Difference between revisions of "mn/safe/nukwik:About"

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(Created page with "Copied from a presentation given at a CINCH workgroup meeting on 25th February 2010 given by Jon Petter Omtvedt<br> Slide 1: E-learning - what is it?")
 
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Copied from a presentation given at a CINCH&nbsp;workgroup meeting&nbsp;on 25th February 2010 given by Jon Petter Omtvedt<br>
 
Copied from a presentation given at a CINCH&nbsp;workgroup meeting&nbsp;on 25th February 2010 given by Jon Petter Omtvedt<br>
  
Slide 1:&nbsp;E-learning - what is it?
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Slide 1:&nbsp;E-learning - what is it?  
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Publishing compendia and exercises on web-pages (WEB 1.0) is not e-learning. It’s simply an effective tool to help do things the old way.<br>E-learning is using computer tools to encourage the student to actively participate in the learning process, e.g. by discussion forums, blogs, simulations, etc. (WEB 2.0). <br>E-learning is also packages which present a certain topic (text, graphs, video, animation), with e.g. self-check questions and exercises to help the student to verify that the subject is understood. <br>New ways of distribution information, like podcasts, are sometimes also regarded as e-learning – but is it really?<br>

Revision as of 08:55, 16 November 2011

Copied from a presentation given at a CINCH workgroup meeting on 25th February 2010 given by Jon Petter Omtvedt

Slide 1: E-learning - what is it?

Publishing compendia and exercises on web-pages (WEB 1.0) is not e-learning. It’s simply an effective tool to help do things the old way.
E-learning is using computer tools to encourage the student to actively participate in the learning process, e.g. by discussion forums, blogs, simulations, etc. (WEB 2.0).
E-learning is also packages which present a certain topic (text, graphs, video, animation), with e.g. self-check questions and exercises to help the student to verify that the subject is understood.
New ways of distribution information, like podcasts, are sometimes also regarded as e-learning – but is it really?