1st Edition

The Design of Instruction and Evaluation Affordances of Using Media and Technology

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book is about empirically tested knowledge and principles that inform the design of instructional and evaluation systems, and the use and promise of media and technology within such systems.

    Historically, psychology has informed the design of instructional and evaluation systems in different ways. A behavioral perspective emphasizes the role of the environment in determining behavior--a factor external to the learner. A cognitive perspective focuses on the role of cognitive processing and constraints in determining learning--factors that are internal to the learner. This volume presents the affordances approach--which addresses how the environment and the affordances within it interact with cognitive processes to determine learning. Insights into this interaction are presented. It is the book's contention that the affordance approach represents an advancement over the behavioral and cognitive perspectives; it is an evolution within the cognitive approach--not an alternative to it.

    The Design of Instruction and Evaluation: Affordances of Using Media and Technology is intended for education practitioners responsible for the implementation of media and technology in classrooms, for researchers and faculty, and for use as a text in courses on media and technology use in educational settings, instructional design, and psychology of learning.

    Contents: M. Rabinowitz, Introduction: The Design of Instruction and Evaluation: Psychological Foundations. Part I: Affordances of Media. S.M. Fisch, Characteristics of Effective Materials for Informal Education: A Cross-Media Comparison of Television, Magazines, and Interactive Media. S.L. Calvert, Media Forms for Children's Learning. R.E. Mayer, Designing Multimedia Technology That Supports Human Learning. Part II: Affordances of Technology. M. Gauvain, S. Borthwick-Duffy, Opportunities for Learning and Development in an After-School Computer Club. Y.B. Kafai, C.C. Ching, S. Marshall, Learning Affordances of Collaborative Software Design. R.E. Bennett, How the Internet Will Help Large-Scale Assessment Reinvent Itself. J.D. Fletcher, Technology, the Columbus Effect, and the Third Revolution in Learning. Part III: Affordances of Software. F.C. Blumberg, M. Torenberg, L.M. Sokol, Asynchronous Learning in Graduate School Classes. R.E. DiPaolo, A.C. Graesser, D.J. Hacker, H.A. White, the Tutoring Research Group, Hints in Human and Computer Tutoring. H.T. Everson, Intelligent Tutors Need Intelligent Measurement, or the Other Way 'Round.

    Biography

    Mitchell Rabinowitz, Fran C. Blumberg