ARTICLE 7 – CRITICAL & ANALYTICAL REFLECTIONS ABOUT ONLINE LEARNING

‘Learning to learn online’ has been a gradual, non-linear process. During the completion of the unit EDFD459, Learning Spaces, the educator and I have been “separated” by “time” and “distance” (Dempsey & Van Eck, 2002, p. 283), two key aspects which can influence investment in effective online learning.  At first, I found myself within the …

ARTICLE 6 – CLASSROOM AND BEYOND

I believe that students’ capacity to involve themselves in effortful learning is influenced by the environment in which it takes place.  Explore examples of programs ‘beyond’ the classroom: scienceworks, Sydney Opera House, Chau Chak Wing Museum Image 1 retrieved from: Read, M. A. (2010). Contemplating design: Listening to children’s preferences about classroom design. Creative Education, …

ARTICLE 5 – GROUP, COLLABORATIVE AND COOPERATIVE LEARNING SPACES

Within interactive learning spaces, students are granted opportunities to ‘grapple’ with content as a ‘community of learners’, developing valuable intrapersonal and interpersonal skills (Smith, 2003, Johnson et al., 1994). It is insufficient for educators to simply “transmit knowledge” (Bada & Olusegun, 2015, p.66) as students must be encouraged to develop social/cognitive skills through interaction. I …

ARTICLE 4 – THE LIMINAL LEARNING SPACE

“Real learning requires stepping into the unknown, which initiates a rupture in knowing” (Schwartzman, 2010, p.38) This ‘rupture’ underpins the ‘liminal’ learning space. Learners are beckoned to accept that they are within the unknown and untether themselves from prior understandings. In order for change to be ‘transformative’ and ‘progressive’, learners experience a “deep, structural shift …

ARTICLE 3 – THE ONLINE LEARNING SPACE

Considering the “ubiquity and pervasiveness of digital technologies within contemporary society” (Framroze, 2017, p.2), it is no surprise that it is used as a tool within the realm of education to assist and enhance learning.  It can act as a catalyst, promoting excitement and limiting disengagement through providing variation from the traditional ‘pen and paper’ …

ARTICLE 2 – THE PERSONAL LEARNING SPACE

Learning is a lifelong process, intrinsically connected to all human practices and therefore “when we fail to take control of our education, we fail to take control of our lives” (Hayes, 1998, p.14).  Churchill et al. (2013) associate the term ‘learner’ with notions of ‘agency’ and ‘autonomy’, positioning learning as a student-centred ‘activity’. Within the …

ARTICLE 1 – LEARNING TO LEARN ONLINE

Greenhow et al. (2022) note that the rise of COVID-19 greatly impacted the form in which learning takes place, being that ‘face to face’ became ‘screen to screen’. Despite presenting opportunities to learn in a new manner, Martin et al. (2020) suggest that a lack of familiarity with online learning can decrease learner engagement as …

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started