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result(s) for
"Theories of Learning"
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Models of disability as distinguishing factor: a theoretical framework of inclusive education and the application to a literature review
by
Eckert, Christine
,
Perels, Franziska
,
Selisko, Tom Jannick
in
Academic Accommodations (Disabilities)
,
Disability
,
Education
2024
This study reports on a newly developed framework of inclusive education, which sets out from three distinct models of disability (medical, relational, and social) and incorporates matching learning theory (behaviourist, cognitivist, and constructivist) and the placement of children with disabilities (exclusive, functional inclusive, full inclusive). Central to the framework is the contradiction between functional and full inclusive concepts, which are traced back to the conflict between a deterministic (medical and relational) and social model of disability. Applied to a complementary review of the literature published between 2006 and 2021, the framework sets the basis for structuring content analysis. An analysis of N = 685 reports shows the coherence of the framework as well as an increase in total publications, especially with full inclusive concepts. Additionally, analysis of the applied methodology shows a predominant role of qualitative methods, which is coherent with the constructivist perception of full inclusion. Implications are discussed regarding inconsistencies and barriers to inclusive education.
Journal Article
Politicization in Process: Developing Political Concepts, Practices, Epistemologies, and Identities Through Activist Engagement
2019
In this article, we explore longitudinal video data from the student activist group Fossil Free UofT to analyze what it means to become politicized. We argue that politicization is a sociocultural learning process, not merely a process of conceptual development or cognitive change, but a simultaneous process of conceptual, practical, epistemological, and identity development. In the analytic sections, we tease apart aspects of politicization, showcasing examples of transformation that center political concept development, changing practices, reconfigured ways of knowing, and new identities in formation.
Journal Article
Virtual Reality in Education: A Review of Learning Theories, Approaches and Methodologies for the Last Decade
by
Krouska, Akrivi
,
Troussas, Christos
,
Sgouropoulou, Cleo
in
Cognition & reasoning
,
Constructivism
,
Discovery learning
2023
In the field of education, virtual reality (VR) offers learners an immersive and interactive learning experience, allowing them to comprehend challenging concepts and ideas more efficiently and effectively. VR technology has enabled educators to develop a wide range of learning experiences, from virtual field trips to complex simulations, that may be utilized to engage students and help them learn. Learning theories and approaches are essential for understanding how students learn and how to design effective learning experiences. This study examines the most recent published findings in educational theories and approaches connected to the use of VR systems for educational and tutoring purposes. Seventeen research studies that meet the search criteria have been found in the database, and each of them focuses on at least one learning theory or learning approach related to educational systems using VR. These studies yielded five educational approaches, one methodology, five learning theories and one theoretical framework, which are presented in the context of virtual reality in education. These include constructivism learning, experiential learning, gamification of learning, John Dewey’s theory of learning by doing, flow theory, Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning, design thinking, learning through problem solving, scientific discovery learning, social constructivism, cognitive load theory and the Technology Pedagogical Content Knowledge Framework (TPACK). A major finding of this study is that constructivism learning is the most often utilized learning theory/method, Experiential Learning is most appropriate for VR and the gamification of learning has the greatest future potential.
Journal Article
Professional development learning environments (PDLEs) embedded in a collaborative online learning environment (COLE): Moving towards a new conception of online professional learning
by
vanOostveen, Roland
,
Bullock, Shawn
,
Desjardins, François
in
Collaborative learning
,
Educational Environment
,
Educational Research
2019
Teaching, and education in general, remain firmly rooted in the practices of the past and continue to resist the implementation of strategies and theories arising from educational research. Consequently, significant reforms have been slow to take hold in educational systems around the world. Much of the reluctance can be attributed to a widely-held misconception of the nature of learning. This project attempts to address this misconception through the development of Professional Development Learning Environments (PDLEs are a series of learning tasks and a video-based case study) embedded in an online learning environment that requires the collaboration of users to solve problems. To use a Problem-Based-Learning (PBL) approach in an online context requires a major paradigm shift as well as using tools that were not designed specifically for such a student-driven, process-centred pedagogical paradigm. This becomes a problem when online resources and systems are used for supporting in-service teacher in their pursuit of furthering their education. Although the current theories of learning and teaching may present the philosophical content of such courses, the online strategies used often conflict with the theory. To study the formal implementation of PBL as a social-constructivist pedagogical approach, into an online learning environment to provide the tools for e-learning that would be closer in design to the current thinking on the very nature of learning, the PDLEs were modified to become small reusable video clips with a structure designed to facilitate PBL and focus learners’ attention on higher order thinking skills rather than specifically on content. These modified PDLEs are referred to as Problem-Based Learning Objects (PBLOs). The PBLOs were embedded into a prototype of a Collaborative Online Learning Environment (COLE) which was developed simultaneously. The entire system was pilot tested with small groups. Preliminary results show that although many technical difficulties remain to be solved, using the environment does show evidence of some effect on beliefs about personal theories of learning, causing shifts from technical issues to those surrounding processes of learning. Our preliminary research has called attention to the potential ability of PBLO/COLE to disrupt conventional, transmission-based conceptions of online learning as content delivery. At the same time, however, our preliminary work has also indicated that learners who are not used to the collaborative opportunities provided within PBLO/COLE may still hold traditional orientations to teaching and learning as a “gold standard” to which all other options are compared. A purposeful direction for our future research will entail working with learners in PBLO/COLE over a sustained period so that they may engage in an online experience grounded in principles of socio-constructivism.
Journal Article
Construction of a teaching mechanism for ideological and political theory courses in universities based on deep learning theory
2024
This study focuses on the problem of 'teachers' teaching' and 'students' learning' in college education courses. It aims to introduce the Deep Learning theory into the teaching of ideological and political theory courses in universities; deepen the theoretical framework of education courses and the associated learning, maintenance, promotion, and support mechanisms; and realise the modernisation of teaching ideas and strategies. A quantitative and qualitative questionnaire survey was used to analyse respondents' learning experience and effect. Most participants had a significant learning experience and effect under the DL mechanism, a large sense of gain, and a strong cognition and acceptance of IPTCs. We also found positive correlations between whether participants chose political subjects and their learning motivation and interest, between classroom attention and overall sense of gain, and between learning interest and overall sense of gain. The results can inform teaching innovations, optimise teaching strategies, and improve the teaching effect of IPTCs in the digital education era.
Journal Article
Determinants of learning strategies among undergraduate accounting students: a study in an emerging economy
by
Tufuor Kwarteng, Joseph
,
Owusu, Anthony Akwasi
,
Betakan, Maclean Bajimpong
in
Academic Achievement
,
Accounting
,
accounting education
2024
This study examines the determinants of learning strategies employed by undergraduate accounting students in an emerging economy. Specifically, it investigates the impact of institution, teacher, and personal determinants on accounting students' utilisation of a particular learning strategy. In line with Information Process Theory (IPM), a descriptive research design was adopted to conduct a questionnaire-based survey among 246 accounting students from the University of Cape Coast in Ghana, Africa. Multiple regression analysis was employed to analyse the collected data. The study reveals that institutional determinants, including performance assessment and a conducive teaching and learning environment, teacher determinants such as learner-centred teaching methods, and personal determinants like intrinsic motivation and time spent studying, significantly influence accounting students' adoption of deep learning strategies. Conversely, higher workload and engagement in extracurricular activities reduced the use of deep learning strategies, while adherence to the accounting curriculum guide encouraged surface learning.
Journal Article
Experiences of setting short-term learning goals for primary school students and reflecting on their implementation: a case study of one Lithuanian school
by
Ponomariovienė, Jovita
,
Jakavonytė-Staškuvienė, Daiva
in
Case Studies
,
Cognitive Style
,
Competence
2024
The article presents the results of an action research study in which 4th-grade students (aged 10-11) were taught to independently set short-term learning goals and reflect on their implementation by reflecting on their educational experiences. The aim of the study is to investigate and describe the experiences of primary school students in independently setting short-term, one-week personal learning goals, how they reflect on goal implementation methods and achieved results when applying action research. The study involved 50 students and 4 teachers. The research was conducted from May to August 2023. The article presents significant data showing how students formulated short-term goals and how they were able to reflect on their implementation experience. In the empirical part, systematic data are presented on how students relate goals to specific subject content, adherence to class agreements, student behavior in the classroom, independently applied learning strategies, and students' personal characteristics.
Journal Article
Intercultural competence as a perceived predictor of cooperative EFL learning and classroom life among Ethiopian university students
by
Haregu, Zelealem Shitahun
,
Chanie, Birhanu Simegn
,
Filatie, Abiy Yigzaw
in
Adult Education and Lifelong Learning
,
Classroom Practice
,
Classrooms
2024
This study aims to establish the significance of intercultural competence (IC) as a perceived predictor of cooperative EFL learning and classroom life among Ethiopian higher education students. In so doing, a quantitative correlational design was employed to answer the research questions. The data were gathered through Intercultural Competence Scale (ICS) and Classroom Life Measure (CLM) questionnaires administered to 292 randomly sampled undergraduate Communicative English Skills students. Correlation and multiple linear regression were computed via SPSS to analyze the data. The results have revealed that there is a significant positive relationship between perceived IC and cooperative classroom life (CCL) among the target EFL students. Besides, learners' overall IC is found to be a significant positive perceived predictor of CCL, with intercultural knowledge, behavioral performance and affective orientation significantly contributing to this effect as individual IC factors. Based on the findings, fresh insights and implications are offered for intercultural cooperative EFL learning theory, pedagogy and research in higher education.
Journal Article
Effectiveness of social robots as a tutoring and learning companion: a bibliometric analysis
by
Dinesh, Tantri Keerthi
,
Shetty, Ankitha
,
Shetty, Adithya D
in
artificial intelligence
,
Artificial Intelligence; Teaching Assistants; Education Studies; Teaching & Learning - Education; Theories of Learning
,
Bibliometrics
2024
A long-term perspective on how technology will mature is needed whereby robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) have accomplished a consequential and remarkable impact by finding their way into mainstream higher education. Robots have already become an indispensable factor in society and possess high potency as a part of educational technology. Social robot education is limited to complementing the digital aptitude of students in the world of information, and the role of social robots is crucial in polishing students ‘cognitive and social abilities. This study reviews the effectiveness of social robots in education, where we highlight the application of educational robots, surrounded by a blend of social robots and enactive didactics, which could lead to promising ideas for tutoring activities in education. It is empirically proven that social robots can assist with literature, science, or technology education. We synthesize the role of social robots in education and weigh their pros and cons by examining the impact of their appearance on robots’ performance as tutors, tools, or peers in learning exercises. The current study is the first bibliometric analysis that reflects robots’ impact in the education field as tutors and learning companions. A total of 288 articles were reviewed, and the data were extracted to construct an overview through bibliometrics. The outcome of this study paves the way for educational institutes to make informed and fruitful decisions on the applicability of robots, which can help them comprehend the learning styles of students and create knowledgeable and well-adjusted learners.
Journal Article
Emotional configurations of politicization in social justice movements
2020
Purpose
This paper aims to trace how emotion shapes the sense that is made of politics and how politicization can remake and re-mark emotion, giving it new meaning in context. This paper brings together theories of politicization and emotional configurations in learning to interrogate the role emotion plays in the learning of social justice activists.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing on sociocultural learning perspectives, the paper traces politicization processes across the youth climate movement (using video-based interaction analysis) and the animal rights movement (using ethnographic interviews and participant observation).
Findings
Emotional configurations significantly impacted activists’ politicization in terms of what was learned conceptually, the kinds of practices – including emotional practices – that were taken up collectively, the epistemologies that framed social justice work, and the identities that were made salient in collective action. In turn, politicization reshaped how social justice activists made sense of emotion in the course of activist practice.
Social implications
This study is valuable for theorizing social justice learning, so social movement facilitators and educators might design spaces where learning about gender, racialization, colonialism and/or human/more-than-human relations can thrive. By attending to emotional configurations, this study can help facilitate a design that supports and sustains learning for justice.
Originality/value
Emotion remains under-theorized and under-analyzed in the learning sciences, despite indications that emotion enables and constrains particular learning opportunities. This paper proposes new ways of understanding emotion and politicization as co-constitutive processes for learning scientists interested in politics and social justice.
Journal Article