scholarly journals Predictive Factors for the Intention to Adopt a Mobile Blackboard Course Management System: The Case Study of University of Hai�l in Saudi Arabia

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Ayman N. Alkhaldi1 ◽  
Abdallah M. Abualkishik ◽  
◽  
Author(s):  
Yasemin Koc ◽  
Onur Cikrikcili ◽  
Ahmet Yucel ◽  
Hong-In Cheng ◽  
Y. Batu Salman

Author(s):  
Brian G. Mackie ◽  
Norbert L. Ziemer ◽  
Nancy L. Russo ◽  
Wayne E. Mackie

This case study describes the development of a course management system. The system was named Community/course Action/interaction Management System (CAMS) to reflect the goal of using it to create a sense of collaboration and community. The iterative, participative development process and the evolution of the system are described in detail.


Author(s):  
Amanda Gordon

If homework assignments that require the use of a computer are given to students, should they be penalized for what their family cannot afford? In this case study, Mrs. Lincoln, who developed her course using a web-based course management system named Moodle, spent time working on her Moodle pages and posting assignments. She then explained to students how the site worked. She also spent a week in the computer lab training her students to become proficient using the Moodle application. After a couple of weeks, Mrs. Lincoln noticed that a quarter of her students were not completing their Moodle based assignments.


2009 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robyn Schell ◽  
David Kaufman

The web has the potential to offer an environment that can support standardized medical education to students dispersed in time or place and, in the process, respond to reduced availability of patients for practice. This exploratory article describes how we evaluated critical thinking in an online collaborative Problem-based Learning (PBL) tutorial built on a platform integrating a well-known course management system and a voice-over the Internet communications tool. We discuss the process and results of evaluating the tutorials by adapting and applying an earlier framework used to measure the level of critical thinking taking place in collaborative online PBL tutorials. Our results indicate that this framework could be used as a method to compare levels of critical thinking between tutorial groups as well as tutorial variables such as case study formats and the types of technology used to support the sessions.


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