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  • × theme_ss:"Computer Based Training"
  1. Harrer, A.; Lohmann, S.: Potenziale von Tagging als partizipative Methode für Lehrportale und E-Learning-Kurse (2008) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Als dynamische und einfache Form der Auszeichnung von Ressourcen kann sich Tagging im E-Learning positiv auf Partizipation, soziale Navigation und das Verständnis der Lernenden auswirken. Dieser Beitrag beleuchtet verschiedene Möglichkeiten des Einsatzes von Social Tagging in Lehrportalen und E-LearningKursen. Hierzu werden zunächst drei konkrete Anwendungsfälle dargestellt. Anschließend werden aus den Anwendungsfällen gewonnene Erkenntnisse für Lehr-/Lernszenarien zusammengefasst.
    Date
    21. 6.2009 12:22:44
    Footnote
    Beitrag der Tagung "Social Tagging in der Wissensorganisation" am 21.-22.02.2008 am Institut für Wissensmedien (IWM) in Tübingen.
    Source
    Good tags - bad tags: Social Tagging in der Wissensorganisation. Hrsg.: B. Gaiser, u.a
    Theme
    Social tagging
  2. Stahl, G.: Group cognition : computer support for building collaborative knowledge (2006) 0.05
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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."
    Series
    Acting with technology
  3. Cal da Silva, L.F.; Werneck Barbosa, M.; Gomes, R.R.: Measuring participation in distance education online discussion forums using social network analysis (2019) 0.04
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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.
    Source
    Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 70(2019) no.2, S.140-150
  4. Wood, A.D.G.: Instructional technology in the business environment (1995) 0.04
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    Source
    Multimedia today. 3(1995) no.1, S.18-22
  5. Luor, T.; Johanson, R.E.; Lu, H.-P.; Wu, L.-l.: Trends and lacunae for future computer assisted learning (CAL) research : an assessment of the literature in SSCI journals from 1998-2006 (2008) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This study surveyed 536 CAL publications in 71 SSCI (Social Science Citation Index) journals from 1998 to February 2006 to identify trends and lacunae for future research. The parameters and keywords employed by the authors are first presented, followed by a description of the study's general findings. A comparison is then drawn between CAL and recent depictions of the blogosphere, for the majority of the contributors to the field produced only a few articles and authors of individual publications demonstrated a far greater collective influence on the field than the more frequently-cited authors. Results also revealed that the amount of articles pertaining to the aged, disabled children, and home schooling were significantly lower than those relating to school student's learning. This study offers an interesting snapshot of a field that is apparently on the rise; moreover, it raises some issues to be addressed in further research on CAL-related topics.
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 59(2008) no.8, S.1313-1320
  6. Creanor, L.; Durndell, H.: Teaching information handling skills with hypertext (1994) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This paper describes the development and content of four Computer Assisted Learning packages designed to teach information skills to higher education students. The areas covered include database searching and library search skills. Educational aspects of using hypertext and hypermedia for learning are discussed along with development issues and a description is given of the staff costs involved. The main source of external funding was the Higher Education Funding Councils' Teaching and Learning Technology Programme
  7. Untiet-Kepp, S.-J.; Rösler, A.; Griesbaum, J.: CollabUni - Social Software zur Unterstützung kollaborativen Wissensmanagements und selbstgesteuerten Lernens (2010) 0.02
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    Abstract
    CollabUni ist eine Social Software-Umgebung, die an der Universität Hildesheim mit dem Ziel der Unterstützung kollaborativen Wissensmanagements und selbstgesteuerten Lernens eingesetzt wird. Dieser Beitrag beschreibt den Implementierungs- und Konfigurationsprozess sowie das resultierende System.
  8. Devaul, H.; Diekema, A.R.; Ostwald, J.: Computer-assisted assignment of educational standards using natural language processing (2011) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 1.2011 14:25:32
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 62(2011) no.2, S.395-405
  9. Berg, L.; Metzner, J.; Thrun, S.: Studieren im Netz - Das Ende der Uni? : Kostenloser Online-Unterricht (2012) 0.01
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    Content
    Wie entwickle ich eine Computer-App zum Beispiel. Oft würden solche Fragen von talentierten Menschen aus armen Ländern gestellt, die sich mit dem Wissen eine Existenz aufbauen wollten. Ihnen die richtigen Antworten zu geben sei besser als Entwicklungshilfe, findet Thrun. Udacity könne die Welt zum Besseren verändern, und deshalb müsse das Angebot kostenlos bleiben. Die meisten Universitäten schlafen noch Im Sommersemester gibt der Forschungsleiter von Google, Peter Norvig, ein Seminar zur Gestaltung von Software, andere namhafte Experten von Hochschulen aus dem angloamerikanischen Raum bieten Kurse über Programmiersprachen oder Kryptografie an. Mit dem Stanford-Image kann Thrun, der sich als Professor hat beurlauben lassen, nur noch indirekt punkten. Und Geld hat er von dort auch nicht mehr zu erwarten. Aber, wer weiß, vielleicht springt ja eines Tages sein neuer Arbeitgeber ein. Bis dahin tragen einige Weltfirmen zur Finanzierung bei: Sie zahlen für die Vermittlung besonders fähiger Absolventen. Unterdessen zieht die Konkurrenz nach. Weitere Stanford-Professoren bieten kostenlose Online-Kurse an und auch das renommierte Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) an der Ostküste des Landes hat eine digitale Initiative namens MITx angekündigt. Die Teilnahme soll kostenlos sein, aber für das Abschlusszertifikat ist eine Gebühr zu entrichten. Diese Aktivitäten seien Ausnahmen, sagt Thrun: Die meisten Universitäten schlafen noch."
    Contra - (Prof. Joachim Metzner) Erleben wir mit der Gründung von Udacity wirklich die kühne revolutionäre Zeitenwende im Bildungswesen, den beginnenden Untergang der herkömmlichen Institution Hochschule? Längst hat sich doch, auch in Deutschland, das e-learning seinen Platz erobert. Es gibt kaum noch eine Hochschule, die nicht über entsprechende Angebote verfügt. Die Reform der Lehre ist trotz überfüllter Hörsäle in vollem Gange, auch dank der Social Media. Das erwartet die heutige Generation der Studierenden, und diese Erwartung wird sich noch verstärken. Aber für Sebastian Thrun wird der virtuelle Raum ja den Hörsaal ablösen. Doch wird er das wirklich? Campus als Herzstück der Hochschule Die Präsidentin des Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Susan Hockfield, ist da anderer Meinung: Trotz aller Online-Möglichkeiten, sagt sie, bleibt der reale Campus das Herzstück der Hochschule. Sie weiß, dass die Studierenden zwar die Freiheiten schätzen, die das Internet bietet, aber mindestens ebenso sehr das reale Zusammensein - sei es im Seminarraum, sei es auf der Wiese oder in der Kneipe. Dass zahlreiche Online-Kurse kostenlos nutzbar sind, ist faszinierend und eröffnet riesige soziale Chancen. Doch werfen solche Kurse immense Gewinne ab, wenn der Anbieter dies will. Jeder Nutzer erzeugt ja, quasi als Testperson, Massen an wertvollen Daten, die Auskunft geben über Interessen und Nutzungsverhalten. Als kostenloser Anbieter kann man aus solchen Informationen Premiumangebote ableiten, die für viel Geld verkäuflich sind.
  10. Wilson, W.: Computer-assisted-instruction in an academic library (1983) 0.01
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    Source
    Information technology and libraries. 2(1983) no.4, S.389-393
  11. Ward, P.; Arshad, F.: Interactive multimedia information systems for education (1992) 0.01
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    Abstract
    This paper will focus on the place of multimedia technology in education, and the need to consider pedagogical concerns which must to be addressed for such technology to be successfully applied
  12. Caruso, E.: Computer aids to learning online retrieval (1981) 0.01
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    Source
    Annual review of information science and technology. 16(1981), S.317-336
  13. Herring, S.C.: Computer-mediated communication on the Internet (2002) 0.01
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    Source
    Annual review of information science and technology. 36(2002), S.109-170
  14. Wilburg, K.: Teaching science with technology : telecommunications and multimedia (1994) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Reports on a variety of studies which indicate how students can learn science through telecomputing and interactive multimedia activities. 2 studies reflect the newest trends in teaching science with technology concerned with telecomputing and an innovative approach to integrating hypermedia with science learning, which has student in several schools in Iowa working as programmers and instructional designers, 2 other studies considers new ways to look at both science/technology education and research. As a study of an international high school science project suggests a new methodology for researching computer-support collaborative learning
  15. ¬The digital university : building a learning community (2002) 0.01
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    Abstract
    University education continues to be revolutionized by the use of Web-based teaching and learning systems. Following on from "The Digital University: Reinventing the Academy", this book provides a fully up-to-date and practical guide to using and implementing this important technology. Looking specifically at asynchronous collaboration, it covers:- policies- management of collaboration- distance learning- support for authoring- course design- educational metadata schemaand will be an essential buy for managers, lecturers, administrators, department heads and researchers.It includes a foreword by Ben Shneiderman, Director of the HCI Laboratory at the University of Maryland, USA.
    Date
    22. 3.2008 14:43:03
  16. Boone, M.D.: Taking FLITE : how new libraries are visioning their way into the future (2002) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The author takes on the assertion posed in recent educational articles that technology is driving down book circulation and contributing to the decline of reading-center learning. In his interview with Richard Cochran, Dean of the Ferris State University Library for Information, Technology, and Education, the two discuss the importance of incorporating technology to support all types of learning, and using faculty buy-in to insure that as many media as possible are integrated into the final building design.
  17. Special section on intelligent tutoring systems and gaming-simulation (1995) 0.01
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    Source
    CIT - Journal of computing and information technology. 3(1995) no.1, S.19-58
  18. Kirk, J.: Computer-assisted learning and teaching in library and information studies in Australia (1993) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The interest of Australian academics in library and information studies is manifest in 2 themes: technology for information practice and technology for learning. These themes underlie the integration of information technology into education for information professionals. Surveys carried out in the early 1980s highlighted the applications of technology, particularly in online cataloguing and online searching. The study reported in this paper aimed to explore the extent of use and non-use od computer-assisted learning and teaching in Australian schools of library and information studies in the early 1990s. The results indicate more widespread use of computer-assisted learning than computer-assisted teaching. There is considerably diversity in courses where computer-assisted learning is included in the packages used by students. More than half of the schools surveyed have plans to extend computer-assisted learning over the next three years. In order to take full advantage of the potential of computer-assisted learning, academies in schools of library and information studies in Australia will need to cooperate with each other, with academics and industry-based colleagues in computer-based training and education, and with similar schools in overseas countries
  19. Crosby, M.E.; Stelovsky, J.: From multimedia instruction to multimedia evaluation (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Explores different aspects of multimedia in learning environments. The dynamic behaviour of typical computer science algorithms were visualized using multimedia courseware using multimedia techniques such as static and animated text, graphics and nonlinear structure. Its effectiveness was contrasted with traditional static presentations
  20. Mödinger, W.; Brossmann, M.: Praxisguide Wissensmanagement : Planung, Umsetzung, Controlling von E-Learning im Unternehmen (2009) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Der Praxisguide Wissensmanagement gibt eine umsetzungsorientierte Anleitung, wie heute Wissensmanagement in Unternehmen geplant und umgesetzt werden kann und welche Vorgehensweise den meisten Nutzen bringt. Diese umfasst die Wissensvermittlung mit Printmedien, Computer Based Training (CBT), Web Based Training (WBT), interaktives Business TV, e-Training und die Wissensvermittlung mit Hilfe von Lernplattformen (Learning-Management-Systemen, LMS). Dabei werden nicht nur die unterschiedlichen Möglichkeiten der genannten Medien aufgezeigt, sondern auch der konkrete Beitrag in der Wertschöpfungskette der Unternehmung. Der Return on Investment des Wissensmanagements wird mit Hilfe einer dafür entwickelten Score Card dargestellt. Der Praxisguide bleibt aber nicht bei den gegenwärtigen Möglichkeiten stehen. Er formuliert Thesen für die Trainings- und Lernwelt von Morgen und zeigt die Möglichkeiten, die sich durch Social Computing und Web 2.0-Anwendungen (Weblog, Wiki u.a.) für die Unternehmen in Zukunft ergeben.

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