IMPLEMENTING AND EVALUATION OF LEARNING SEQUENCE METHOD: THIRD EXPERIMENT
الكلمات المفتاحية:
eLearning; Learning Sequence، Learning styles، Instructional design، CALالملخص
It is well established that people learn differently from one another and there has been considerable research into how these differences can be characterised. The work by Honey and Mumford is widely recognised and proposes 4 learning styles, Activist, Pragmatist, Theorist and Reflector. Adaptive hypermedia systems have been used to allow various types of learning material, related to the different stages of the Kolb learning cycle, to be presented to students with different learning styles in different orders.
Work being undertaken at The College Of Computer Technology Tripoli is designed to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach. E-learning material to support various different learning activities has been created for a first year undergraduate course on computer technology. The activities have been designed to match the learning styles identified by [1,2]. The material has been presented to different groups of students with the activities in different sequences. The students were later tested to establish their learning style and where the learning style matched the delivery order, students reported that they had made better progress than those students for whom there was a mismatch. Further work is planned to verify this preliminary finding by investigating whether an objective measure of the students' achievement matches their perceptions.
المراجع
Honey, Peter; Mumford, Alan (1986). Learning styles questionnaire: 80-item version. London: Maidenhead. ISBN 1902899296. OCLC 889619009.
Honey, P. (2006), The Learning Styles Questionnaire: 40Item Version Peter Honey Publications Ltd., Maidenhead, Berkshire, UK evidence?" (PDF). Medical Education. 46 (7): 634–635. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2923.2012.04273.x.
Garrison, D., & Anderson, T. (2013). eLearning in the 21st Century: A Framework for Research and Practice. London: RoutledgeFalmer.
Ramanujam, P. R. (2015, 19th September). Global Trends in Distance Open Learning: Challenges before the Developing World. Paper presented at the UNESCOIICBA,Addis Ababa.
MacDonald, C., Stodel, E., Farres, L., Breithaupt, K., & Gabriel, M. (2001). The Demand- Learning Model A Framework for Web-Based Learning. Internet and Higher Education, 4, 9-30.Driven
Kraus, L., Reed, W., & Fitzgerald, G. (2013). The Effects of Learning Style and Hypermedia Prior Experience on Behavioural Disorders Knowledge and time on Task: A Case-Based Hypermedia Environment. Computers in Human Behaviour, 17, 125-140.
Raths, D. (2014). Next Century Skills. InfoWorld Group, Inc, 21(16), 12(91).
Thorne, K. (2003). Blended Learning: How to Integrate Online and Traditional Learning. Uk.: Kogan Page Ltd.
Singh, H., & Reed, C. (2013). Achieving Success with Blended Learning. Retrieved 9th May.
Kolb, David A. (2015) [1984]. Experiential learning: experience as the source of learning and development (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education. ISBN 9780133892406. OCLC 909815841. 23: 44–52. doi:10.1016/j.lindif.2012.10.009.
Honey, P. and Mumford, A. (1992) The Manual of Learning Styles, 3rd edition, Published and distributed by Peter Honey.
Honey, P. and Mumford A. (1986), The Manual of Learning Styles, Second ed. Peter Honey Publications Ltd., Maidenhead, Berkshire, UK.
Rasseneur, D., Jacoboni, P., & Tchounikine, P. (2013). An Approach to Distance Learning Curriculum Appropriation. Paper presented at the 3rd International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies (ICALT’03).
Spiro, R., Felovich, P., Jacobson, M., & Coulson, R. (2014). Cognitive Flexibility, Constructivism, and Hypertext: Random Access Instruction for Advanced Knowledge Acquisition in ill-Structured Domains. Educational Technology.
Lee, Y., & Chen, N. (2015). Group Composition Methods for Cooperative Learning in Web-Based Instructional Systems. Paper presented at the ICCE/ICCAI 2015 Full & Short Papers (Web-Based Learning).
Federico, P. (2014). Learning Styles and Student Attitudes Toward Various Aspects of Network-Based Instruction. Computers in Human Behaviour.
CEO. (2013). The CEO Forum: School Technology and Readiness Report: CEO Forum on Education & Technology.
Hsiang, m. l., Vasu, E. S., Alibrand, M., Atkins, N., & Steelman, J. (2013). Is Everyone on Board: Learning Styles and the Internet. Paper presented at the ICCE/ICCAI (2013) Full & Short Papers (Web-Based Learning), Taiwan.
Musa, A., & Wood, J. (2013, 9th-7th November). Transferring to Web-Based Learning: A survey of 22 studies evaluating Web-Based Learning. Paper presented at the 2nd European Conference on eLearning, Glasgow, Scotland U.K.
Agil, A . Ashref A. Kashkusha (2019) ELearning and Learning Styles: Implementing and Evaluation of Learning Sequence Method, Tripoli- Libya.
Stash, N., Cristea, A., and De Bra, P. (2014) Authoring of Learning Style in Adaptive Hypermedia Problems and Solutions WWW’04 Education Track, ACM, New York.
Papadatou-Pastou, Marietta; Gritzali, Maria; Barrable, Alexia (2018). "The learning styles educational neuromyth: lack of agreement between teachers' judgments, self-assessment, and students' intelligence". Frontiers in Education. 3. doi:10.3389/feduc.2018.00105.
Kollöffel, Bas (February 2016). "Exploring the relation between visualizer–verbalizer cognitive styles and performance with visual or verbal learning material". Computers & Education. 58 (2): 697–706. doi:10.1016/j.compedu.2011.09.016.
Wang, K., Wang, T. and Wang, W. (2017), " Learning styles and formative assessment strategy: enhancing student achievement in Web-based learning", Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, Vol.29, pp. 207-217.
التنزيلات
منشور
كيفية الاقتباس
إصدار
القسم
الرخصة
الحقوق الفكرية (c) 2019 Agil M. Agil
هذا العمل مرخص بموجب Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.