scholarly journals El entorno personal de aprendizaje como estrategia asociada con el desarrollo de habilidades de autogestión del aprendizaje en estudiantes de licenciatura en administración

2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alma Elizabeth Merla González ◽  
María Magdalena Madrigal Lozano ◽  
Claudia Dörfer
Keyword(s):  

Esta investigación se enfoca en el tema de los Entornos Personales de Aprendizaje o Personal Learning Enviroment (PLE), como estrategia pedagógica asociada con el desarrollo de habilidades metacognitivas de autorregulación y autonomía que permiten al estudiante autogestionar su aprendizaje en un entorno virtual. Desde esta perspectiva, se realizó un estudio no experimental, transaccional y de alcance descriptivo para conocer los componentes del PLE (estrategias, procesos y tecnologías) que utiliza el estudiante, para desarrollar sus habilidades metacognitivas de autogestión del aprendizaje, como procesos convenientes para cumplir los propósitos de formación de una Unidad de Aprendizaje del programa de Licenciatura en Administración, impartida en modalidad virtual en contexto de pandemia por COVID-19, por una universidad pública del Noreste de México. En el proceso participaron 42 estudiantes inscritos en el semestre febrero – julio de 2021. El análisis de los datos se realizó mediante pruebas no paramétricas para generar resultados descriptivos sobre las herramientas digitales del PLE del estudiante en el desarrollo de sus procesos de autogestión del aprendizaje, particularmente en acciones relacionadas con la autogestión de la información. Los hallazgos muestran que los recursos tecnológicos que emplean los estudiantes en la configuración de su PLE, marcan una alta tendencia hacia los medios audiovisuales para fortalecer sus habilidades metacognitivas de autonomía y autogestión del aprendizaje.

Author(s):  
Hubert J. M. Hermans

This book investigates the psychological background of contemporary societal problems such as hate speech, authoritarianism, and divisive forms of identity politics. As a response to these phenomena, the book presents the basic premise that a democratic society needs citizens who do more than just express their preference for free elections, freedom of speech, and respect for constitutional rights. Democracy has vitality only if it is rooted in the hearts and minds of its participants who are willing to plant it in the fertile soil of their own selves. In the milieu of tension created by societal power clashes and absolute-truth pretensions, the book investigates how opposition, cooperation, and participation work as innovative forces in a democratic self. Democracy is understood as a personal learning process and as a dialogical play between thought and counter-thought, between imagination and counter-imagination, and between emotion and reason. The book is written for social scientists, teachers, and journalists.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 237428952199423
Author(s):  
Andres E. Mindiola Romero ◽  
Candice C. Black ◽  
Christopher R. Jackson

Our program in is a 4-year combined anatomic pathology (AP) and clinical pathology (CP) program located in New Hampshire. Prior to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, double-headed sign-outs and multi-headed scope didactic conferences took place daily. On the autopsy service, cases were performed in-house under attending supervision, and forensic cases were performed at the off-site Office of the Medical Examiner. In CP, residents engaged in weekly didactic CP lectures and engaged in in-person resident-attending discussions, laboratory rounds, and direct patient contact on a daily basis. Institutional Universal Guidelines from the Emergency Order from New Hampshire were imposed at the beginning of the pandemic. These included exposure mitigation and employee screening strategies. Changes to resident rotations and didactic sessions, strategies to maintain resident wellness, and the program director perspectives are described. Amid the pandemic, digital pathology, teleconferencing platforms, and social media became important resources for pathology education. Digital platforms allowed groups of people to communicate and watch live presentations while social distancing. In AP, whole slide imaging allowed both attendings and residents to scan slides for personal learning, slide conferences, and didactic learning sessions. Following these measures, we supported the clinical needs of our medical center and learning needs of our residents while enacting social distancing and prevention guidelines early in the pandemic. Although the full impact of COVID-19 on pathology residency programs is still unknown, we incorporated new facets of communication technologies. These were immensely helpful in maintaining social distancing and helping to reduce the spread of disease.


Author(s):  
Sebastian H. D. Fiedler ◽  
Terje Väljataga

This paper reviews and critiques how the notion of PLEs has been conceptualised and discussed in literature so far. It interprets the variability of its interpretations and conceptualisations as the expression of a fundamental contradiction between patterns of activity and digital instrumentation in formal education on one hand, and individual experimentation and experience within the digital realm on the other. It is suggested to place this contradiction in the larger socio-historic context of an ongoing media transformation. Thus, the paper argues against the prevalent tendency to base the conceptualisation of PLEs almost exclusively on Web 2.0 technologies that are currently available or emerging, while underlying patterns of control and responsibility often remain untouched. Instead, it proposes to scrutinise these patterns and to focus educational efforts on supporting adult learners to model their learning activities and potential (personal learning) environments while exploring the digital realm.


2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 337-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Amine Chatti ◽  
Simona Dakova ◽  
Hendrik Thus ◽  
Ulrik Schroeder

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