This special theme issue of the Malaysian Journal of Distance Education provides a forum for multiple engagements with the relationships (or lack thereof) between cultural and linguistic diversity and new information communications technologies, in the context of distance education policies and practices in contemporary postcompulsory education in the Asia Pacific region. The starting point for these engagements is understanding and interrogating the concept of ‘multiliteracies’, most commonly associated with the New London Group, so-called because of a meeting of group members in New London, New Hampshire, USA in September 1994 that resulted in a seminal paper in the Spring 1996 issue of the Harvard Educational Review (http://www.a...
The sheer diversity of educational research has often been attributed as one of the sources of diffi...
Over the last decade, the field of distance education (and e-learning) has substantially strengthene...
This presentation was created to discuss our book for a larger group. However, authors were asked t...
This special theme issue of the Malaysian Journal of Distance Education provides a forum for multipl...
This special theme issue of the Malaysian Journal of Distance Education provides a forum for multipl...
This Special Issue of Higher Learning Research Communications (HLRC) is dedicated to research in con...
It is an honor and a pleasure to have the December 2013 issue of Higher Learning Research Communicat...
Online learning is increasingly playing an integral part in distance education. The explanation for ...
As is generally well known, the project of intercultural communication originated on two successive ...
Multiliteracies and distance education: diversities and technologies in contemporary universities is...
We begin our editorial with a profound thank you to Dr. Michael Grahame Moore for his willingness to...
Valuing more open and equitable approaches to practice and research in the field of flexible, open, ...
Any discussion of literacy is necessarily selective and is likely to engender or respond to debates....
In the 21st Century, new technologies, in particular interactive multimedia and the internet, challe...
Media and communication research has closely followed the profound transformations undergone by glob...
The sheer diversity of educational research has often been attributed as one of the sources of diffi...
Over the last decade, the field of distance education (and e-learning) has substantially strengthene...
This presentation was created to discuss our book for a larger group. However, authors were asked t...
This special theme issue of the Malaysian Journal of Distance Education provides a forum for multipl...
This special theme issue of the Malaysian Journal of Distance Education provides a forum for multipl...
This Special Issue of Higher Learning Research Communications (HLRC) is dedicated to research in con...
It is an honor and a pleasure to have the December 2013 issue of Higher Learning Research Communicat...
Online learning is increasingly playing an integral part in distance education. The explanation for ...
As is generally well known, the project of intercultural communication originated on two successive ...
Multiliteracies and distance education: diversities and technologies in contemporary universities is...
We begin our editorial with a profound thank you to Dr. Michael Grahame Moore for his willingness to...
Valuing more open and equitable approaches to practice and research in the field of flexible, open, ...
Any discussion of literacy is necessarily selective and is likely to engender or respond to debates....
In the 21st Century, new technologies, in particular interactive multimedia and the internet, challe...
Media and communication research has closely followed the profound transformations undergone by glob...
The sheer diversity of educational research has often been attributed as one of the sources of diffi...
Over the last decade, the field of distance education (and e-learning) has substantially strengthene...
This presentation was created to discuss our book for a larger group. However, authors were asked t...