Approved no
Call Number AU @ pinkyshres @ Serial 295
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Author Dron, J.
Title (down) Self-paced and Social Type Journal Article
Year 2012 Publication Abbreviated Journal World Conference on E-Learning in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, and Higher Education 2012
Volume Issue Pages 962-976
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Abstract Traditionally, much institutional self-paced distance learning has been a largely individual activity, offering limited opportunities for teacher-student interaction and almost none for student-student interaction. This is because, when students are all learning different things at different times, unless enrolment is extremely high, it is difficult to engage in any form of meaningful social learning. This paper reports on a self-paced course at Athabasca University that is designed to provide both the freedom of self-paced learning and the pedagogical benefits of social learning. At the same time the approach deals effectively with issues of plagiarism and the different needs, skills and interests of diverse learners.
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Area Expedition Conference
Impact Factor Approved no
Call Number AU @ jond @ Serial 764
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Author Dron, J.
Title (down) Self-paced and Social Type Journal Article
Year 2012 Publication Abbreviated Journal World Conference on E-Learning in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, and Higher Education
Volume 2012 Issue Pages 962-976
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Abstract
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Corporate Author Thesis
Publisher Place of Publication Editor
Language Summary Language Original Title
Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title
Series Volume Series Issue Edition
ISSN ISBN Medium
Area Expedition Conference
Impact Factor Approved no
Call Number AU @ jond @ Serial 765
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Author Dron, J.; Ostashewski, N.
Title (down) Seeking Connectivist Freedom and Instructivist Safety in a MOOC Type Journal Article
Year 2015 Publication Abbreviated Journal Educación XX1
Volume 18,2 Issue Pages
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Abstract Many MOOCs rely on instructivist pedagogies, in which teaching follows a top-down transmission model. Whether they follow a behaviourist, cognitivist or constructivist path, teachers guide or dictate activities as well as provide information that learners use in learning. In most cases, learners are not treated as sources of knowledge but as recipients or, at best, constructors of it. This is a waste of the vast pools of skills and knowledge that inevitably exist in any large collection of learners and is diametrically opposed to the principles behind earlier but now less  commonplace connectivist MOOCs (cMoocs). Such cMOOCs, at least in principle, benefit from scale – they gain value the more people there are engaged in them because, though they coalesce around shared events and resources that resemble the instructivist patterns of publication, learners generate and design their own learning paths, discussing, debating, sharing their learning in rich networks and clusters of networks. As part of a strategy to explore different approaches to MOOC delivery, we developed a site using the Elgg social media framework in order to attempt to gain benefits of social sharing to support learning. Participating in the Digital Age, a six-week Australian MOOC (PDA MOOC), self-referentially was concerned with learning to be a digital citizen while using participatory tools to do so. In this paper we report on the theoretical foundations of the design, its technical implementation, and the benefits and disadvantages of the approach when the course was run.
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Language Summary Language Original Title
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Area Expedition Conference
Impact Factor Approved no
Call Number AU @ jond @ Serial 739
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