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Journal Article

Designed-Based Research and Technology Enhanced Learning Environments

TL;DR: In this paper, design-based research has demonstrated its potential as a methodology suitable to both research and design of technology-enhanced learning environments (TELEs) and discuss future challenges of using this methodology.

AbstractDuring the past decade, design-based research has demonstrated its potential as a methodology suitable to both research and design of technology-enhanced learning environments (TELEs). In this paper, we define and identify characteristics of design-based research, describe the importance of design-based research for the development of TELEs, propose principles for implementing design-based research with TELEs, and discuss future challenges of using this methodology. (http://www.springerlink.com/content/a582109091287128/)

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Citations
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31 Dec 2012
TL;DR: McKenney, S. as discussed by the authors presented an invited lecture for the Crossfield Graduate School at the University of St. Gallen, St.Gallen, Switzerland, 2012, 4-5 September.
Abstract: McKenney, S. (2012, 4-5 September). What is educational design research? Invited lecture for the Crossfield Graduate School at the University of St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland.

640 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Researchers are calling for more research into the factors that account for K-12 student success in distance education and virtual school environments and more design research approaches than traditional comparisons of student achievement in traditional and virtual schools.
Abstract: Virtual schooling was first employed in the mid-1990s and has become a common method of distance education used in K-12 jurisdictions. The most accepted definition of a virtual school is an entity approved by a state or governing body that offers courses through distance delivery - most commonly using the Internet. While virtual schools can be classified in different ways, the three common methods of delivery are by independent, asynchronous or synchronous means. Presently, the vast majority of virtual school students tended to be a select group of academically capable, motivated, independent learners. The benefits associated with virtual schooling are expanding educational access, providing high-quality learning opportunities, improving student outcomes and skills, allowing for educational choice, and achieving administrative efficiency. However, the research to support these conjectures is limited at best. The challenges associated with virtual schooling include the conclusion that the only students typically successful in online learning environments are those who have independent orientations towards learning, highly motivated by intrinsic sources, and have strong time management, literacy, and technology skills. These characteristics are typically associated with adult learners. This stems from the fact that research into and practice of distance education has typically been targeted to adult learners. The problem with this focus is that adults learn differently than younger learners. Researchers are calling for more research into the factors that account for K-12 student success in distance education and virtual school environments and more design research approaches than traditional comparisons of student achievement in traditional and virtual schools.

414 citations

BookDOI
01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: This book discusses the role of Mediating Artifacts in learning design, and the needs of pedagogical planners, in the context of the changing digital landscape of education.
Abstract: Table of Contents Preface - origins of and rationale for the book Setting the scene Ch 1Introduction a. Overview b. The context of modern education c. The nature of educational technology d. Today's learners e. The need for a new learning design methodology f. Audience and structure of the book g. The process of writing the book Ch 2 Design languages. a. Introduction b. The challenges of designing for learning c. Design languages d. Design notation in music, architecture and chemistry i. Musical notation ii. Architectural notation iii. Chemical notation e. Learning design i. Defining learning design ii. The origins of learning design iii. A spectrum of learning design languages f. Origins of the Open Learning Design methodology i. The OU Learning Design Initiative ii. Design-Based Research iii. The OULDI learning design methodology g. Conclusion Ch 3: Related research fields a. Introduction b. Instructional Design c. Learning Sciences d. Learning objects and Open Educational Practices e. Pedagogical Patterns f. Professional networks and support centres g. Conclusion Ch 4: Open, social and participatory media a. Introduction b. The changing digital landscape of education c. A review of new technologies i. The characteristics of new technologies ii. The impact of Web 2.0 technologies iii. The use of Web 2.0 technologies in education iv. The impact on practice d. A review of Web 2.0 tools and practice e. Conclusion Theoretical perspectives Ch 5 Theory and methodology in learning design research a. Introduction b. Definitions c. Researchers' home disciplines d. The nature of theory e. Theoretical perspectives i. Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) ii. Communities of Practice iii. Actor Network Theory iv. Cybernetics and systems thinking a. Methodological approaches i. Content analysis ii. Ethnography iii. Case studies iv. Action research v. Evaluation vi. Choosing an appropriate methodology b. Influences, beliefs and theoretical perspectives c. Conclusion Ch 6 The role of Mediating Artifacts in learning design a. Introduction b. The origins of the concept of Mediating Artifacts c. Capturing and representing practice d. Examples of Mediating Artifacts e. Understanding learning activities through Mediating Artifacts f. Meta-Mediating Artifacts g. An illustrative example of the application of this approach i. Teacher A: The design phase ii. Learner A: Use Scenario 1 - beginner's route iii. Learner B: Use Scenario 2 - advanced route iv. Teacher B: Use Scenario 3 - repurposing h. Conclusion Ch 7 Affordances a. Introduction b. Definitions of the term c. ICT affordances i. Collaboration ii. Reflection iii. Interaction iv. Dialogue v. Creativity vi. Organization vii. Inquiry viii. Authenticity ix. Negative affordances - constraints a. Conclusion Design representations and tools Ch 8 Design representations a. Introduction b. Types of representation c. Examples of different types of representations i. Textual ii. Content map iii. The course map view iv. The pedagogy profile v. The task swimlane representation vi. Learning outcomes map vii. The course dimensions view viii. Principles/pedagogy matrix d. Evaluation of the views e. An example of application of the representations i. Course view ii. Pedagogical profile iii. Course dimensions iv. Learning outcomes v. Task swimlane f. Conclusion Ch 9 Case study: tools for visualizing designs a. Introduction b. Practitioners' approaches to design c. Repurposing an Open Educational Resource d. The development of Compendium LD e. Evaluation of the use of Compendium LD f. Use by practitioners g. Use by students h. Other visualization tools i. Conclusion Ch 10 Pedagogical planners a. Introduction b. The need for pedagogical planners c. Examples of pedagogical planners i. The DialogPlus toolkit ii. Phoebe iii. The London Pedagogical Planner (LPP) iv. The Learning Design Support Environment (LDSE) d. Conclusion Openness Ch 11 The nature of openness a. Introduction b. Facets of openness i. Open design ii. Open delivery iii. Open evaluation iv. Open research c. Principles d. Defining openness e. Characteristics of openness f. The OU's Supported Open Learning (SOL) model g. Applying openness i. Open design ii. Open delivery iii. Open evaluation iv. Open research h. Conclusion Ch 12 Open Educational Resources a. Introduction b. The Open Educational Resource movement c. A review of OER initiatives d. Case study 1: Openlearn e. Case study 2: Wikiwijs f. Case study 3: LeMill g. Case study 4: Podcampus h. Conclusion i. Appendix: The broader OER landscape Ch 13 Case study: Realising the vision of Open Educational Resources a. Introduction b. The Olnet initiative c. The OPAL initiative i. Strategies and policies ii. Quality assurance models iii. Collaborative and partnership modles iv. Tools and tool practices v. Innovations vi. Skills development and support vii. Business models and sustainability strategies viii. Barriers and enablers d. Enhancing the quality and innovation of OER e. Conclusion Social and participatory media Ch 14: Online communities and interactions a. Introduction b. The co-evolution of tools and practice c. Modes of interaction d. The changing nature of online communities e. The pedagogies of e-learning f. Sfard's metaphors of learning g. Frameworks for supporting online communities h. The Community Indicators Framework i. Conclusion Ch 15 Case study: Cloudworks a. Introduction b. Cloudworks c. Theoretical underpinnings d. Evaluation of the OU Learning and Teaching Cloudscape e. Using Cloudworks to support learning Conclusion Ch 16 Conclusion, implications and reflections Postscript - reflections on adopting an open approach to the writing of the book

399 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This chapter focuses on design and development research, a type of inquiry unique to the instructional design and technology field dedicated to the creation of new knowledge and the validation of existing practice.
Abstract: This chapter focuses on design and development research, a type of inquiry unique to the instructional design and technology field dedicated to the creation of new knowledge and the validation of existing practice. We first define this kind of research and provide an overview of its two main categories—research on products and tools and research on design and development models. Then, we concentrate on recent design and development research (DDR) by describing 11 studies published in the literature. The five product and tool studies reviewed include research on comprehensive development projects, studies of particular design and development phases, and research on tool development and use. The six model studies reviewed include research leading to new or enhanced ID models, model validation and model use research. Finally, we summarize this new work in terms of the problems it addresses, the settings and participants examined, the research methodologies employed used, and the role evaluation plays in these studies.

313 citations

01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: This invited paper explores the example of information security, a mode of design that incorporates the assembly of information systems from a wide variety of platform ecosystems that requires more creativity to develop needed functionality from a finite set of available platforms.
Abstract: Because ‘going digital’ regards using digital technologies to fundamentally change the way things get done, information security is necessarily engaged in going digital. Society and science are going digital. For the sciences, this digitalization process invokes an emerging model of the science of design that incorporates the assembly of information systems from a wide variety of platform ecosystems. According to principles of bounded rationality and bounded creativity, this mode of design requires more creativity to develop needed functionality from a finite set of available platforms. Going digital requires more creativity in designers of all types of information systems. Furthermore, the designers’ goals are changing. The traditional model of information systems is representational: the data in the system represents (reflects) reality. Newer information systems, equipped with 3D printing and robotics actually create reality. Reality represents (reflects) the data in the system. This invited paper explores the example of information security. Designers of security for information systems not only must be more creative, they must design for more goals. The security task is no longer just protecting the digital system, the security task is protecting the products of the digital system. These innovations have particular implications for information systems curricula at university, too.

250 citations


References
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Book
01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: In this paper, conceptual issues and themes on qualitative research and evaluaton methods including: qualitative data, triangulated inquiry, qualitative inquiry, constructivism, constructionism, complexity (chaos) theory, qualitative designs and data collection, fieldwork strategies, interviewing, tape-recording, ethical issues, analysis, interpretation and reporting, observations vs. perceived impacts and utilisation-focused evaluation reporting.
Abstract: This book explains clearly conceptual issues and themes on qualitative research and evaluaton methods including: qualitative data, triangulated inquiry, qualitative inquiry, constructivism, constructionism, Complexity (chaos) theory, qualitative designs and data collection, fieldwork strategies, interviewing, tape-recording, ethical issues, analysis, interpretation and reporting, observations vs. perceived impacts and utilisation-focused evaluation reporting.

13,418 citations

Book
01 Jan 1990
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a brief history of educational change at the local and national level, and discuss the causes and problems of implementation and continuation of change at both the local level and the national level.
Abstract: Part I Understanding Educational Change 1. A Brief History of Educational Change 2. Sources of Educational Change 3. The Meaning of Educational Change 4. The Causes and Problems of Initiation 5. The Causes and Problems of Implementation and Continuation 6. Planning Doing and Coping with Change Part II Educational Change at the Local Level 7. The Teacher 8. The Principal 9. The Student 10. The District Administrator 11. The Consultant 12. The Parent and the Community Part III Educational Change at Regional and National Levels 13. Governments 14. Professional Preparation of Teachers 15. Professional Development of Educators 16. The Future of Educational Change

10,195 citations

Book
01 Jan 1990
TL;DR: Whyte as discussed by the authors discusses the role of the social scientist in participatory action research in agricultural research and development in the context of agricultural data collection and data sharing in the field of agricultural research.
Abstract: Introduction - William Foote Whyte PAR IN INDUSTRY Participatory Action Research - William Foote Whyte, Davydd J Greenwood and Peter Lazes Through Practice to Science in Social Research Participatory Action Research - Larry A Pace and Dominick R Argona A View from Xerox Participatory Action Research - Anthony J Constanza A View from ACTWU Participatory Action Research - Jose Luis Gonzalez Santos A View from FAGOR Participatory Action Research and Action Science Compared - Chris Argyris and Donald Schon A Commentary Comparing PAR and Action Science - William Foote Whyte Research, Action and Participation - Richard E Walton and Michael Gaffney The Merchant Shipping Case Co-Generative Learning - Max Elden and Morton Levin Bringing Participation into Action Research Action Research as Method - Jan Irgen Karlsen Reflections from a Program for Developing Methods and Competence Participant Observer Research - Robert E Cole An Activist Role PAR IN AGRICULTURE Participatory Strategies in Agricultural Research and Development - William Foote Whyte A Joint Venture in Technology Transfer to Increase Adoption Rates - Ramiro Ortiz Participatory Action Research in Togo - Richard Maclure and Michael Bassey An Inquiry into Maize Storage Systems The Role of the Social Scientist in Participatory Action research - Sergio Ruano Social Scientists in International Agriculture Resarch - Douglas E Horton Ensuring Relevance and Conributing to the Knowledge Base Conclusions - William Foote Whyte

3,602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The lion's share of my current research program is devoted to the study of learning in the blooming, buzzing confusion of inner-city classrooms, and central to the enterprise is that the classroom must function smoothly as a learning environment before the authors can study anything other than the myriad possible ways that things can go wrong.
Abstract: (1992) Design Experiments: Theoretical and Methodological Challenges in Creating Complex Interventions in Classroom Settings Journal of the Learning Sciences: Vol 2, No 2, pp 141-178

3,555 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Design experiments have both a pragmatic bent and a theoretical orientation as mentioned in this paper, developing domain-specific theories by systematically studying those forms of learning and the means of supporting them, and the authors clarify what is involved in preparing for and carrying out a design experiment, and conduct a retrospective analysis of the extensive, longitudinal data sets generated during an experiment.
Abstract: In this article, the authors first indicate the range of purposes and the variety of settings in which design experiments have been conducted and then delineate five crosscutting features that collectively differentiate design experiments from other methodologies. Design experiments have both a pragmatic bent—“engineering” particular forms of learning—and a theoretical orientation—developing domain-specific theories by systematically studying those forms of learning and the means of supporting them. The authors clarify what is involved in preparing for and carrying out a design experiment, and in conducting a retrospective analysis of the extensive, longitudinal data sets generated during an experiment. Logistical issues, issues of measure, the importance of working through the data systematically, and the need to be explicit about the criteria for making inferences are discussed.

2,901 citations