Facilitating active learning in distance education: An experience from India

Author(s):  
Sujatha Jagannath ◽  
Rajshri Jobanputra
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Dean ◽  
Carol Considine

2020 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 18068
Author(s):  
Raisa Bazaliy

The author studies information and communication resources that increase students' academic and professional skills, their activity in creative research. The article considers new promising areas of cooperation between subjects of the educational process. The focus is on the study of forms and means of distance education at the technical university using educational and information platforms. The article summarizes the comparison of the use of interactive and active learning methods, and presents the results of the study. The following research methods were used: the analysis of scientific and theoretical, psychological and pedagogical literature on the topic of distance education, foreign and domestic experience in using multimedia and information content on the Internet, questionnaires, testing of bachelors in humanitarian and technical fields.


Author(s):  
Irina Abakumova ◽  
Irina Bakaeva ◽  
Anastasia Grishina ◽  
Elena Dyakova

10.28945/2431 ◽  
2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Pencek ◽  
Dennis Bialaszewski

This paper discusses the planning and observations of a group project using the Internet between two schools, one in Indiana and one in North Carolina. Students at each school are members of a group assigned to do some financial research on the Internet. Specifically, two companies are researched by each group and two financial ratios computed and compared. Finance students in North Carolina have the assignment to explain the meaning of the two ratios to their colleagues in Indiana, who are mainly freshmen Management Information Systems students. The goals are to promote the use of the Internet, active learning, and teamwork. Despite some problems, the project is deemed to be a success.


Author(s):  
William R. Hamilton ◽  
Victor A. Padron ◽  
Jennifer A. Henriksen

The economic climate is pushing educational institutions toward larger class sizes and distance education. As both physical and virtual class sizes increase, the use of active learning becomes a challenge. The authors report a decade-long experience converting students from passive to active learners in a large classroom with an asynchronous distance component. As class size increases and a distance pathway is added, the foundational pedagogy, technology, active learning strategies, the integration of distance and campus pathways, and the teaching of intangibles are recounted. This chapter describes a model that achieves a reasonable, efficient, learner-centered, delivery of an educational experience.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. e0251352
Author(s):  
Julia Holzer ◽  
Selma Korlat ◽  
Christian Haider ◽  
Martin Mayerhofer ◽  
Elisabeth Pelikan ◽  
...  

The sudden switch to distance education to contain the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally altered adolescents’ lives around the globe. The present research aims to identify psychological characteristics that relate to adolescents’ well-being in terms of positive emotion and intrinsic learning motivation, and key characteristics of their learning behavior in a situation of unplanned, involuntary distance education. Following Self-Determination Theory, experienced competence, autonomy, and relatedness were assumed to relate to active learning behavior (i.e., engagement and persistence), and negatively relate to passive learning behavior (i.e., procrastination), mediated via positive emotion and intrinsic learning motivation. Data were collected via online questionnaires in altogether eight countries from Europe, Asia, and North America (N = 25,305) and comparable results across countries were expected. Experienced competence was consistently found to relate to positive emotion and intrinsic learning motivation, and, in turn, active learning behavior in terms of engagement and persistence. The study results further highlight the role of perceived relatedness for positive emotion. The high proportions of explained variance speak in favor of taking these central results into account when designing distance education in times of COVID-19.


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