Remixing to design learning: social media and peer-to-peer interaction


Autoria(s): Casey, Gail; Wells, Muriel
Data(s)

01/01/2015

Resumo

Social and participatory media offer opportunities to interact and share user-generated content. After some investigation and research, the authors are in their initial stages of using such media to provide a pathway for thinking about learning design in higher education. Using the concept of remixing, the authors aim to creatively blend and manipulate ideas to build a sustainable approach to course/program enhancement. Remixing is touted as one of the most important practices within the field of open educational resources, but it is not mainstream practice in educational thinking or design. This article highlights the authors’ approach and uses their pre-service teacher education program and their previous high school study as an example of remixing. The high school study involved the integration of social and participatory media into the face-to-face classroom; Author 1 was the practitioner researcher in the high school study. This article articulates the use of online social environments at the high school level to highlight concepts of sharing and remixing as a creative and social approach to designing learning in higher education. It also attempts to consider this within a course-wide approach.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30070598

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30070598/casey-remixingtodesign-2015.pdf

https://www.jld.edu.au/article/view/225

Direitos

2015, Queensland University of Technology

Palavras-Chave #Learning Design #Remix #Social Media #Action Research #Web 2.0 #Teaching and Learning #Teacher Education
Tipo

Journal Article