Personal tools

What is your domain of research?

by Zinayida Petrushyna last modified May 28, 2009 03:09 PM
Up to JTEL Summer School 2009
  • What is your domain of research?

    Posted by Zinayida Petrushyna at May 27. 2009
    Hi, guys and girls! I would like to ask you what are you interested in TEL. What is TEL for you at all and what areas are you working with. Normally there are students coming from pedagogical side and from technical side. But most of us anyway are working with E-Learning, thus are intersted in Learning Management System, Personal Learning Environments, Learning styles, Connectivism, Behaviourism, etc. Let us find our overlapping interest! Looking forward for your answers! Z
    • Re: What is your domain of research?

      Posted by Costin-Gabriel CHIRU at May 27. 2009
      Hi! My background is in Natural Language Processing and for my thesis I will try to make use of what I know to build a system that should ease the students and teachers' job in the didactic activity. For this, I will also need some theories regarding 'community of practice', so I hope you'll be so kind to share a part of what you know with me. :) Thank you!
    • Re: What is your domain of research?

      Posted by Mikhail Fominykh at May 27. 2009
      Hi! My background is in software development, but the current work is on learning with ICT. My topic is using web2.0 tools in collaborative work with 3D educational content. Learning and collaboration in 3D virtual worlds, social constructivism, educational content and stuff like this.
      Misha :D PS: Zina thank you for your creativity! by the way, you haven't answer your own question:)
      • Re: What is your domain of research?

        Posted by Zinayida Petrushyna at May 27. 2009

        Previously Mikhail Fominykh wrote:

        by the way, you haven't answer your own question:)

        Hi, Mikhail! Thanks for your answer and you question. I'm interested in E-Learning communities and analysis of them: structurally and semantically. I'm using actor network theory, social network analysis, community of practice theory, dual theory, sentiment analysis - all in one pot.
Powered by Ploneboard
Document Actions