Online learning and its users : lessons for higher education / C. McAvinia.
Material type:
- 9780081006269
- 378.17344678 23 M478
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | ISI Library, Kolkata | 378.17344678 M478 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 137413 |
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378.1664 R658 Cracking the GRE | 378.17344678 F385 Content management for e-learning | 378.17344678 F394 Plugged-in professor : | 378.17344678 M478 Online learning and its users : | 378.17344678 R915 Handbook of online learning | 378.19625 In39 Reports of teacher's hostels | 378.19625 In39 Report of the panel on university buildings |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction --
Chapter 1. Enter the VLE --
Chapter 2. Challenges and Disappointments --
Chapter 3. Activity Theory --
Chapter 4. Lessons for e-Learning Management and Support --
Chapter 5. Lessons for Teaching in Higher Education --
Chapter 6. Lessons From Our Learners --
Chapter 7. Learning to Break the Cycle --
Chapter 8. Lessons for the Future - The VLE and the MOOC Chapter 9. Conclusions.
The book focuses particularly on the introduction and mainstreaming of one of the most widely used, the virtual learning environment (VLE) or learning management system (LMS). The book presents an activity theoretic analysis of the VLE's adoption, drawing on research into this process at a range of higher education institutions. Through analysis and discussion of the activities of managers, lecturers, and learners using the VLE, lessons are identified to inform future initiatives including the implementation of massive open online courses (MOOCs). A replicable research design is included and explained to support evaluation and analysis of the use of online learning in other settings. The book questions accepted views of the place of technologies in higher education, arguing that there has been a repeated cycle of hype and disappointment accompanying the development of online learning. While much research has documented this cycle, finding new strategies to break it has proved to be a more difficult challenge. Why has technology not made more impact? Are lecturers going to be left behind by their own students in the use of digital technologies? Why have we seen costly and time-consuming failures? This book argues that we can answer these questions by heeding the lessons from previous experiences with the VLE and early iterations of the MOOC. More importantly, we can begin to ask new and different questions for the future to ensure better outcomes for our institutions and ultimately our learners.
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