ESL UNDERGRADUATES' EXPERIENCE OF WIKI AND SKYPE FOR COLLABORATIVE LEARNING (original) (raw)

Study on Students’ Communication and Interaction in Collaborative Learning Processes with Web-based Social Tools

Jurnal Teknologi, 2014

The rapid progression of ICT has influenced the social change and broadened the horizon of innovative learning which further enabled the web-based collaborative learning. Studies show that the use of web-based social tools is able to expand the social interaction and engagement among the students. In fact, many learning approaches in today’s higher education context have embedded collaborative learning activities. Therefore, it is important to investigate the student communicative acts and social interaction in the online communication process for sustaining and better supporting web-based collaborative learning. This study presents students’ feedback and their communicative acts in the process of collaborating on a multimedia project. Communicative Model of Collaborative Learning (CMCL) was used to analyze these inputs which obtained from open-ended questions, student interviews and students’ posting in social networking sites. The results showed that the CMCL was a useful tool for...

Supporting students to develop collaborative learning skills in technology-based environments

British Journal of Educational Technology, 2006

The paper focuses on the question of how to advance collaboration through the Web and support lifelong learning. First, the theoretical framework and architecture of a new web-based tool, the ‘IQ Team’, is introduced. IQ Team is an interactive online assessment and support system to learn social skills needed in cooperative work, and belongs in an interactive online assessing and tutoring system, ‘IQ Form’, developed for the Finnish Virtual University. IQ Team has three main elements: (1) interactive self-evaluation test banks, (2) online tutoring sets and (3) learning diaries. In the creation of IQ Team, the validation process was conducted with two samples (n = 259 and n = 275). The online students’ social skills in different groups were explored, and the feedback data from different user groups were analysed. The online students scored high values for social skills, and no differences were discerned between university, Open University and technical students. The qualitative data (n = 35) were collected in order to get users’ feedback of the tool. The qualitative data consisted of interviews, open-ended questions and online discussions. The users of IQ Team reflected that the tool benefited them to become aware of their group work skills and developed their collaborative learning skills. IQ Team provides a powerful tool for online instruction and communication in higher education and in the Open University to promote joint-regulated learning.

The Contribution of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning to the Development of Collaboration Between Students: Results of Pilot Implementation in Greek Secondary Education

International Education Studies, 2019

The main purpose of this survey is to explore whether Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) constitutes a good practice in the teaching of Literature in Lyceum and in the cross-curricular approach of the specific subject. More specifically, the contribution of the digital platform web 2.0, wiki pbworks – along with the use of subsidiary software applications – is explored in the promotion of collaborative learning and the special skills it develops among students. The method that was used is the field experiment, working both with an experimental group (25 students) and with a control group (25 students). The outcome of the findings, regards the promotion of collaborative learning, the formation of a more positive attitude towards collaboration proved to be successful with regard to the use of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning and the application of the digital platform of collaboration web 2.0, wiki pbworks.

Technology in Support of Collaborative Learning

Educational Psychology Review, 2007

This paper reviews the research conducted in the last 20 years on the application of technology in support of collaborative learning in higher education. The review focuses primarily on studies that use Internet-based technologies and social interaction analysis. The review provides six sets of observations/recommendations regarding methodology, empirical evidence, and research gaps and issues that may help focus future research in this emerging field of study.