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Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies
DOI link for Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies
Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies book
Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies
DOI link for Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies
Hybrid spaces and the impact of new technologies book
ABSTRACT
The recent concern with post-compulsory learning and teaching methods has been partly driven by a frustration with the perceived lack of impact of computing and networking on universities’ and colleges’ ways of working. A newish discipline – ‘learning technologies’ – has developed to better understand how changing information and communication technologies can support learning, based mainly on a social constructivist understanding of learning (Laurillard 2001; Conole and Oliver 2007; Beetham and Sharpe 2007) but this remains an under-resourced and often marginalised area in the post-compulsory education sector. Of course learning technologies have a longer history than just the recent exponential growth of personal computing, mobile devices and the internet. In the UK, for example, the Open University has built up a considerable expertise in distance learning design over the last 40 years, based fi rst on a mixture of course books and study guides supported by video and audio tapes, and TV programmes; and then pre and early web-based computer-based conference (CMC) capabilities such as First Class , which enabled online tutorial and seminar conversations, ‘e-moderated’ by a tutor (Salmon 2000).