Learning, Teaching, and Scholarship in a Digital Age
United States Department of Education · Lear (Spain) · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Since Windschitl first outlined a research agenda for the World Wide Web and classroom research, significant shifts have occurred in the nature of the Web and the conceptualization of classrooms. Such shifts have affected constructs of learning and instruction, and paths for future research. This article discusses the characteristics of Web 2.0 that differentiate it from the Web of the 1990s, describes the contextual conditions in which students use the Web today, and examines how Web 2.0’s unique capabilities and youth’s proclivities in using it influence learning and teaching. Two important themes, learner participation and creativity and online identity formation, emerged from this analysis and support a…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 306.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 111
Authors
3- CGChristine GreenhowCorresponding
United States Department of Education, Lear (Spain), International Society of Differentiation, The University of Texas at Austin, Bethel University
- BRBeth Robelia
United States Department of Education, Lear (Spain), International Society of Differentiation, The University of Texas at Austin, Bethel University
- JEJoan E. Hughes
United States Department of Education, Lear (Spain), International Society of Differentiation, The University of Texas at Austin, Bethel University
Topics & keywords
- Conceptualization
- Scholarship
- Creativity
- Web 2.0
- Educational research
- The Internet
- Educational technology
- Sociology
- Quality Education