Making the Transition to E-Learning: Strategies and Issues: Strategies and IssuesHigher education institutions around the world are increasingly turning to e-learning as a way of dealing with growing and changing student populations. Education for the knowledge society means new skills and knowledge are needed and it means that lifelong learning has become a necessity. Higher education institutions are looking to e-learning to provide convenient and flexible access to high quality education and training that is needed to meet these emerging demands. As they implement e-learning, however, institutions are struggling with the many pedagogical, organizational and technological issues. Making the Transition to E-learning: Strategies and Issues provides insights and experiences from e-learning experts from around the world. It addresses the institutional, pedagogical, and technological issues that higher education institutions are grappling with as they move from conventional face-to-face teaching to e-learning in its diverse forms. |
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Many institutions have coherent, well-developed elearning strategies, robust and well-funded organizational structures, and high quality e-learning products ranging from individual modules to fully online elearning programs.
This chapter is concerned with how individuals may examine the potential for social change arising from interactions in an e-learning environment. We explore continuing education as the site for e-learning in the context of developing a ...
[in which] the key agent of influence and change is neither the government nor the corporation, but rather the individual, acting alone or with others to strengthen civic life. In turn, how individuals think about themselves and others, ...
In a similar way, the map helped individuals conceptualize the space within which their nation resided, along with adjoining space that they might aspire to control. Dots depicting the emerging national group's cities were contrasted ...
As we have observed, the census, the map, and the museum provided institutional bases for imagining a nation that was more extensive and more inclusive than what an individual could observe firsthand. Copyright © 2007, Idea Group Inc.
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Moving to Blended Delivery in a Polytechnic Shifting the Mindset of Faculty and Institutions | 33 |
Strategic Planning for ELearning in a Polytechnic | 47 |
Using ELearning to Promote Excellence in Polytechnic Education | 66 |
Teaching and Learning in a Laptop Nursing Program Institutional and Pedagogical Issues | 84 |
Learning and Teaching Issues | 103 |
ELearning in Higher Education The Need for a New Pedagogy | 104 |
Empowering Learners to Interact Effectively in Asynchronous Discussion Activites | 208 |
A Frameowrk for Choosing Communication Activites in ELearning | 229 |
Using ProblemBased Learning in Online Courses A New Hope? | 243 |
Instructional Design and Technological Issues | 265 |
Fast Prototyping as a Communication Catalyst for ELearning Design | 266 |
Educational Design as a Key Issues in Planning for Quality Improvement | 284 |
Cognitive Tools for SelfRegulated ELearning | 300 |
Adopting Tools for Online Synchronous Communication Issues and Strategies | 318 |
New Skills and Ways of Working Faculty Development for ELearning | 121 |
Using ELearning to Transform Large Class Teaching | 139 |
The Continuing Struggle for Community and Content in Blended Technology Courses in Higher Education | 157 |
Toward Effective Instruction in ELearning Environments | 173 |
The Plain Hard Work of Teaching Online Strategies for Instructors | 191 |
Knowledge is PowerPoint Slideware in ELearning | 335 |
About the Editors | 350 |
About the Authors | 352 |
Index | 361 |
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Making the Transition to E-learning: Strategies and Issues Mark Bullen,Diane P. Janes äÁèÁÕµÑÇÍÂèÒ§ - 2007 |
Making the Transition to E-learning: Strategies and Issues Mark Bullen,Diane P. Janes äÁèÁÕµÑÇÍÂèÒ§ - 2007 |