9 resultados para Psychology of learning
em University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Resumo:
A brief skim through educational theory intended for students registered on a single module in Technology Enhanced Learning. Startes with Blooms taxonomy, travles through instructivism and constructivism and on to theories of motivation/
Resumo:
These slides accompany a seminar delivered on 20 May 2016 by Jane Warren (Southampton Education School) and Adam Warren (Institute for Learning Innovation and Development). A recording of the lecture can be viewed here: http://tinyurl.com/zp8u3lq
Resumo:
Looks at some of the models of learning and discusses how they apply to university students
Resumo:
This is one of a series of short case studies describing how academic tutors at the University of Southampton have made use of learning technologies to support their students.
Resumo:
This is one of a series of short case studies describing how academic tutors at the University of Southampton have made use of learning technologies to support their students.
Resumo:
Actually this is a timeline of Learning Technology but has all teh important dates in it
Resumo:
An introduction/overview to the whole issue of learning objects, interoperability and IMS specifications in Learning Technology
Resumo:
A few slides used in 2013 class to introduce the subject of learning technology
Resumo:
The proliferation of Web-based learning objects makes finding and evaluating online resources problematic. While established Learning Analytics methods use Web interaction to evaluate learner engagement, there is uncertainty regarding the appropriateness of these measures. In this paper we propose a method for evaluating pedagogical activity in Web-based comments using a pedagogical framework, and present a preliminary study that assigns a Pedagogical Value (PV) to comments. This has value as it categorises discussion in terms of pedagogical activity rather than Web interaction. Results show that PV is distinct from typical interactional measures; there are negative or insignificant correlations with established Learning Analytics methods, but strong correlations with relevant linguistic indicators of learning, suggesting that the use of pedagogical frameworks may produce more accurate indicators than interaction analysis, and that linguistic rather than interaction analysis has the potential to automatically identify learning behaviour.