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Exploring students' understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learning in Higher Education

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conference contribution
posted on 2011-10-24, 09:41 authored by Lucinda Kerawalla, Shailey Minocha, Gráinne Conole, Gill Kirkup, Matt Schencks, Niall Sclater
We focus on exploring students’ understanding of how blogs and blogging can support distance learning in Higher Education. We report on the findings from a survey of 795 distance learners at the UK Open University, and interviews with course designers whose courses utilise blogs. Despite enthusiasm from educators, the survey revealed that students are not enthusiastic about the potential for blogging activities to be built into their courses. Analysis of students’ open-ended comments revealed that some students have positive expectations about blogging facilitating the sharing of material and ideas, for example, whilst the majority expressed concerns about subjectivity. We also discuss some empirically derived guidelines that we have generated that will enable educators to provide the appropriate scaffolds so that students can appropriate blogging tools for their own individual learning needs.

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Citation

Research paper presented at ALT-C 2007: Beyond Control: Association of Learning Technologies Conference, 14th International Conference of the Association for Learning Technology, 4-6 September 2007, Nottingham, UK.

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  • NA (Not Applicable or Unknown)

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Research paper presented at ALT-C 2007: Beyond Control: Association of Learning Technologies Conference

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2007

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2011-10-24

Language

en

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