| Claude Gagné's profileCLAUDE GAGNE'S LEARNING ...PhotosBlogLists | Help |
|
|
Privacy: A grounded theory of information sharing behavior in a personal learning spacePaper presented by Maryam N. Razavi and Lee Iverson from Universty of Bristih Columbia
ABSTRACT This paper presents a grounded theory of information sharing behavior of the users of a personal learning space. A personal learning space is an environment consisted of weblog, ePortfolio, and social networking functionality. It is primarily used within education as a tool to enhance learning, but is also used as a knowledge management tool and to develop communities of practice. Our results identify privacy as a main concern for users of a personal learning space and illustrate challenges users face in ensuring privacy of their information and strategies they employ to achieve the desired level of privacy. We then identify factors that affect users' decisions regarding disclosure of their personal artifacts to various people and groups in a personal learning space. The three main themes as emerged in our study include current stage in the information life cycle, the nature of trust between the owner and the receiver of information, and the dynamics of the group or community within which the information is being shared. Together, these themes portrayed a clearer picture of users’ perspective on the privacy of their information in a personal learning space. The findings offer some ideas about how to create privacy management mechanisms for personal learning spaces that are based on users’ mental model of information privacy. Practical implications of the results are also discussed.
Benefits of Cooperative Learning in Weblog Networks (Wang; Fang)Jenny Wang and Yuehchiu present a study that explores the benefits of cooperative learning in weblog networks. Results indicate that two thirds of learners agreed that using asynchronous communication improved the students’ academic development. Instructional Blogging: Promoting Interactivity, Student-Centered Learning, and Peer Input (Stuart Glogoff)Outlines the ways in which blogs can enable receptive learning, directive learning, and guided discovery, as well as build community, promote interactivity, and increase student comprehension. Note: Registration required, but free. Development, validation and use of the Online Learning Environment Survey (Aldridge & Fraser)This article reports the development, validation and use of a survey for assessing students' perceptions of their e-learning environments. The article concludes by saying that teaching and learning does not improve as a result of ICT alone; it is improved when it is grounded in practical learning theory. Full .pdf article here. Blogs: Personal e-learning spaces (Lamshed, Berry & Armstrong)This project investigates the effectiveness of using web logging in learning. It looks at the background of blogs as well as its different uses. It also presents several case studies related to education and training. Full .pdf file here. (104 pages) Learning with Weblogs: An Empirical InvestigationThe study investigates the impact of weblog use on individual learning in a university environment. The research sought to empirically determine whether the keeping of on-going (web based) learning logs throughout a semester would result in better overall student performance. Results indicate that weblog performance is a significant predictor for learning outcome, while traditional coursework is not. (Helen S. Du) Full text here. Exploring the use of blogs as learning spaces in higher education (Jeremy Williams)This paper explores the potential of blogs as learning spaces for students in the higher education sector. (Australian Journal of Educational Technology). Full .pdf file here. Learning Webs: Learning in Weblog NetworksThis artcile suggests that there is a growing number of people making use of personal webpublishing and weblogs to support their own learning outside any institutionally organized system of instruction. The research says that these people exhibit skills for the initiation and maintenance of personally learning projects. They construct their personal learning domains on the fly while they are listening, observing, and sometimes contacting others who publish visible traces of their meaning making activities on the Web. Full .pdf link here. |
|
|