Teaching ASL Signs using Signing Avatars and Immersive Learning in Virtual Reality

Author(s):  
Lorna Quandt
Author(s):  
Zuzana Palkova ◽  
Maria Fragkaki ◽  
Faiz Abdelhafid ◽  
Sameh R. Al-Qubaj ◽  
Nidal Aburajab ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Plamen Miltenoff ◽  
Kate Borowske

This chapter presents and discusses a review and comparison of low-end 360-degree and extended reality (XR) practices. The goal of the chapter is to assist both technologically and organizationally with the ubiquitous acceptance of these two technologies as part of the move toward immersive teaching and learning. The chapter shares an overview of rather fluctuant terminology: 360-degree videos and images, virtual reality, augmented reality, mixed reality, extended reality, immersive teaching, and immersive learning. Fostering and accepting a standardized and understandable terminology is an important part of the application process of these technologies to enable immersive teaching and learning. Furthermore, this chapter will argue the importance of a low-end approach toward immersive teaching and learning due to constraints of various characters and as a part of the scalable construct of immersive teaching and learning in academic libraries and respectively on campus.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 363-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bosede Iyiade Edwards ◽  
Kevin S. Bielawski ◽  
Rui Prada ◽  
Adrian David Cheok

This chapter approaches the Real Virtuality theme that appears in the construction processes of Digital Virtual World in 3D in Metaverses. The authors present and discuss subtopics like “Virtuality and Reality: Virtual Reality Experiences and Real Virtuality Experiences in Immersive Learning,” “The Simultaneousness of Worlds: From the Digital Virtual Space of Coexistence to the Space of Hybrid and Multimodal Coexistence,” “The Culture of Real Virtuality.” The chapter concludes that it is possible to understand that i-Learning, through the Real Virtuality Experiences and Virtual Reality Experiences, may represent an effective possibility to subjects' education nowadays. In this context, the authors believe it is fundamental to (re) think Education for the current generation, the prospect of a Network Society, a Cultural Hybridism and Multimodality.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document