Search (66 results, page 2 of 4)

  • × theme_ss:"Computer Based Training"
  1. Hyland, M.; Mortimer, M.: Computer assisted learning and the teaching of cataloguing (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Discusses the benefits of computer assisted learning (CAL) in overcoming the problem of teaching practical cataloguing skills in already crowded library studies programmes. Describes the development of CatSkill, a CAL package offering a complete course in the use od AACR2R and machine readable cataloguing coding, and looks at the features of an effective CAL package
  2. Tergan, S.-O.: Misleading theoretical assumptions in hypertext / hypermedia research (1997) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Outlines and reviews basic theoretical assumptions of research on learning with hypertext and hypermedia. Focuses on whether the results of research on hypertext / hypermedia-based learning support these assumptions. Results of empirical studies as well as a theoretical analysis reveal that many research approaches have been misled by inappropriate theoretical assumptions on the potential of structural and functional features of hypertext / hypermedia to support learning. Discusses theoretical shortcomings and outlines future research
  3. Picking, R.: ¬A comparative study of computer-based document manipulation techniques (1994) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Techniques to aid the manipulation of a computer based document were tested by a group of 38 novice users. The subjects were given a period of time to browse the document, and were subsequently given a set of goal related tasks in a questionnaire/answer session. The techniques tested were sequential paging, index referral, text fins and embedded hypertext links. 3 differing types of link mechansms were assessed and compared with each other. Sequential paging and index referral were the most commonly used of the techniques. Text find was employed more for goal related tasks than for browsing. The hypertext link technique was generally unpopular, especially for goal related tasks. In order to establish the importance of the text find technique, the effect on reading strategies without this facility was also investigated. For browsing operations, an increase in paging and decrease in hypertext linking was observed. In the case of goal directed searching, an increase was observed in paging and index referral techniques. The study calls into question the usefulness of hypertext in educational software
  4. Pasicznyuk, R.W.: Application development for user instruction : constructing an interactive kiosk (1995) 0.01
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    Source
    Colorado libraries. 21(1995) no.2, S.44-45
  5. Tu, C.-H.: Online collaborative learning communities : twenty-one designs to building an online collaborative learning community (2004) 0.01
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    Imprint
    Littleton, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited
  6. Nieuwenhuysen, P.: Development of slides about information retrieval : using a presentation software package (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The author reports on his experience with the creation of slides, using a presentation software package on microcomputer, in the subject area of information retrieval.
  7. Yi, H.: Library instruction goes online : an inevitable trend (2005) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Purpose - To demonstrate how there is an irreversible momentum towards the adoption of online modes of delivery for library instruction, a process which will have distinctive benefits in the promotion of enhanced levels of information literacy (IL). Design/methodology/approach - The author uses case study and other literature, plus examples from personal professional practice to build an argument. Findings - The momentum towards "cyber-delivery" is inevitable and is driven by a variety of factors, which can be understood as either external or intrinsic to the arena of IL. External factors include the pressure to find the most effective educational approaches to train students to use tools such as Google appropriately (virtual formats are best to deal with virtual challenges); intrinsic factors include the innate suitability of online IL for encouraging independent learning and student-centred education. Research limitations/implications - The research technique consists of a dualistic analysis of dynamic factors driving the digital library movement towards online delivery of IL: this has the potential to be extended to other LIS contexts and tested for robustness and relevance. Practical implications - The paper shows how the LIS practitioner can better understand the relevance of courseware-based models of IL delivery for their user education practice. Originality/value - An insightful summary and coherent analysis of a range of disparate trends in digital library developments helps provide a coherent overview of a fast-developing aspect of the current LIS world.
  8. Cal da Silva, L.F.; Werneck Barbosa, M.; Gomes, R.R.: Measuring participation in distance education online discussion forums using social network analysis (2019) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Distance Education professionals have been constantly coming up with methods and techniques to increase student participation in an environment where learning happens continuously and asynchronously. An online discussion forum (ODF) is one of these mechanisms, but it will only be successful if students are willing to participate. Stimulating students is a challenge many institutions currently face. The objective of this study was to analyze the social interaction among participants in ODFs using Social Network Analysis. Knowing the characteristics of these networks and its participants is important to design actions to improve the use of ODFs. As a case study, data were collected from ODF logs of the majors in Business Administration and Accounting in a Brazilian private university. This study found out that these interaction networks are sparse, which shows that students could be more engaged in interacting and collaborating with others. Students, in general, tend to interact more in the first semester and interaction diminishes as time passes. The number of active ODF participants has been around 45-50%, which shows that students currently do not participate very often in ODFs. Their main incentive seems to exist when they are graded. Popular ODFs were also analyzed.
  9. Stahl, G.: Group cognition : computer support for building collaborative knowledge (2006) 0.01
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    Abstract
    This book explores the software design, social practices, and collaboration theory that would be needed to support group cognition - collective knowledge that is constructed by small groups online. Innovative uses of global and local networks of linked computers make new ways of collaborative working, learning, and acting possible. In "Group Cognition", Gerry Stahl explores the technological and social reconfigurations that are needed to achieve computer-supported collaborative knowledge building - group cognition that transcends the limits of individual cognition. Computers can provide active media for social group cognition where ideas grow through the interactions within groups of people; software functionality can manage group discourse that results in shared understandings, new meanings, and collaborative learning. Stahl offers software design prototypes, analyses empirical instances of collaboration, and elaborates a theory of collaboration that takes the group, rather than the individual, as the unit of analysis. Stahl's design studies concentrate on mechanisms to support group formation, multiple interpretive perspectives, and the negotiation of group knowledge in applications as varied as collaborative curriculum development by teachers, writing summaries by students, and designing space voyages by NASA engineers. His empirical analysis shows how, in small-group collaborations, the group constructs intersubjective knowledge that emerges from and appears in the discourse itself. This discovery of group meaning becomes the springboard for Stahl's outline of a social theory of collaborative knowing. Stahl also discusses such related issues as the distinction between meaning making at the group level and interpretation at the individual level, appropriate research methodology, philosophical directions for group cognition theory, and suggestions for further empirical work.
    Footnote
    Rez. in: JASIST 59(2008) no.9, S.1531. (C. Caldeira): "Successful, real-world organizations employ groups to get work done. Despite the large number of years of collaborative models in work-group paradigm, it is a little surprising that there are very few books about the subject. Furthermore, most of those studies are mainly focused on work group performance management and work productivity. This text belongs to the advanced type, and is a valuable resource for graduate students in a wide range of courses and for a large spectrum of professionals interested in collaborative work. Due to its advanced level, some topics are relatively difficult to understand if the reader does not have some background in collaborative work and group cognition. Students who use this book will rapidly understand the most important topics of the science of collaboration for computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning, and their relation to the business world of our days. The main concern and fundamental idea of this book is to set its focus primarily on work group, and not on individuals. Stahl's baseline is to use the science of collaboration for computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning to conduct comparative studies on group interaction, group meaning, group cognition, group discourse, and thinking. The book is divided into three distinct parts. The first one is about the design of computer support for collaborative work and presents eight studies centered on software tools and their particular applications: The first three are AI applications for collaborative computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning, the fourth and the fifth are about collaborative media, and the last ones are a combination of computational technology and collaborative functions. The second part is focused on the analysis on knowledge building in the collaborative work of small groups. It is developed with support on five essays published by Stahl from 2000 to 2004. In the first of those chapters, he describes a model of collaborative knowledge building and how to share knowledge production. The second criticizes some cooperative work and collaborative learning research methodologies that make the collaborative phenomena hard to perceive. The remaining chapters mostly provide mechanisms to understand in new and better ways collaborative processes. The third part contains the theoretical corpus of the book. Chapters 14 through 21 contain the most recent of Stahl's contributions to the theoretical foundations of computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning. Chapters 16 to 18 provide much material about topics directly related to group cognition research and collaborative work in modern organizations. Finally, the last part of the book contains an exhaustive list of references that will be of great value to all interested in the multiple aspects and fields of cooperative work and collaborative learning."
  10. E-learning for management and marketing in libraries : papers presented at the IFLA satellite meeting, Section Management & Marketing, Geneva, Switzerland, July 28 - 30, 2003 = E-formation pour le marketing et le management des bibliotheques (2005) 0.01
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    Abstract
    This publication reflects the content and richness of the IFLA satellite meeting held in Geneva, Switzerland, in 2003. It was devoted to e-learning for the marketing and management of libraries and was organized by the IFLA Management & Marketing Section, with the help of the University of Geneva, the Ecole nationale supérieure des sciences de l'information des bibliotheques (ENSSIB, France) and the Agence Intergouvernementale de la FrancophonieI INTIF. Contributions from experts examine the fundamental e-learning issues raised in Africa, Europe, India and North America, as weIl as illustrating the power and diversity of this new teaching medium. In the final, informal discussions, chaired by Réjean Savard and Jean-Michel Salaün, we are given many tentative insights into what the future holds for both teachers and students alike.
  11. Williams, P.; Nicholas, D.; Gunter, B.: E-learning: what the literature tells us about distance education : an overview (2005) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Purpose - The CIBER group at University College London are currently evaluating a distance education initiative funded by the Department of Health, providing in-service training to NHS staff via DiTV and satellite to PC systems. This paper aims to provide the context for the project by outlining a short history of distance education, describing the media used in providing remote education, and to review research literature on achievement, attitude, barriers to learning and learner characteristics. Design/methodology/approach - Literature review, with particular, although not exclusive, emphasis on health. Findings - The literature shows little difference in achievement between distance and traditional learners, although using a variety of media, both to deliver pedagogic material and to facilitate communication, does seem to enhance learning. Similarly, attitudinal studies appear to show that the greater number of channels offered, the more positive students are about their experiences. With regard to barriers to completing courses, the main problems appear to be family or work obligations. Research limitations/implications - The research work this review seeks to consider is examining "on-demand" showing of filmed lectures via a DiTV system. The literature on DiTV applications research, however, is dominated by studies of simultaneous viewing by on-site and remote students, rather than "on-demand". Practical implications - Current research being carried out by the authors should enhance the findings accrued by the literature, by exploring the impact of "on-demand" video material, delivered by DiTV - something no previous research appears to have examined. Originality/value - Discusses different electronic systems and their exploitation for distance education, and cross-references these with several aspects evaluated in the literature: achievement, attitude, barriers to take-up or success, to provide a holistic picture hitherto missing from the literature.
  12. Rodriguez, H.F.: ¬The role of the library in distance education (1996) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The role of the library in distance ducation is evolving. Guided by accreditation standards, libraries seek to meet the needs of distant learners through a variety of services and products. While the Internet plays a significant role in the access and delivery of library services, new information technology is being developed to meet the growing needs and demands of distant learners
  13. Stubley, P.: Authoring multimedia : a staff training package for librarians and information workers (1993) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Describes a project which the library of the Univ. of Sheffield in England completed at the request of the British Library Research and Development Department between 1990 and 1992. The project investigated the application of multimedia in libraries and produced a multimedia demonstrator to train staff in handling the reference interview. Explains how the demonstrator was produced and the factors involved in the cost of multimedia authoring
  14. Azzaro, S.; Cleary, K.: Developing a computer-assisted learning package for end-users (1994) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Reports the results of a survey of end users of CD-ROM databases, at Ballarat University, Victoria, and the application of the Author authoring software to the development of a user training system (computer assisted instruction), called CDIntro, designed to address the issues raised by the survey. In the 6 months following the launch of CDIntro commercially, it has been purchased by 20 academic and hospital libraries and 2 library schools in Australia and New Zealand
  15. Zainab, A.N.; Hai, T.K.; Hazita, M.A.: ¬A multimedia library guide for general reference information (1998) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Describes the development of UMLIS (University of Malaya Library Information System), a multimedia general guide to the library developed using Authorware 3.0 software. The guide provides information on all 12 libraries within the Malaya University library system, with details about the library type, procedures for membership, borrowing and returning; reservations; fines; regulations; opening hours; and services and facilities offered. Provides information on the library collection, CD-ROM databases and on the OPAC
  16. Díaz, P.: Usability of hypermedia educational e-books (2003) 0.00
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    Abstract
    To arrive at relevant and reliable conclusions concerning the usability of a hypermedia educational e-book, developers have to apply a well-defined evaluation procedure as well as a set of clear, concrete and measurable quality criteria. Evaluating an educational tool involves not only testing the user interface but also the didactic method, the instructional materials and the interaction mechanisms to prove whether or not they help users reach their goals for learning. This article presents a number of evaluation criteria for hypermedia educational e-books and describes how they are embedded into an evaluation procedure. This work is chiefly aimed at helping education developers evaluate their systems, as well as to provide them with guidance for addressing educational requirements during the design process. In recent years, more and more educational e-books are being created, whether by academics trying to keep pace with the advanced requirements of the virtual university or by publishers seeking to meet the increasing demand for educational resources that can be accessed anywhere and anytime, and that include multimedia information, hypertext links and powerful search and annotating mechanisms. To develop a useful educational e-book many things have to be considered, such as the reading patterns of users, accessibility for different types of users and computer platforms, copyright and legal issues, development of new business models and so on. Addressing usability is very important since e-books are interactive systems and, consequently, have to be designed with the needs of their users in mind. Evaluating usability involves analyzing whether systems are effective, efficient and secure for use; easy to learn and remember; and have a good utility. Any interactive system, as e-books are, has to be assessed to determine if it is really usable as well as useful. Such an evaluation is not only concerned with assessing the user interface but is also aimed at analyzing whether the system can be used in an efficient way to meet the needs of its users - who in the case of educational e-books are learners and teachers. Evaluation provides the opportunity to gather valuable information about design decisions. However, to be successful the evaluation has to be carefully planned and prepared so developers collect appropriate and reliable data from which to draw relevant conclusions.
  17. Dammeier, J.: Informationskompetenzerwerb mit Blended Learning : Ergebnisse des Projekts Informationskompetenz I der Bibliothek der Universität Konstanz (2006) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Informationskompetenz wird immer mehr als eine wichtige und notwendige Schlüsselqualifikation für Studium, Forschung und Beruf anerkannt. Einen Informationsbedarf erkennen und benennen, dazu eine Suchstrategie entwickeln und geeignete Informationsquellen identifizieren und adäquat nutzen, anschließend die Informationen beschaffen, evaluieren und so weiterverarbeiten, dass die ursprüngliche Fragestellung effizient gelöst wird, sind Fähigkeiten, die nach der Definition der ACRL (Association of College and Research Libraries der USA) ein informationskompetenter Studierender für ein effizientes Studium beherrschen sollte. Nicht nur die SteFi-Studie der Sozialforschungsstelle Dortmund zeigt hier Defizite auf, auch Bibliothekaren wird immer mehr bewusst, dass im Bereich Informationskompetenz ein immens großer Schulungsbedarf besteht. Zudem zeigt ein Blick ins vor allem angelsächsische Ausland, welch hoher Stellenwert der Informationskompetenz an sich und dem Engagement der Bibliotheken als Teaching Libraries eingeräumt wird, und das schon über Jahre hinweg. Aus diesen Gründen beschloss die Bibliothek der Universität Konstanz im Jahre 2002, sich im Schulungsbereich stärker zu engagieren. Mit dem bestehenden Schulungsangebot (neben Erstsemesterführungen vor allem 90-minütige Veranstaltungen zum Online-Katalog und einzelnen (Fach)-Datenbanken) waren alle Beteiligten unzufrieden, sowohl was den zeitlichen Umfang und die damit vermittelten Inhalte als auch was die Resonanz betraf. Zeitgleich bot sich durch die rasche Einführung der neuen gestuften Studiengänge Bachelor und Master, die neben fachlichen Veranstaltungen teilweise auch explizit den Erwerb so genannter Schlüsselqualifikationen oder berufsqualifizierender Kompetenzen vorsehen, an der Universität Konstanz die Chance, Informationskompetenz als eine solche Schlüsselqualifikation in die Studienpläne zu integrieren und damit als Bibliothek für Kurse in diesem Bereich auch Punkte für das ECTS (European Credit Transfer System) vergeben zu können. Die Kooperation mit den Fachbereichen lief insgesamt sehr gut, so dass bereits im Wintersemester 2003/2004 die ersten Informationskompetenzkurse im gerade fertig gestellten neuen Schulungsraum der Bibliothek stattfinden konnten.
  18. Azzaro, S.; Cleary, K.: One, two, three ... infinity : a computer assisted learning package for the first time user of SilverPlatter CD-ROMs (1994) 0.00
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    Source
    Australian academic and research libraries. 25(1994) no.1, S.47-54
  19. Leach, B.A.: Identifying CD-ROM use patterns as a tool for evaluating user instruction (1994) 0.00
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    Source
    College and research libraries. 55(1994) no.4, S.365-371
  20. Ford, C.E.; Worley, G.C.: Using presentation graphics software to introduce on-line sources (1995) 0.00
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    Source
    College and undergraduate libraries. 2(1995) no.1, S.19-31

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