The article discusses design thinking as a process and mindset for collaboratively finding solutions for wicked problems in a variety of educational settings. Through a systematic literature review the article organizes case studies, reports, theoretical reflections, and other scholarly work to enhance our understanding of the purposes, contexts, benefits, limitations, affordances, constraints, effects and outcomes of design thinking in education. Specifically, the review pursues four questions: (1) What are the characteristics of design thinking that make it particularly fruitful for education? (2) How is design thinking applied in different educational settings? (3) What tools, techniques and methods are characteristic for design thinking? (4) What are the limitations or negative effects of design thinking? The goal of the article is to describe the current knowledge base to gain an improved understanding of the role of design thinking in education, to enhance research communication and discussion of best practice approaches and to chart immediate avenues for research and practice.
This paper presents a theoretical perspective on patterns derived from epistemology and theory of science. We argue that patterns are specific kinds of theories and that the process of pattern mining is similar to scientific discovery. Exploring the concepts of induction, deduction and abduction with respect to patterns, we reflect upon common methods of pattern mining in the pattern community. This allows for a critical discussion of the level of confidence and corroboration of patterns. We suggest new research questions on the mining and evaluation of patterns. For the scientific scholar the paper offers arguments that pattern mining is a research process with outcomes as reliable and sound as other scientific procedures. This justification is needed to establish the pattern approach as a scientific methodology beyond the scope of the pattern community. For the pragmatic pattern practitioner, e.g. users and authors of patterns, this paper encourages the critical reflection on the pattern concept. Patterns are not triedand-true per se, just like theories they have to be subjected to empirical tests. Understanding the epistemological nature of patterns is crucial to derive criteria for pattern quality, e.g. the degrees of corroboration, and the limits of objectivism -especially since patterns are not only descriptive documentation but normative instructions, designed to have an impact on shaping our environments.
In the last decade, the concept of Open Educational Resources (OER) has gained an undeniable momentum. However, it is an easy trap to confuse download and registration rates with actual learning and interest in the adoption and reuse of OER. If we focus solely on access, we cannot differentiate between processes of mere information foraging and deep sense-making activities. The article provides an overview of the OER movement, stressing emerging concerns surrounding the educational efficacy of OER and highlighting learning theories which aid our understanding of this growing domain. The authors discuss building-blocks for a theoretical framework that allows us to conceptualize the learner's part in open educational practices, also characterizing challenges of open learning and traits of successful open learners.
Der vorliegende Beitrag widmet sich dem Thema «Edublogging», also der Nutzung von Weblogs im Bildungsbereich, und fokussiert dabei auf den Hochschulsektor. Weblogs werden vielerorts als Instrument für die Lehre, aber auch als Diskussionsplattform im E-Learning-Forschungsdiskurs sowie als Mittel zur Öffentlichkeitsarbeit in E-Learning-Zentren und anderen Zentraleinrichtungen eingesetzt. Hinzu kommen Blogfarmen bzw. Multiblogs, die jedem und jeder Hochschulangehörigen mit wenigen Klicks die Einrichtung einer Weblog-Präsenz eröffnen. Entsprechend facettenreich präsentiert sich die Landschaft der Edublogs. Der Artikel beleuchtet das Phänomen «Edublogosphäre» durch eine umfangreiche Literatursichtung, Web-Recherchen, Inhaltsanalysen und Befragungen. Angestrebt wird eine Kartografie der vielfältigen Landschaft an Edublogs. Im Ergebnis werden Besonderheiten der Weblog-Strategien von E-Learning-Einrichtungen, bloggenden E-Learning-Wissenschaftlern/-innen, Blogfarmen und weiteren Einsatzformen in Hochschulbereich beschrieben.
Social tagging ranges among the ``killer applications'' of Web 2.0. An ever-growing international community uses Web sites such as the photo database Flickr and the bookmarking service Delicious. In addition, a number of other portals use tagging to compile user-specific metadata on information on any subject—whether it be travel destinations, personal contacts, films, or museum exhibits. Retrieving and storing information via tagging seems to meet users' needs for a number of purposes and in many contexts. Starting with a synopsis of the current literature on social tagging and then focusing on the results of two surveys—qualitative interviews and an online questionnaire—this article explores the potential and limitations of tagging as a tool for organizing shared and personal knowledge.
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