scholarly journals Learning with Friction—Students’ Gestures and Enactment in Relation to a GeoGebra Simulation

Author(s):  
Lorena Solvang ◽  
Jesper Haglund

AbstractThe present study contributes to the understanding of physics students’ representational competence by examining specific bodily practices (e.g. gestures, enactment) of students’ interaction and constructions of representations in relation to a digital learning environment. We present and analyse video data of upper-secondary school students’ interaction with a GeoGebra simulation of friction. Our analysis is based on the assumption that, in a collaborative learning environment, students use their bodies as means of dealing with interpretational problems, and that exploring students’ gestures and enactment can be used to analyse their sensemaking processes. This study shows that specific features of the simulation—features connected with microscopic aspects of friction—triggered students to ask what-if and why questions and consequently, to learn about the representation. During this sense-making process, students improvised their own representations to make their ideas more explicit. The findings extend current research on students’ representational competence by bringing attention to the role of students’ generation of improvised representations in the processes of learning with and about representations.

2019 ◽  
pp. 174-182
Author(s):  
Louise Maddens ◽  
Fien Depaepe ◽  
Annelies Raes ◽  
Jan Elen

In today’s complex world, the acquisition of research skills is considered an important goal in (upper secondary) education. Consequently, there is a growing body of literature that recognises the value of well-designed (online) learning environments for effectively supporting the development of this complex set of skills. However, a clear consensus on how these research skills can be facilitated is currently lacking. Furthermore, interventions aiming to foster these skills are often implemented in specific domains, mostly in physics, biology and chemistry. In addition, current approaches to facilitation often refer to only a few epistemic activities related to research skills. Because of the broad and (mainly) domain-specific character of research skills, the purpose of this paper is to articulate the instructional design considerations for an online learning environment for upper secondary school students’ (broad set of) research skills in a(n) (underrepresented) behavioural sciences context.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (34) ◽  
pp. 624
Author(s):  
Vladimir N. Ivanov ◽  
Ekaterina A. Ilyina ◽  
Alexander A. Kirillov ◽  
Galina A. Alexandrova ◽  
Nikolay I. Stepanov ◽  
...  

Este artigo tem como objetivo descobrir as particularidades de desenvolvimento do sistema de gerenciamento de universidades digitais da Rússia na Rússia no contexto da digitalização universal e identificar as oportunidades para o desenvolvimento de elementos do ambiente de aprendizado digital das universidades. O principal método de pesquisa da questão é uma análise comparativa do nível de competências digitais de estudantes de educação profissional na Rússia e nos estados membros da União Europeia. Os autores do artigo descobriram as particularidades dos processos transformacionais da educação moderna, revelaram o papel principal do desenvolvimento das tecnologias da informação e da comunicação, determinaram o lugar da Rússia no espaço de aprendizado mundial e analisaram a dinâmica da posição das instituições de ensino superior russas no país. a classificação mundial da universidade.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 1159-1166
Author(s):  
Budi Laksono Putro ◽  
Yusep Rosmansyah ◽  
Suhardi Suhardi

Group development is the first and most important step for the success of collaborative problem solving (CPS) learning in the digital learning environment (DLE). A literacy study is needed for studies in the intelligent agent domain for group development of collaborative learning in DLE. This paper is a systematic literature review (SLR) of intelligent agents for group formation from 2001 to 2019. This paper aims to find answers to 4 (four) research questions, namely: 1) What components to develop intelligent agents for group development; 2) What is the intelligent agent model for group development; 3) How are the metrics for measuring intelligent agent performance; and 4) How is the Framework for developing intelligent agent. The components of the intelligent agent model consist of: member attributes, group attributes (group constraints), and intelligent techniques. This research refers to Srba and Bielikova's group development model. The stages of the model are formation, performing and closing. An intelligent agent model at the formation stage. A performance metric for the intelligent agent at the performance stage. The framework for developing an intelligent agent is a reference to the stages of development, component selection techniques, and performance measurement of an intelligent agent.


Author(s):  
Jon Mott ◽  
Rob Nyland ◽  
Greg Williams ◽  
Michael Atkinson ◽  
Arin Ceglia

Institutions looking to adopt competency-based education often struggle with the technological challenges of supporting this model. In response, this chapter proposes a “born-CBE” infrastructure intentionally designed to support the data exchanges and workflows required by CBE. This modular infrastructure contains a system of record, a digital learning environment, a recommendation engine, a financial aid processor, a competency dashboard, and a competency transcript. In order for these components to work together cohesively, data standards for interoperability (LIS, OneRoster, and LTI) are essential. The authors then discuss the essential capabilities of the learning infrastructure. These include support for backward design, authentic assessments, various learning workflows, personalization and adaptivity, and learning and performance analytics.


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