Author/Authors :
Colin Baskin، نويسنده , , Michelle Barker and Peter Woods، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In moving towards what Lemke (1996) terms the ‘interactive learning
paradigm’, higher education has adopted two key principles consistent with
group learning technologies:
• learning is always mediated by and occurs through language (Falk, 1997;
Gee, 1997); and
• learning is distributed across a range of other people, sites, objects, technologies
and time (Gee, 1997).
A third and relatively recent principle to emerge on the higher education scene
that seems to ‘contradict’ accepted views of group learning technologies is that:
• many universities now choose to offer ‘learning resources’ online.
This paper asks whether Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs)
are ‘robust’ enough to support, sustain and address industry, employer and
government calls for greater attention to group skills development in university
graduates. Data features an examination of respondent feedback (n
=
171) in
an ‘ICT-rich’ group work setting, and the subsequent ratings of group skills
development over a 13-week period. This discussion offers an account of learner
outcomes by adopting Kirkpatrick’s (1996) four levels of evaluation of learning
as a classification scheme for determining learner satisfaction (Level One), the
effectiveness of learning transfer (Level Two), its impact on practice (Level
Three) and the appropriation of learning behaviours by participants (Level
Four). The contrasting patterns of ICT use between female and male users in
the data are discussed in relation to building social presence and producing
social categories online. Differences reported here indicate that ICT group work
is moving forward, but opportunities to challenge rather than reproduce
existing learning relations and differences, remain largely unresolved