Showing posts with label Wikipedia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wikipedia. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Time to extend our concept of 'blended learning'

The time has come to reconsider what we mean by blended learning. I suggest that it can exist on two levels.

Firstly an acceptable definition from Wikipedia:

' Blended learning is a formal education program in which a student learns at least in part through online delivery of content and instruction with some element of student control over time, place, path or pace.[1] While still attending a “brick-and-mortar” school structure, face-to-face classroom methods are combined with computer-mediated activities.[2] Proponents of blending learning cite the opportunity for data collection and customization of instruction and assessment as two major benefits of this approach.[3] Schools with blended learning models may also choose to reallocate resources to boost student achievement outcomes.[4]'
  1. ^ "Blended Learning (Staker / Horn - May 2012)" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-10-24.
  2. Jump up ^ Strauss, Valerie (22 September 2012). Three fears about blended learning, The Washington Post
  3. Jump up ^ Harel Caperton, Idit. (2012) Learning to Make Games for Impact. The Journal of Media Literacy, 59(1), 28-38.
  4. Jump up ^ Jacob, Anna M. (2011). Benefits and Barriers to the Hybridization of Schools. Journal of Education Policy, Planning and Administration, 1(1): 61-82.
Then a proposed extension from me.
 If a MOOC, for example, is accompanied by:
  • peer-to-peer teaching with questions answered by a professor - for example by email
  • dropboxes or wikis for idea collection and development
  • skyping or video conferencing to set up pair or group learning
  • with knowledeable peers or experienced tutors involved
isn't that blended learning too - or is it the case that we really believe a monopoly of knowledge resides in formalised institutions of learning?


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