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Showing 1 to 15 of 76 results Save | Export
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Smythe, Suzanne – Adult Literacy Education, 2022
In this response, Suzanne Smythe imagines the role of new technologies in community-based education as we settle into a "new normal." This article builds upon and extends Jen Vanek's suggestions in Part 1 by drawing upon research and practice oriented to digital justice. Smythe describes her experiences as an adult literacy researcher in…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Technology Uses in Education, Adult Education, Service Learning
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Vanek, Jen – Journal of Research and Practice for Adult Literacy, Secondary, and Basic Education, 2017
In his article "Expanding Access to Learning with Mobile Digital Devices" (EJ1150752), Jeff Carter recommended a balanced perspective when measuring the potential of mobile learning to redefine teaching and learning for adults with basic skills needs. In response to Carter's article, the author makes some recommendations that she thinks…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education
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Cacicio, Sarah; Shell, Alison R.; Tare, Medha – Adult Literacy Education, 2022
In the hours following the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak and subsequent shutdown, educators across the nation were suddenly tasked with teaching online. As Jen Vanek describes in "Supporting Quality Instruction: Building Teacher Capacity as Instructional Designers (Part 1 of 3)" (EJ1344704), the majority of educators had to quickly learn and…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Adult Education, Teaching Methods, COVID-19
Cushman, Mike – Adults Learning, 2012
Michael Gove has correctly lambasted the current curriculum for information and communication technology (ICT): his proposed solution is as wrong as the current curriculum, as findings from the Penceil Research Project on how to engage non-users of ICTs demonstrate. Learning how to use a word processor and a spreadsheet is a useful low-level…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Word Processing, Information Technology, Spreadsheets
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Simsek, Ali – Contemporary Educational Technology, 2013
Charles M. Reigeluth is one of the most contributing and certainly the leading scholars in the field of educational technology and instructional design. His early contributions were about developing instructional design theories such as Elaboration Theory and Component Display Theory. He has also edited monumental books as collections of major ID…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Educational Technology, Educational Change, Interviews
Simsek, Ali – Online Submission, 2013
Professor Reigeluth emphasizes that the work of educational technology researchers should focus on advancing instructional design theories rather than investigating some trendy aspects of utilizing educational media in schools. He makes the point that such an orientation will provide a comprehensive framework for efforts toward improving education…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Instructional Design, Educational Media, Educational Change
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Hunter, William J. – College Quarterly, 2012
From time to time, every educator asks the question "why am I doing this?" Some of the answers may relate to personal goals or needs, but some are invariably focused on beliefs about the impact their work has on learners. For postsecondary educators, those answers may include thoughts about increased employability or better citizenship or mastery…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Technology, Transformative Learning, Adult Learning
Saba, Farhad – Educational Technology, 2011
The practice of distance education in the United States is traced back to its early roots. In the 20th century, distance education remained at the periphery in corporate training, K-12 schools, and most universities, but it gradually developed its practice by using broadcast media, and later the Internet. Since the turn of the current century,…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Educational Trends, Trend Analysis, Educational Development
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T.H.E. Journal, 2011
It is almost a foregone conclusion that the mobile device will become an indispensable tool for learning in the future. That's why "T.H.E. Journal" asked a number of educators to let their imaginations go wild and conjure up visions of the future of the device in the classroom. This paper presents the views of educators who conjure up the mobile…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Appropriate Technology, Futures (of Society), Prediction
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Bowen, Lauren Marshall – College English, 2012
The magazine of the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) often relies on problematic rhetorics that privilege youth-centered ideals and create limited representations of older adults' literacy in digital times. These rhetorics rest on a metaphor of repair, which labels aging adults as primarily bodies in need of fixing or protection. In…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Literacy, Technology, Cultural Context
Blankenship, Mark – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2010
Not long ago, television sets in classrooms were a novel idea and most professors could remember the days of slide rules, mimeograph machines, and manual typewriters. Now, even DVD players can seem quaint. But education has been altered by the breathtakingly rapid technological advancements of the last 10 years, and just like the rest of the…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Influence of Technology
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Chapelle, Carol A. – Language Learning & Technology, 2010
Over the past fourteen years, the pages of "Language Learning & Technology" have been filled with examples of research that take up the challenge of investigating second language learning through technology. It has been a period of expansion and growth in many ways. The expansion of technologies as well as their acceptance and use in language…
Descriptors: Second Languages, Second Language Learning, Language Acquisition, Technology Uses in Education
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Ahmed, Nadia – Disability & Society, 2013
The golden summer of sport is now over, but what is the legacy of London 2012 for disabled people? Nadia Ahmed, a disabled student, discusses the difficulties she has faced in finding accessible accommodation in London. She argues that while the Games are over, the United Kingdom still has lots of hurdles to leap when it comes to disability. The…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Assistive Technology, Foreign Countries, Adapted Physical Education
Educational Technology, 2009
In 2008, the Department of Instructional Technology at Utah State University (USU) changed its name to the Department of Instructional Technology and Learning Sciences. Like many other programs that have undergone similar name changes, the Department first considered the idea several years ago, with the official title modification taking place…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Sciences, Faculty, Higher Education
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Leigh, Doug; Watkins, Ryan – Performance Improvement, 2011
Efforts to improve human and organizational performance are often courageous adventures full of unexpected twists and turns and frequently leading to unexpected destinations. From mentoring and succession planning to e-learning and beyond, the activities that can be leveraged to improve performance are vast. Comparing, contrasting, selecting, and…
Descriptors: Personnel Management, Performance Technology, Improvement Programs, Organizational Development
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