Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Scharf, Meg, Smith, Karen L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED452807
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181894412533760
author Scharf, Meg
Smith, Karen L.
author_facet Scharf, Meg
Smith, Karen L.
Scharf, Meg
Smith, Karen L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Managed Chaos: Learning in Technology Enhanced Environments. Scharf, Meg Smith, Karen L. Computer Assisted Instruction Computer Uses in Education Educational Development Educational Practices Faculty Development Higher Education Instructional Innovation Learner Controlled Instruction Nontraditional Education Learning and information management in technology rich environments is a nonlinear process that teachers cannot pretend to control. The University of Central Florida's (UCF) teaching and information management strategies build on metaphors and models borrowed from Dynamical Systems and Complexity Theories to help teachers and others understand learning processes and effectively guide students in complex environments. The UCF Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning and the UCF Library are tracking and analyzing the processes students use for information acquisition, management and application in order to identify strategies that lead to successful learning and those that break down. The result has been a faculty development process that has moved faculty away from a lecture/information distribution model to one that actively engages students in the learning process. Through the use of templates and guidelines, negotiated outcomes, team roles, and phased deadlines, students have begun to accept responsibility for their own learning and are shifting from passive recipients of information to explorers, discoverers, and experimenters. Some faculty embrace the notion of chaos in the classroom, while others fear it. By understanding the teaching approaches that support dynamic learning and the type of students who can benefit from this environment, UCF has been able to create learning alternatives and to maximize the use of high tech environments, making the most flexible available only to those faculty who are prepared to use them. The UCF model for helping faculty maximize the dynamic learning environment can help other institutions move toward a philosophy that embraces students' ability to discover and apply knowledge that is not only contained in a textbook. (AEF)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED452807
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2000
record_format eric
spellingShingle Managed Chaos: Learning in Technology Enhanced Environments.
Scharf, Meg
Smith, Karen L.
Computer Assisted Instruction
Computer Uses in Education
Educational Development
Educational Practices
Faculty Development
Higher Education
Instructional Innovation
Learner Controlled Instruction
Nontraditional Education
Managed Chaos: Learning in Technology Enhanced Environments. Scharf, Meg Smith, Karen L. Computer Assisted Instruction Computer Uses in Education Educational Development Educational Practices Faculty Development Higher Education Instructional Innovation Learner Controlled Instruction Nontraditional Education Learning and information management in technology rich environments is a nonlinear process that teachers cannot pretend to control. The University of Central Florida's (UCF) teaching and information management strategies build on metaphors and models borrowed from Dynamical Systems and Complexity Theories to help teachers and others understand learning processes and effectively guide students in complex environments. The UCF Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning and the UCF Library are tracking and analyzing the processes students use for information acquisition, management and application in order to identify strategies that lead to successful learning and those that break down. The result has been a faculty development process that has moved faculty away from a lecture/information distribution model to one that actively engages students in the learning process. Through the use of templates and guidelines, negotiated outcomes, team roles, and phased deadlines, students have begun to accept responsibility for their own learning and are shifting from passive recipients of information to explorers, discoverers, and experimenters. Some faculty embrace the notion of chaos in the classroom, while others fear it. By understanding the teaching approaches that support dynamic learning and the type of students who can benefit from this environment, UCF has been able to create learning alternatives and to maximize the use of high tech environments, making the most flexible available only to those faculty who are prepared to use them. The UCF model for helping faculty maximize the dynamic learning environment can help other institutions move toward a philosophy that embraces students' ability to discover and apply knowledge that is not only contained in a textbook. (AEF)
title Managed Chaos: Learning in Technology Enhanced Environments.
topic Computer Assisted Instruction
Computer Uses in Education
Educational Development
Educational Practices
Faculty Development
Higher Education
Instructional Innovation
Learner Controlled Instruction
Nontraditional Education
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED452807