Personalised and self regulated learning in the Web 2.0 era: International exemplars of innovative pedagogy using social software
Australian Catholic University · Charles Sturt University
Abstract
<blockquote><p>Research findings in recent years provide compelling evidence of the importance of encouraging student control over the learning process as a whole. The socially based tools and technologies of the Web 2.0 movement are capable of supporting informal conversation, reflexive dialogue and collaborative content generation, enabling access to a wide raft of ideas and representations. Used appropriately, these tools can shift control to the learner, through promoting learner agency, autonomy and engagement in social networks that straddle multiple real and virtual learning spaces independent of physical, geographic, institutional and organisational boundaries. As argued in this article,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 162.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 75
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Educational technology
- Agency (philosophy)
- Pedagogy
- Conversation
- Collaborative learning
- Computer science
- Sociology
- Knowledge management