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106 J.Cullen
combiningfacetofaceteachingwithawiderangeofdigitaltools,withdifferenttools
beingapplied fordifferentpedagogicpurposes.Forexample, ‘mind-mapping’ tools
aimtosupport students to linkconceptsandvisualise them;simulationsareapplied
to help students develop problem-solving and ‘trouble-shooting’ skills; wikis are
applied to support collaborative learning and student blogs to disseminate the con-
tent created by students in their assignments. A recent development has been the
migration of the ‘flipped classroom’ approach fromK12 education to the higher
educationsetting.Flippedclassroomsreplaceeducator-generatedclasscontentwith
student-generated content. Students are required to complete preparatoryworkand
bring it to the classroom,where it is used to support greater interactivity between
students asagroupandbetweenstudents and their teachers (Berrett, 2012).Adher-
ents of theflipped classroomapproach argue that it offers a number of advantages
overconventional formsof teachingand learning. It allowsstudents to learnat their
own pace; it frees up class time for critical review and problem-solving; it pro-
vides studentswithmoreopportunities to learn ‘twenty-first-century’ skills that are
more relevantwith regard to subsequent job searching—and it fosters studentown-
ershipof their learningandtheir learningcontent.This, in turn, is linkedtoevidence
of greater student engagement, improved peer learning and interaction, improved
creativity and self-confidence, increased student performance and higher levels of
student satisfaction (Wilson,2014;Vasilchenkoet al., 2017).
Equally, the increasing popularity of Personal Learning Environments (PLE’s)
in the educational field has been seen as evidence of the increasing adoption of a
‘constructivist’ pedagogy that emphasises a shift in the role of the educator from
transmitterof information to facilitatorofknowledgeproduction.AsAtwell (2007)
argues, throughPLEs, students—formerly consumersof knowledge—becomepro-
ducers, throughcreatingandsharingcontent.Typically,PLEsbundletogetherdiffer-
enttools—includingsocialmedia,wikis,blogs,multimediaandsharingplatforms—
inordertoaggregatedifferentlearningservicesthat, togetherenablelearnerstobuild
andmanage their own learning spaces, under their control, bring together different
sourcesandcontexts for learningandbridgeeducational institutional environments
withtheworldoutside.OtherwritersmakeanexplicitconnectionbetweenPLEsand
prosumerism. PLE’s enable students to choose the services and applications they
need to generate or consume content. They actively participate in determining the
aims and delivery of their learning experience. The diversity of tools embodied in
a PLE supports awide range of flexibility that learners can use to their advantage
to customise the structure, content and delivery of educational services according
to theirownpersonalneedsand ‘learningstyles’. In thisway, the learnermakes the
transition fromapassive recipient of information to the ‘protagonist’ of a learning
experience.Theprocessingof informationcanbemanagedbyeach learnerusinga
set of tools that they choose, allowing each learner to tailor the learningprocess to
theirownneedsandcircumstances (Kompenet al., 2019).
A further indication of this increasing shift towards engaging students asmore
active co-creators and co-producers of their learning is the recent move towards
Radical Solutions and Open Science
An Open Approach to Boost Higher Education
- Titel
- Radical Solutions and Open Science
- Untertitel
- An Open Approach to Boost Higher Education
- Herausgeber
- Daniel Burgos
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-981-15-4276-3
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 200
- Kategorie
- Informatik