Search (14 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × theme_ss:"Computer Based Training"
  • × year_i:[2010 TO 2020}
  1. Laczny, J.: E-Tutorials zur Nutzerschulung in Bibliotheken : Stand der Technik und Trends (2018) 0.02
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    Content
    "Im Jahr 1995 weckte auf dem 85. Deutschen Bibliothekartag in Göttingen, welcher sich thematisch der "Herausforderung der Bibliotheken durch elektronische Medien und neue Organisationsformen" widmete, der Beitrag zur Vorstellung neuer Informationsmöglichkeiten für Bibliotheksnutzende, wie digitale "Präsentationen zur Einführung in die Benutzung elektronischer Informationsmittel", "Handhabung von Online-Katalogen" sowie "Erkundung der Räumlichkeiten einer Bibliothek", das Interesse der Teilnehmenden." Vgl.: https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/bibliothek/article/view/57961. Vgl. auch: URN (PDF): https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/bibliothek/article/view/57961.
    Source
    Perspektive Bibliothek. 7(2018) H.2, S.111-143
  2. Chianese, A.; Cantone, F.; Caropreso, M.; Moscato, V.: ARCHAEOLOGY 2.0 : Cultural E-Learning tools and distributed repositories supported by SEMANTICA, a System for Learning Object Retrieval and Adaptive Courseware Generation for e-learning environments. (2010) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The focus of the present research has been the development and the application to Virtual Archaeology of a Web-Based framework for Learning Objects indexing and retrieval. The paper presents the main outcomes of a experimentation carried out by an interdisciplinary group of Federico II University of Naples. Our equipe is composed by researchers both in ICT and in Humanities disciplines, in particular in the domain of Virtual Archaeology and Cultural Heritage Informatics in order to develop specific ICT methodological approaches to Virtual Archaeology. The methodological background is the progressive diffusion of Web 2.0 technologies and the attempt to analyze their impact and perspectives in the Cultural Heritage field. In particular, we approached the specific requirements of the so called Learning 2.0, and the possibility to improve the automation of modular courseware generation in Virtual Archaeology Didactics. The developed framework was called SEMANTICA, and it was applied to Virtual Archaeology Domain Ontologies in order to generate a didactic course in a semi-automated way. The main results of this test and the first students feedback on the course fruition will be presented and discussed..
    Source
    Wissensspeicher in digitalen Räumen: Nachhaltigkeit - Verfügbarkeit - semantische Interoperabilität. Proceedings der 11. Tagung der Deutschen Sektion der Internationalen Gesellschaft für Wissensorganisation, Konstanz, 20. bis 22. Februar 2008. Hrsg.: J. Sieglerschmidt u. H.P.Ohly
  3. Beutelspacher, L.: Fördern Web 2.0 und mobile Technologien das Lernen? : Ein Bericht über die ICT 2011 in Hongkong (2011) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Plattformen für Blended Learning, Lernsysteme (wie Moodle), Dienste im Web 2.0 (z. B. Facebook), ePortfolio-Systeme (beispielsweise Mahara), Verfilmungen von Lehrveranstaltungen und weitere Informationsdienste haben breite Anwendung in der Lehre gefunden. Durch das Angebot mobiler Endgeräte (Smartphones, Tablet-Rechner und Laptops) werden die Dienste zunehmend mobil genutzt. Dieser Bericht gibt in informationswissenschaftlicher Perspektive Forschungsergebnisse wieder, die auf der 6. ICT Konferenz in Hongkong "Education unplugged: Mobile Technologies and Web 2.0" (Juli 2011) vorgetragen worden sind.
    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 62(2011) H.8, S.377-379
  4. Emmons, S.R.; Light, R.P.; Börner, K.: MOOC visual analytics : empowering students, teachers, researchers, and platform developers of massively open online courses (2017) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Along with significant opportunities, Massively Open Online Courses (MOOCs) provide major challenges to students (keeping track of course materials and effectively interacting with teachers and fellow students), teachers (managing thousands of students and supporting their learning progress), researchers (understanding how students interact with materials and each other), and MOOC platform developers (supporting effective course design and delivery in a scalable way). This article demonstrates the use of data analysis and visualization as a means to empower students, teachers, researchers, and platform developers by making large volumes of data easy to understand. First, we introduce the insight needs of different stakeholder groups. Second, we compare the wide variety of data provided by major MOOC platforms. Third, we present a novel framework that distinguishes visualizations by the type of questions they answer. We then review the state of the art MOOC visual analytics using a tabulation of stakeholder needs versus visual analytics workflow types. Finally, we present new data analysis and visualization workflows for statistical, geospatial, and topical insights. The workflows have been optimized and validated in the Information Visualization MOOC (IVMOOC) annually taught at Indiana University since 2013. All workflows, sample data, and visualizations are provided at http://cns.iu.edu/2016-MOOCVis.html.
    Source
    Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 68(2017) no.10, S.2350-2363
  5. Liu, X.; Jia, H.: Answering academic questions for education by recommending cyberlearning resources (2013) 0.00
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    Abstract
    In this study, we design an innovative method for answering students' or scholars' academic questions (for a specific scientific publication) by automatically recommending e-learning resources in a cyber-infrastructure-enabled learning environment to enhance the learning experiences of students and scholars. By using information retrieval and metasearch methodologies, different types of referential metadata (related Wikipedia pages, data sets, source code, video lectures, presentation slides, and online tutorials) for an assortment of publications and scientific topics will be automatically retrieved, associated, and ranked (via the language model and the inference network model) to provide easily understandable cyberlearning resources to answer students' questions. We also designed an experimental system to automatically answer students' questions for a specific academic publication and then evaluated the quality of the answers (the recommended resources) using mean reciprocal rank and normalized discounted cumulative gain. After examining preliminary evaluation results and student feedback, we found that cyberlearning resources can provide high-quality and straightforward answers for students' and scholars' questions concerning the content of academic publications.
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 64(2013) no.8, S.1707-1722
  6. Devaul, H.; Diekema, A.R.; Ostwald, J.: Computer-assisted assignment of educational standards using natural language processing (2011) 0.00
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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
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 62(2011) no.2, S.395-405
  7. Huber, R.; Paschke, A.; Awad, G.; Hantelmann, K.: Einsatz semantischer Technologien zur Entwicklung eines Lerntrajektoriengenerators in frei zugänglichen, nicht personalisierenden Lernplattformen : Erfahrungsbericht (2010) 0.00
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    Source
    Semantic web & linked data: Elemente zukünftiger Informationsinfrastrukturen ; 1. DGI-Konferenz ; 62. Jahrestagung der DGI ; Frankfurt am Main, 7. - 9. Oktober 2010 ; Proceedings / Deutsche Gesellschaft für Informationswissenschaft und Informationspraxis. Hrsg.: M. Ockenfeld
  8. Höbarth, U.: Konstruktivistisches Lernen mit Moodle : praktische Einsatzmöglichkeiten in Bildungsinstitutionen (2010) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Die Unterstützung des Lehr-/Lernprozesses durch Lernplattformen und Web-2.0-Anwendungen wird immer stärker zu einem wesentlichen Faktor im Bildungsbereich. Aus dem breit gefächerten Angebot von Lernplattformen hat sich Moodle in den letzten Jahren als einer der Favoriten herauskristallisiert. Bedienungsanleitungen und Erklärungen zur Verwendung einzelner Module aus technischer Sicht gibt es bereits - kaum aufbereitet sind hingegen die methodisch-didaktischen Einsatzmöglichkeiten der unterschiedlichen Werkzeuge, angereichert mit praktischen Tipps aus der Praxis für die Praxis. Dies möchte das vorliegende Buch leisten. Die Autorin beleuchtet zunächst die verschiedenen Lernparadigmen, wobei der Fokus auf den Konstruktivismus gerichtet ist. Ergänzend werden die Gestaltungsanforderungen und -möglichkeiten des Lehr-/Lernprozesses in Lernplattformen thematisiert. Wie sehen sinnvolle Einsatzszenarien aus? Welche Funktion können Moodle-Online-Kurse in Blended-Learning-Szenarien einnehmen? Wo liegen mögliche Mehrwerte (und Probleme) gegenüber konventionellen Präsenzveranstaltungen? Praktische Beispiele ergänzen die theoretischen Grundlagen. Die Fallstudien und ihre Evaluation können sowohl als Impuls für die verstärkte Nutzung der Lernplattform Moodle im Unterricht gesehen werden, vermitteln den Lehrenden aber auch grundsätzliche methodische Ansätze des Prinzips der Prozessorientierung unter Verwendung webbasierter Software. -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.
  9. Berg, L.; Metzner, J.; Thrun, S.: Studieren im Netz - Das Ende der Uni? : Kostenloser Online-Unterricht (2012) 0.00
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    Content
    Die Idee, seinen Präsenzkurs speziell aufbereitet ins Internet zu stellen, kam ihm im vergangenen Jahr, als er die Arbeit von Salman Khan kennenlernte. Dieser wendet sich mit seiner Video-Bibliothek vor allem an Schüler (siehe nebenstehende Reportage). Nun, nach dem Erfolg des Stanford-Experiments, sieht Sebastian Thrun einen Epochenwechsel heraufziehen. Er sagt das Ende der Universität, wie wir sie kennen, voraus. "In fünfzig Jahren wird es weltweit nur noch zehn Institutionen geben, die akademische Bildung vermitteln." Der jugendlich wirkende Informatikprofessor sitzt auf einer Parkbank am sogenannten Oval, einer großen Rasenfläche am Haupteingang von Stanford. Er spricht schnell, fröstelt. Seit Wochen bekommt er nicht genug Schlaf, zu viele Projekte. Als das Gespräch auf seine Studienzeit in Deutschland kommt - die späten Achtzigerjahre - wird er nicht etwa nostalgisch. Denn er hat keine guten Erinnerungen: Professoren, die veralteten Stoff lieblos vermittelten, überfüllte Lehrveranstaltungen, zu wenig Diskussion. Fragen aus der Praxis "Die Professoren waren unnahbar, es ging ihnen oft nur darum, Studenten abzuwimmeln." Sebastian Thrun hat es dennoch geschafft: Zuerst als Stanford-Professor, jetzt als Chef bei Google X, einem Labor, in dem der Suchmaschinen-Konzern zum Beispiel fahrerlose Fahrzeuge entwickelt. Nebenher baut er das Projekt Udacity auf, eine digitale Universität, die kostenlose Online-Kurse anbietet. Zunächst in den Computerwissenschaften, später sollen Angebote in den Ingenieurwissenschaften, Physik und Chemie folgen. Thruns Vision sind dynamische, interaktive Videos, nicht nur zu abstrakten Themen, sondern zu Fragen aus der Praxis.
  10. Untiet-Kepp, S.-J.; Rösler, A.; Griesbaum, J.: CollabUni - Social Software zur Unterstützung kollaborativen Wissensmanagements und selbstgesteuerten Lernens (2010) 0.00
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    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 61(2010) H.6/7, S.413-414
  11. Untiet-Kepp, S.-J.: der Stand der Forschung : Adaptive Unterstützung für das computergestützte kollaborative Lernen (2010) 0.00
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    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 61(2010) H.6/7, S.397-406
  12. Maibach, C.; Heinrich, Axel; .; Schulz, J.: Fallbasiertes Lernen mit CaseTrain : Umsetzung und Einsatz zur Vermittlung von Informationskompetenz an der Universitätsbibliothek Würzburg (2011) 0.00
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    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 62(2011) H.5, S.213-223
  13. Guo, Z.; Lu, X.; Li, Yuan; Li, Yifan: ¬A framework of students' reasons for using CMC media in learning contexts : a structural approach (2011) 0.00
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