DocumentCode :
2091661
Title :
Preserving the E-Learning Cottage Industry
Author :
Dron, Jon
Author_Institution :
Athabasca Univ., Athabasca, AB
fYear :
2008
fDate :
1-5 July 2008
Firstpage :
1003
Lastpage :
1004
Abstract :
E-learning in higher education is usually either a small scale cottage industry or the product of a production line. Neither approach is perfect: production-line models of distance education suit relatively few learners while the craft approach, though more tailored, is expensive and hard to re-use. However, this picture of the e-learning craftsperson is more complex than it seems: often, learning management systems and their administrators play a subtle role in structuring and scaffolding the process, reducing the artistry required and acting as a silent teaching partner. A closer analogy than a craftspersonpsilas cottage might be an e-learning sweat-shop, in which educators assemble courses within a centrally provided mould or pattern. The solution is a post-industrial model in which the tools informate rather than automate. Rather than creating more industrial machines for learning, we must provide more adaptable, aggregatable and interoperable tools for the craftsperson.
Keywords :
computer aided instruction; educational courses; craftsperson; distance education; e-learning cottage industry; higher education; interoperable tools; learning management systems; production line; silent teaching partner; Assembly; Distance learning; Educational products; Educational technology; Electronic learning; Home automation; Least squares approximation; Machinery production industries; Manufacturing automation; Production facilities; LMS; components; cottage industry;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Learning Technologies, 2008. ICALT '08. Eighth IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Santander, Cantabria
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3167-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICALT.2008.307
Filename :
4561892
Link To Document :
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