e-learning is a term compromising one letter representing a physical property of technology (e for electronic)
Tuesday, 21 Sept 2010, 10:36
Visible to anyone in the world
Edited by Jonathan Vernon, Friday, 25 Nov 2011, 14:08
I wonder of e-learning as a term will last, like email?
What's happened to 'new media?' I guess it's no longer new. What's happend to 'web-based learning?' I guess the web is there, like air, so we don't need to refer to its existance, it just is. And so on to 'online learning' which at the OU has usrped 'open learning.'
I like this thought:
‘Whereas education is by definition a multi-faceted activity understood to involve a variety of players and activities – teachers and teaching; students and studying; institutions and structures, information, knowledge and, it is hoped, learning.
e-learning is a term compromising one letter representing a physical property of technology (e for electronic) and the hoped-for outcome (learning) for one participant in the interaction.
Given the power of language to constrain our thinking, is our current circumscribed terminology making it increasingly difficult to keep in mind and focus on elements of this expanding activity that, while not readily apparent in the term ‘e-learning’ itself, must be understood and included when establishing policy and researching the phenomenon?’
(Melody Thompson, 2007 in Conole and Oliver, 2007:187)
REFERENCE
Conole, G and Oliver, M (2007) Research in E-Learning
e-learning is a term compromising one letter representing a physical property of technology (e for electronic)
I wonder of e-learning as a term will last, like email?
What's happened to 'new media?' I guess it's no longer new. What's happend to 'web-based learning?' I guess the web is there, like air, so we don't need to refer to its existance, it just is. And so on to 'online learning' which at the OU has usrped 'open learning.'
I like this thought:
‘Whereas education is by definition a multi-faceted activity understood to involve a variety of players and activities – teachers and teaching; students and studying; institutions and structures, information, knowledge and, it is hoped, learning.
e-learning is a term compromising one letter representing a physical property of technology (e for electronic) and the hoped-for outcome (learning) for one participant in the interaction.
Given the power of language to constrain our thinking, is our current circumscribed terminology making it increasingly difficult to keep in mind and focus on elements of this expanding activity that, while not readily apparent in the term ‘e-learning’ itself, must be understood and included when establishing policy and researching the phenomenon?’
(Melody Thompson, 2007 in Conole and Oliver, 2007:187)
REFERENCE
Conole, G and Oliver, M (2007) Research in E-Learning