Blended learning and digital education

2021 ◽  
pp. 79-97
Author(s):  
Emiliano Grimaldi
2020 ◽  
Vol 1566 ◽  
pp. 012044
Author(s):  
Maradoni Jaya Saragih ◽  
Raden Mas Rizky Yohannes Cristanto ◽  
Yusri Effendi ◽  
Elviawaty M. Zamzami

2021 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-34
Author(s):  
H.I Ibragimov ◽  
◽  
E.M Ibragimova ◽  
A.A Kalimullina ◽  
◽  
...  

The article is devoted to the up-to-date issue on how to develop the conceptual and terminological apparatus of higher education didactics. The purpose of the article is clarify the interpretation of new terms and concepts (digitalization of education, digital education, digital learning, digital didactics, blended learning, etc.), the emergence of which is due to the era of education digitalization. As a research method, the authors used a theoretical analysis of the conceptual and terminological apparatus of didactics, generalization, comparison, interpretation. The research results are as follows: 1) the concepts "digitalization of education", "digitalization of the education system" and "digital learning" are given; 2) authors determined their place in the system of closely established terms and concepts; 3) they made a conclusion about the boundaries in using the term “digital pedagogy” and “digital didactics”; 4) the identified the main features, the role and place of the concept of "blended learning" in the system of didactic knowledge. The research results contribute to the development of the conceptual and terminological apparatus of didactics. They can be useful both for educational researchers and for practicing educators, as they clarify a whole range of new terms and concepts


Author(s):  
Gerard Dunleavy ◽  
Charoula Konstantia Nikolaou ◽  
Sokratis Nifakos ◽  
Rifat Atun ◽  
Gloria Chun Yi Law ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND There is a pressing need to implement efficient and cost-effective training to address the worldwide shortage of health professionals. Mobile digital education (mLearning) has been mooted as a potential solution to increase the delivery of health professions education as it offers the opportunity for wide access at low cost and flexibility with the portability of mobile devices. To better inform policy making, we need to determine the effectiveness of mLearning. OBJECTIVE The primary objective of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness of mLearning interventions for delivering health professions education in terms of learners’ knowledge, skills, attitudes, and satisfaction. METHODS We performed a systematic review of the effectiveness of mLearning in health professions education using standard Cochrane methodology. We searched 7 major bibliographic databases from January 1990 to August 2017 and included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or cluster RCTs. RESULTS A total of 29 studies, including 3175 learners, met the inclusion criteria. A total of 25 studies were RCTs and 4 were cluster RCTs. Interventions comprised tablet or smartphone apps, personal digital assistants, basic mobile phones, iPods, and Moving Picture Experts Group-1 audio layer 3 player devices to deliver learning content. A total of 20 studies assessed knowledge (n=2469) and compared mLearning or blended learning to traditional learning or another form of digital education. The pooled estimate of studies favored mLearning over traditional learning for knowledge (standardized mean difference [SMD]=0.43, 95% CI 0.05-0.80, N=11 studies, low-quality evidence). There was no difference between blended learning and traditional learning for knowledge (SMD=0.20, 95% CI –0.47 to 0.86, N=6 studies, low-quality evidence). A total of 14 studies assessed skills (n=1097) and compared mLearning or blended learning to traditional learning or another form of digital education. The pooled estimate of studies favored mLearning (SMD=1.12, 95% CI 0.56-1.69, N=5 studies, moderate quality evidence) and blended learning (SMD=1.06, 95% CI 0.09-2.03, N=7 studies, low-quality evidence) over traditional learning for skills. A total of 5 and 4 studies assessed attitudes (n=440) and satisfaction (n=327), respectively, with inconclusive findings reported for each outcome. The risk of bias was judged as high in 16 studies. CONCLUSIONS The evidence base suggests that mLearning is as effective as traditional learning or possibly more so. Although acknowledging the heterogeneity among the studies, this synthesis provides encouraging early evidence to strengthen efforts aimed at expanding health professions education using mobile devices in order to help tackle the global shortage of health professionals.


Author(s):  
Elena Bilic ◽  

The article addresses the concept of blended learning, as an innovative opportunity for effective learning in the age of digital education. Definitions, existing models, foreign experience of implementing blended learning in the educational process are presented. To achieve this successfully, the author examines organizational strategies, information and communication technologies that allow the achievement of blended learning.


The article under review actualizes the problem of using digital computer technologies in the process of blended learning. The notion of «blended learning» is determined and specified according various sources. Various models and ways of organizing this kind of work as an alternative to the standard form of learning are presented. The article presents the positive experience of using blended learning technology. Attention is paid to visualization as one of teaching tool to create educational materials for blended learning. Synthesis of verbal (especially word) and visual elements (pictures, graphic notes, animations, films, plots and diagrams, etc.) within the limits of one text’s space is an instrument of optimization of the process of semantic perception and understanding text information. All benefits of this modern technology allows to establish a holistic adoption of this model by students and the positive direction for the development of blended learning as an innovative teaching technology


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesley Gourlay

The distinction between face-to-face and distant digitally-mediated educational engagement is a complex one, and the two modes are often combined in practice, via ‘blended learning’ or the use of a VLE to support campus-based teaching. The current Covid-19 pandemic has thrown this distinction into relief, in a context where educationalists have been forced to move to fully distant engagement in a very short timeframe. This paper explores how this predicament has brought to the fore the nature of our engagement with digital knowledge practices and screen-based communication, arguing that the notion of ‘virtual learning’ is a flawed one. Instead, adopting a sociomaterial perspective, it argues that all aspects of digital engagement are in fact grounded in material and embodied entanglements with devices and other artefacts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 14-27
Author(s):  
Ol’ga B. DAUTOVA ◽  
Elena Y. IGNATEVA ◽  
Ol’ga N. SHILOVA

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