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Taxonomy Term : Interactice Learning

Journal of Interactive Media in Education

Authorship Details
Dough Clow; Team editor
Patrick McAndrew; Team editor
Anna Page; Team editor
Publication Details
Resource Type: 
Journal
Publication Date: 
1996-
Publisher: 
Institute of Educational Technology The Open University
Notes
JIME was launched in September, 1996. It's aims are: •To foster a multidisciplinary and intellectually rigorous debate on the theoretical and practical aspects of interactive media in education. •To clarify the cognitive, social and cultural issues raised by the use of interactive media in education. •To radically improve teaching and learning through better interactive media. •To publish leading international research on the theories, practices and experiences in the field. •To link scholars and commercial practitioners •Through its innovative use of interactive Net-based media, to be an action research project which explores the changing face of journals, and more broadly, scholarly practice in the age of digital publishing and communication.

Development of Interactive and Reflective Learning among Malaysian Online Distant Learners: An ESL Instructor’s Experience

Authorship Details
Puvaneswary Murugaiah
Siew Ming Thang
Publication Details
Resource Type: 
Article
Publication Date: 
Oct 2010
Volume: 
11
Issue or Number: 
3
Summary

Technology has brought tremendous advancements in online education, spurring transformations
in online pedagogical practices. Online learning in the past was passive, using the traditional
teacher-centred approach. However, with the tools available today, it can be active, collaborative,
and meaningful. A well-developed task can impel learners to observe, to reflect, to strategize,
and to plan their own learning. This paper describes an English as a Second Language (ESL)
instructor’s attempt to foster interactive and reflective learning among distance learners at a
public university in Malaysia, working within the framework proposed by Salmon (2004). The
authors found that proper planning and close monitoring of a writing activity that incorporates
interactive and reflective learning helped to raise the students’ awareness of their own learning
process and consequently helped them to be more responsible for their learning. The students
acquired significant cognitive benefits and also valuable practical learning skills through the
online discussions. However, there were challenges in carrying out the writing task to promote
this form of learning, including students’ professional and family commitments and cultural
attitudes as well as communication barriers in the online environment. To overcome these
challenges, the authors recommend the following: ensure tutor guidance, enforce compulsory
participation, address technical problems quickly, commence strategic training prior to the
beginning of a task, and implement team teaching with each instructor taking on certain roles. (Authors' abstract)


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