Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students

Universities face the challenge of constantly improving the quality of higher education and changing the learning behaviour of students, from passive reactive learning to active self-regulated learning. Learner-centred, constructively designed learning tasks offer a great opportunity here. This pape...

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Main Author: Junmin Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/230
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spelling doaj-24525594af0c4d52b0be595686653bef2021-05-31T23:54:00ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022021-05-011123023010.3390/educsci11050230Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among StudentsJunmin Li0Chair of Economics and Business Education, University of Cologne, 50931 Cologne, GermanyUniversities face the challenge of constantly improving the quality of higher education and changing the learning behaviour of students, from passive reactive learning to active self-regulated learning. Learner-centred, constructively designed learning tasks offer a great opportunity here. This paper investigates to what extent the learning process is challenged by these learning tasks, and how these tasks are perceived by the students, using a before and after survey of students studying at bachelor level in business courses at a German university. The paper starts with a short description of constructivism in the context of task design and the main characteristics of learner-centred, constructivist-orientated learning tasks: openness to problems, situation orientation, openness to solution paths, and degree of difficulty. Then the research method used is outlined before the findings are presented. The before and after survey shows that despite an increased complexity and workload, the motivation to deal with topics on the subject remained stable.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/230self-directed learninglearning tasksstudent surveysuniversity didactics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Junmin Li
spellingShingle Junmin Li
Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
Education Sciences
self-directed learning
learning tasks
student surveys
university didactics
author_facet Junmin Li
author_sort Junmin Li
title Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
title_short Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
title_full Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
title_fullStr Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
title_full_unstemmed Learner-Centred Learning Tasks in Higher Education: A Study on Perception among Students
title_sort learner-centred learning tasks in higher education: a study on perception among students
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Universities face the challenge of constantly improving the quality of higher education and changing the learning behaviour of students, from passive reactive learning to active self-regulated learning. Learner-centred, constructively designed learning tasks offer a great opportunity here. This paper investigates to what extent the learning process is challenged by these learning tasks, and how these tasks are perceived by the students, using a before and after survey of students studying at bachelor level in business courses at a German university. The paper starts with a short description of constructivism in the context of task design and the main characteristics of learner-centred, constructivist-orientated learning tasks: openness to problems, situation orientation, openness to solution paths, and degree of difficulty. Then the research method used is outlined before the findings are presented. The before and after survey shows that despite an increased complexity and workload, the motivation to deal with topics on the subject remained stable.
topic self-directed learning
learning tasks
student surveys
university didactics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/230
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