Realizing the potential for web-based communication provides a challenge for educators. The purpose here is to report students’ behavioural and cognitive strategies for active learning when using an unrestricted blog in an academic context. This provides insight into how students are making sense of the incorporation of Web 2.0 technology into higher education. An analytical framework was created to investigate the willingness and competence of students to engage in the social and virtual construction of knowledge. The analysis indicated that, while the students appear to have wanted to complete the task efficiently, the process of critically constructing knowledge was not pursued with vigour. The main implication is therefore that students...
Technological development has spawned new opportunities for the construction and dissemination of ne...
The chapter reports an empirically grounded investigation into the self-motivated course-related blo...
The small but developing literature on weblogging underscores its potential as an effective learning...
Realizing the potential for web-based communication provides a challenge for educators. The purpose ...
With a variety of asynchronous communication and collaboration tools and environments such as wikis,...
We focus on exploring students’ understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learnin...
Research has shown that active learning techniques increase students’ ability to find solutions to p...
As the Web has afforded new ways to network people dispersed across a broad, invisible system of byt...
How is it possible to evidence whether students are engaging with a course? What can be done to incr...
We focus on exploring students’ understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learnin...
We report on a study involving Masters-level students who blogged as a part of a distance-learning c...
The outcome of a small inquiry exploring the use of blogs with a class of post-graduate students is ...
This study investigates the perspectives of part-time students and academics on the uses of blogs wi...
Since early 2001 several institutions and many individual teachers have incorporated blogging into t...
Since the early years of the twenty-first century there has been an increasing interest in using Web...
Technological development has spawned new opportunities for the construction and dissemination of ne...
The chapter reports an empirically grounded investigation into the self-motivated course-related blo...
The small but developing literature on weblogging underscores its potential as an effective learning...
Realizing the potential for web-based communication provides a challenge for educators. The purpose ...
With a variety of asynchronous communication and collaboration tools and environments such as wikis,...
We focus on exploring students’ understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learnin...
Research has shown that active learning techniques increase students’ ability to find solutions to p...
As the Web has afforded new ways to network people dispersed across a broad, invisible system of byt...
How is it possible to evidence whether students are engaging with a course? What can be done to incr...
We focus on exploring students’ understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learnin...
We report on a study involving Masters-level students who blogged as a part of a distance-learning c...
The outcome of a small inquiry exploring the use of blogs with a class of post-graduate students is ...
This study investigates the perspectives of part-time students and academics on the uses of blogs wi...
Since early 2001 several institutions and many individual teachers have incorporated blogging into t...
Since the early years of the twenty-first century there has been an increasing interest in using Web...
Technological development has spawned new opportunities for the construction and dissemination of ne...
The chapter reports an empirically grounded investigation into the self-motivated course-related blo...
The small but developing literature on weblogging underscores its potential as an effective learning...