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  • × theme_ss:"Computer Based Training"
  1. Kozma, R.B.: Learning with media (1991) 0.11
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    Source
    Review of educational research. 61(1991) no.2, S.179-211
  2. Cloete, L.M.; Snyman, R.; Cronjé, J.C.: Training cataloguing students using a mix of media and technologies (2003) 0.09
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    Abstract
    The appropriateness of utilising a training resource programme consisting of a mix of media and technologies for the training of cataloguing students is evaluated. The findings from reported research and evaluation of the training resource programme made it possible to identify advantages and disadvantages of using such a programme. The results of the research enabled the researcher to derive guidelines for the design and development of a training resource programme consisting of a mix of media and technologies. The use of media and technologies, in a training research programme for cataloguing training, can be utilised in training cataloguing students in contact classes, distance education as well as in-service training.
  3. Guo, Z.; Lu, X.; Li, Yuan; Li, Yifan: ¬A framework of students' reasons for using CMC media in learning contexts : a structural approach (2011) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Motivated by the increasing popularity of computer-mediated communication (CMC) media in university students' learning, this study employs a four-stage novel approach for analyzing and developing a structured hierarchy framework for students' usage of CMC media in learning contexts. First, media characteristics and the Uses and Gratifications (U&G) approach were adopted to understand student-specific reasons for using media. Second, a set of relevant data concerning the university students' reasons for using CMC media was collected by the Repertory Grid Interview Technique (RGT) and analyzed qualitatively using content analysis. The Interpretive Structural Modeling (ISM) technique was then used to develop a six-level hierarchical structural model of media use reasons. Finally, the cross-impact matrix multiplication applied to classification (MICMAC) technique was used to analyze the driver and dependence power for each media use reason and identify the hidden and indirect relationships among all reasons. The reasons related to students' use of CMC were classified as independent variables, linkage variables, and dependent variables. The study provides a validated typology of different clusters of interrelated students' reasons for using CMC media in learning contexts. The findings of this study will have significant implications and will be helpful for researchers, university policy-makers, instructors, and organizations in framing CMC technology implementation and use strategies.
  4. Williams, P.; Nicholas, D.; Gunter, B.: E-learning: what the literature tells us about distance education : an overview (2005) 0.04
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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.
  5. Fuller, D.W.: Computer-assisted instruction and the school library media center (1986) 0.04
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  6. (e)Pedagogy - visual knowledge building : rethinking art and new media in education (2005) 0.03
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    Abstract
    The accelerating «iconic turn» in our society today increasingly demands the interactive representation of contextual knowledge. At the same time the use of Web based learning environments highlight the audio-visual dimension of (e)pedagogy and the move towards practical, project-oriented curricula. Regardless of the educational field pedagogical expertise thus requires more and more understanding and control of visual elements and their interpretations. There is a growing need for visually oriented pedagogical experts such as teachers, tutors, designers and developers who are capable of community knowledge building and collaboration with other experts from different fields from both private and public sectors. The book intends to illuminate scientific and programmatic excerpts from an international community of researchers, practitioners, teachers and scholars working in interrelated fields such as Aesthetic Education, ePedagogy Design - Visual Knowledge Building, Visual Education, Art Education, Media Pedagogy and Intermedia Art Education.
    Content
    Contents: Gerhard Hickisch: Transfairness - Pierangelo Maset: Aesthetic Operations - a perspective in art and media education - Torsten Meyer: Art Education within a New Medium - Martina Paatela-Nieminen: Thinking digitally and intermedially in art education - Iwan Pasuchin: Media Pedagogy and Interdisciplinary Artistic Education - Karl Josef Pazzini: Media, Suggestion, Suspicion - Stefan Sonvilla-Weiss: ePedagogy Design - Visual Knowledge Building - Peter Truniger: Communication in Creative Processes.
  7. Stahl, G.: Group cognition : computer support for building collaborative knowledge (2006) 0.03
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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."
  8. Tritsch, B.: Verteiltes Lernen in Computernetzen : Eine Tele-Media-Trainingsarchitektur (1997) 0.03
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  9. Multimediale Bildungstechnologien I : Anwendungen und Implementation (2005) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Neue Medien und Multimedia finden augenblicklich große Beachtung in fast allen Bereichen unseres Lebens. Diese Entwicklung basiert in erheblichem Maße auf technologischen und organisatorischen Neuerungen bei der Nutzung digitaler und multimedialer Produkte und Dienstleistungen in allen Sektoren. Dazu gehören neben den Anwendungen in der Wirtschaft gerade die auf die Bildung bezogenen Dienste und Infrastrukturen. Verbunden mit der rapiden Verbreitung der Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien sind Erwartungen hinsichtlich ihrer besonderen Möglichkeiten für den Austausch von Informationen, die Wissensvermittlung und das Lehren und Lernen. Der Sammelband thematisiert aktuelle Entwicklungen auf diesen Ebenen in systematischer Weise und gliedert sich in die drei Kapitel «eLearning», «Multimedia» und «Innovative Applikationen & Mobile Media». Ein besonderer Schwerpunkt liegt dabei auf der regionalen Bezugnahme zu Brandenburg und Berlin.
    Content
    Aus dem Inhalt: eLearning - Multimedia - Innovative Applikationen & Mobile Media.
  10. Cleote, L.: ¬The education and training of cataloguing students in South Africa through distance education (2005) 0.02
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    Abstract
    This paper discusses the education and training of cataloguing students in South Africa at a distance education institution where the focus is on career specific training. The position of the cataloguing course in the curriculum and the content of the course are explained. The utilization of media and technologies in offering the course is discussed. Anticipated changes and possible future developments are discussed.
  11. Shyu, H.-Y.: Using an instructional design model for developing a multimedia CAI courseware (1995) 0.02
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    Source
    Journal of educational media and library sciences. 33(1995) no.1, S.68-78
  12. Jonassen, D.H.: Conceptual frontiers in hypermedia environments for learning (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The nature of computer based learning and the instructional environments that support it have changed dramatically in the past decade. Introduces a special issue consisting of selected papers from ED-MEDIA 93 - World Conference on Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia. Provides conceptual and historical organizers that overview these changes. These organizers will describe 2 continua for analysing these changes: a technology-based continuum and a continuum describing the range of information processing enganged by these environments. Relates these selected papers to these continua and describes briefly why they are important and have been selected
  13. Budin, G.: Mehrsprachige Wissensorganisation für den Aufbau von eLearning Systemen für die Ökologie : Erfahrungsberichte zu den Projekten "Logos Gaias" und "Media Nova Naturae" (2004) 0.02
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  14. Maurer, H.; Scherbakov, N.: Multimedia authoring for presentation and education : the official guide to HM-card (1996) 0.02
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    Abstract
    There are many multimedia authoring packages available under MS Windows. There is none with as many outstanding features as HM-Card: HM-Card does all you expect from a modern multimedia authoring system: it allows you to combine als kinds of media: text, graphics, pictures, audio-and videoclips, and arbitrary executable files created by other programs to give you all the freedom of the world
  15. Freeman, H.; Rouse, R.; Hilton, A.: Making the most of electronic databases : computer based tutorials for CD-ROM network (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The library at De Montfort University, UK, has an established reputation for user education and support through its academic and subject librarians. Because the new technologies of CD-ROM, online databases and computer networks were being inefficiently used by students, the Student Learning Development Centre developed a brief for a tutorial package that would enable students to develop quality search strategies and skills for electronically sourced information. Describes the product, a mixed media package consisting of a computer based tutorial and a paper based workbook, and discusses the development of the CD-ROM network
  16. Boone, M.D.: Taking FLITE : how new libraries are visioning their way into the future (2002) 0.02
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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. Kaplowitz, J.; Contini, J.: Computer-assisted instruction : is it an option for bibliographic instruction in large undergraduate survey classes? (1998) 0.02
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    Date
    13. 7.1998 22:01:14
    Source
    College and research libraries. 59(1998) no.1, S.19-27
  18. Schröter, F.; Meyer, U.: Entwicklung sprachlicher Handlungskompetenz in Englisch mit Hilfe eines Multimedia-Sprachlernsystems (2000) 0.02
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    Source
    Sprachtechnologie für eine dynamische Wirtschaft im Medienzeitalter - Language technologies for dynamic business in the age of the media - L'ingénierie linguistique au service de la dynamisation économique à l'ère du multimédia: Tagungsakten der XXVI. Jahrestagung der Internationalen Vereinigung Sprache und Wirtschaft e.V., 23.-25.11.2000, Fachhochschule Köln. Hrsg.: K.-D. Schmitz
  19. Zimmermann, K.; Mimkes, J.; Kamke, H.U.: ¬An ontology framework for e-learning in the knowledge society (2006) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Efficient knowledge management is essential within the information society. Life long learning as well as the use of new media have lead to e-Learning of different kinds. In order to combine existing resources, a general description of this topic is needed. The semantic web aims at making these meta data machine understandable. In this paper we present our Ontology Framework for e-Learning. After the introduction we review existing approaches and describe our general view of the concepts. In chapter 4 and 5 we present different views of our framework aimed at the intended application areas as material or user centred approaches and end up with the conclusions.
  20. Devaul, H.; Diekema, A.R.; Ostwald, J.: Computer-assisted assignment of educational standards using natural language processing (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Educational standards are a central focus of the current educational system in the United States, underpinning educational practice, curriculum design, teacher professional development, and high-stakes testing and assessment. Digital library users have requested that this information be accessible in association with digital learning resources to support teaching and learning as well as accountability requirements. Providing this information is complex because of the variability and number of standards documents in use at the national, state, and local level. This article describes a cataloging tool that aids catalogers in the assignment of standards metadata to digital library resources, using natural language processing techniques. The research explores whether the standards suggestor service would suggest the same standards as a human, whether relevant standards are ranked appropriately in the result set, and whether the relevance of the suggested assignments improve when, in addition to resource content, metadata is included in the query to the cataloging tool. The article also discusses how this service might streamline the cataloging workflow.
    Date
    22. 1.2011 14:25:32

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