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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Enhancing student learning through hypermedia courseware and incorporation of student learning styles

TLDR
An adaptive hypermedia interface was developed that provided dynamic tailoring of the presentation of course material based on the individual student's learning style, and the authors believe students learned more efficiently and more effectively.
Abstract
This paper outlines attempts to enhance student learning by addressing different learning styles through course hypermedia. Students learn by a variety of different learning styles. Previously, instructors were unable to effectively address these different learning styles outside the classroom. Two approaches were developed to address this problem. The first approach was the development of hypermedia courseware. This provided a wide variety of tools which students could use to prepare for lessons. In this way students retained complete control over how they prepared for a lesson and could choose those hypermedia tools that were most conducive to their learning. An assessment of the multimedia and hypertext documents in the course revealed that the value of a particular multimedia tool to a student varied widely. Each student was traversing the course material according to his/her unique learning style. Unfortunately, the plethora of tools confused some students because they were uncomfortable making active choices of what course material would be most conducive to their learning. As a result, a second approach was adopted. An adaptive hypermedia interface was developed that provided dynamic tailoring of the presentation of course material based on the individual student's learning style. By tailoring the presentation of material to the student's learning style, the authors believe students learned more efficiently and more effectively.

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Book ChapterDOI

Work in Progress: Model Design to Measure the Efficacy of Students Learning Preferences—Does Media Matter?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a study that will examine if first year engineering students learn more about given case studies using the recommended textbook or the video prepared by the text publisher.
Book ChapterDOI

Intelligent, Adaptive and Social e-Learning in POLYGLOT

TL;DR: This chapter gives a short presentation of the concepts of domain independent mechanisms, including student modeling techniques, as well as of learners’ characteristics for building efficient student models in the implementation of the social networking-based language learning application, called POLYGLOT.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of a Centered Virtual Teaching Environment on Learning Styles in the Academic Performance of College Students

TL;DR: There are differences in the way of using the objects of learning, and that there are differentiated patterns to access the support material, depending on the studentsâ?? learning styles.

Live, virtual, and constructive environments for performance support

TL;DR: This dissertation addresses an essential component of performance systems, namely the ability to deliver the knowledge needed to guide a problem solver to a solution state, thereby enhancing worker capabilities by developing the LockTel Framework that provides a construct for segmenting knowledge into three environments for performance support.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Sign That Education is Maturing: Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, the Classification of Educational Goals, Handbook I: Cognitive Domain

TL;DR: Using Bloom's Taxonomy to Write Effective Learning Objectives: The Abcds of Writing Learning ObjectIVES: A Basic Guide.

Learning and Teaching Styles in Engineering Education.

TL;DR: A self-scoring web-based instrument called the Index of Learning Styles that assesses preferences on four scales of the learning style model developed in the paper currently gets about 100,000 hits a year and has been translated into half a dozen languages.
Journal Article

Reaching the Second Tier--Learning and Teaching Styles in College Science Education.

TL;DR: This paper defined two tiers of entering college students, the first consisting of those who go on to earn science degrees and the second those who have the initial intention and the ability to do so but instead switch to nonscientific fields.