KMi Seminars
Getting campus-based eLearning into the blender
This event took place on Thursday 07 July 2005 at 10:20

 
Dr Charles Crook Learning Sciences Research Institute at Nottingham University

Some ICT learning research initiatives are described which are argued to reflect worrying forms of influence on undergraduate study practices. The paper argues for more imaginative innovation along the route of "blended learning". Several case studies that might illustrate this route are described for discussion.

Charles Crook is Reader in ICT and Education. He is closely attached to the Learning Sciences Research Institute at Nottingham and is a developmental psychologist by background. After research at Cambridge, Brown and Strathclyde Universities, he lectured in Psychology at Durham University and was Reader in Psychology at Loughborough University. Current projects concern the resourcing of collaborative learning with particular interest in early education but also undergraduates. Much of this work implicates new technology. He was a founder member of the European Society for Developmental Psychology and is currently editor of the Journal of Computer Assisted Learning.

His research interests are:
How can insights from the psychology of child development be applied to the design of learning technologies? How can these designs then be best integrated with existing cultures of teaching and learning? In particular, how can computers create distinctive opportunities for more collaborative forms of learning? How do highlly networked educational environments re-configure the experience of teaching and learning? How can technology bridge the discontinuities between formal and informal settings for learning?

This seminar is the first in a new series of IET CALRG Research Seminars

 
KMi Seminars Event | SSSW 2013, The 10th Summer School on Ontology Engineering and the Semantic Web Journal | 25 years of knowledge acquisition
 

Narrative Hypermedia is...


Narrative Hypermedia
Narrative is concerned fundamentally with coherence, for instance, whether that be a fiction, an historical account or an argument, none of which 'make sense' unless they are put together in a coherent manner.

Hypermedia is the combination of hypertext for linking and structuring multimedia information.

Narrative Hypermedia is therefore concerned with how all of the above narrative forms, plus the many other diverse forms of discourse possible on the Web, can be effectively designed to communicate coherent conceptual structures, drawing inspiration from theories in narratology, semiotics, psycholinguistics and film.