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How Do People
Learn? (cont'd from cover page)
Reflection on
a big question is amplified when it enters collaborative
inquiry,
as multiple styles and approaches interact to
respond to the challenge and create solutions.
In How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience,
and School, John Bransford and colleagues
describe a legacy cycle for collaborative inquiry
[3], depicted
in a figure by Vanderbilt University researchers
[4] (see image, lower left).
The legacy cycle is the design
for the 2004
Sloan-C Online Learning Research Workshop in which participants will build a legacy
of responses to some big questions.
Sloan-C will "go
public" and publish the workshop results,
so please join in and test your thoughts, or
stay tuned for the results.
[1]
Michael Danchak. "Using
Adaptive Hypermedia to Match Web Presentation
to Learning Styles." Elements of
Quality Online Education: Into the Mainstream.
Needham, MA: Sloan-C, 2004 (forthcoming).
[2]
D. Randy Garrison, "Cognitive Presence for Effective Asynchronous
Online
Learning: The Role of Reflective Inquiry, Self-Direction
and Metacognition". Elements of Quality
Online Education: Practice and Direction. Needham,
MA: Sloan-C, 2003.
[3] John
Bransford, Ann L. Brown, and Rodney R. Cocking.
Eds. How People Learn: Brain, Mind,
Experience, and School. The National Research
Council, 2000. An online,
searchable pdf is viewable at:
http://www.nap.edu/html/howpeople1/
[4] "Instructional
Design Patterns and Their Use Within CAPE":
http://www.isis.vanderbilt.edu/
projects/VaNTH/patterns.htm.
See also the useful
demonstration of how people learn at
http://hpl.peabody.vanderbilt.edu:
16080/exploringhpl/explorehpl/
fullmap.htm
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