La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia

How can works and individual learnings be valued in distance learning? And, after all, how can we promote a distance learning student by giving grades and degrees? There is no doubt that a thesis or research piece plus a many-yearlong process of elaboration in which tens or hundreds of messages a...

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Main Author: Miguel Zapata Ros
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Murcia 2004-01-01
Series:RED. Revista de Educación a Distancia
Online Access:http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=54701005
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spelling doaj-31eeed549c4349d38d313944c9815c2d2020-11-25T01:26:56ZspaUniversidad de MurciaRED. Revista de Educación a Distancia1578-76802004-01-013100La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experienciaMiguel Zapata RosHow can works and individual learnings be valued in distance learning? And, after all, how can we promote a distance learning student by giving grades and degrees? There is no doubt that a thesis or research piece plus a many-yearlong process of elaboration in which tens or hundreds of messages are written and exchanged between a student and their tutors offer enough validation elements to evaluate if goals have been met. However, there is an extra added issue of vital importance that crops up before a personal piece of work to consider in the end: how do we know if the real author is the one who claims to be so? The same doubt that originated Steiners vignette in the New Yorker1, in which a dog can be seen before a computer keyboard saying, On the Internet, nobody knows youre a dog, is cast again. Undoubtedly, an essential worry for several basic issues underlies this anxiety: Can a learning program be wholly at a distance? What is the academic or professional guarantee given to those degrees? And what is most, which is their social credibility? This paper approaches the problem of authorship and acknowledgement of identity in personal pieces of work done in distance learning. Besides, this work describes and experience on the area and offers a reflexion on the topic.http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=54701005
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miguel Zapata Ros
spellingShingle Miguel Zapata Ros
La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
RED. Revista de Educación a Distancia
author_facet Miguel Zapata Ros
author_sort Miguel Zapata Ros
title La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
title_short La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
title_full La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
title_fullStr La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
title_full_unstemmed La autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en Educación a Distancia. Una experiencia
title_sort la autoría y la acreditación de la identidad en los trabajos personales en educación a distancia. una experiencia
publisher Universidad de Murcia
series RED. Revista de Educación a Distancia
issn 1578-7680
publishDate 2004-01-01
description How can works and individual learnings be valued in distance learning? And, after all, how can we promote a distance learning student by giving grades and degrees? There is no doubt that a thesis or research piece plus a many-yearlong process of elaboration in which tens or hundreds of messages are written and exchanged between a student and their tutors offer enough validation elements to evaluate if goals have been met. However, there is an extra added issue of vital importance that crops up before a personal piece of work to consider in the end: how do we know if the real author is the one who claims to be so? The same doubt that originated Steiners vignette in the New Yorker1, in which a dog can be seen before a computer keyboard saying, On the Internet, nobody knows youre a dog, is cast again. Undoubtedly, an essential worry for several basic issues underlies this anxiety: Can a learning program be wholly at a distance? What is the academic or professional guarantee given to those degrees? And what is most, which is their social credibility? This paper approaches the problem of authorship and acknowledgement of identity in personal pieces of work done in distance learning. Besides, this work describes and experience on the area and offers a reflexion on the topic.
url http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=54701005
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