1st Edition

Teaching and Learning with Technology Beyond Constructivism

    314 Pages 28 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    314 Pages 28 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Today, new media is both augmenting and extending the traditional classroom with a variety of technology-based tools available to both students and faculty, and has created "new" virtual classrooms for anywhere, anytime availability to education. Despite the enormous potential for technology to support the educational enterprise in this emerging "creative" economy, technologies are still not yet fully integrated in the classroom and their association with educational outcomes is as-yet unclear. This book profiles scholarly work from around the world to examine closely the effectiveness of the newest media in education at bridging the gaps among and between teachers, students and subject matter at all levels, from K-12 through adult education. These pieces are theory-based investigations with implications for future research, theory and application. Contributors examine how the fields of education and new media have evolved and are continuing to evolve pedagogically and practically, from predominantly instructivist, with a passive, one-way teaching format; to constructivist, including teacher- and learner-controlled, sensorially immersive and socially interactive exchanges. This book will be of interest to students and faculty in the areas of new media in education, including distance learning, online learning and "virtual" learning.

    Foreword  Chris Dede 
    Part I: Introduction and State of the Field  1. Technologies and the Classroom Come to Age after Century of Growth  Catherine C. Schifter and Concetta M. Stewart 
    Part II: Achieving Social Closeness through Authentic Learning Exchanges  2. Effects of Web-Enhanced Course Materials on College Students’ Engagement and Learning Outcomes  Xigen Li  3. From Homer to High Tech: The Impact of Social Presence and Media Richness on Online Mentoring in Higher Education  Jamie S. Switzer  4. Educating Educators for Virtual Schooling: Communicating Roles and Responsibilities  Chad Harms, Dale S. Niederhauser, Niki E. Davis, M. D. Roblyer and Stephen B. Gilbert 
    Part III: Media-Rich Environments Building Stronger Connections  5. A New Lens for Learning in the Communications Field: The Effectiveness of Video Lectures with Asynchronous, Synchronous Discussions in Online/Distance Education  Amy Schmitz Weiss  6. A New Educational Technology for Media and Communication Studies: Mapping Media in Australia and Sweden  Christina Spurgeon, Christy Collis, Marcus Foth and Pernilla Severson  7. Not Your Father’s Educational Technology: A Case Study in Mobile Media and Journalism Education  Susan Jacobson and Karen Turner 
    Part IV: Complex Virtual Systems: Making Learning Spatially and Socially Whole 
    8. Virtual Reality in Education  Veronica S. Pantelidis and David C. Vinciguerra  9. A User Centered Approach for Building Design Guidelines for the Use of Virtual Actors in CVEs for Learning  Daphne Economou  10. Matching Computer Game Genres to Educational Outcomes  John L. Sherry  11. The Virtual Harlem Experiments  James J. Sosnoski  12. The Unique Features of Educational Virtual Environments  Tassos A. Mikropoulos and Joan Bellou 
    Part V: Discussion and Conclusion  13. ‘Real’ Learning in Virtual Worlds: An Integration of Media, Curricula and Pedagogy through Telepresence  Melissa E. Markaridian Selverian and Concetta M. Stewart

    Biography

    Concetta M. Stewart is Dean of the School of Art and Design at the Pratt Institute.

    Catherine C. Schifter is Associate Professor in the College of Education at Temple University.

    Melissa E. Markaridian Selverian is Adjunct Faculty in the School of Communications and Theater at Temple University.