Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment

Various tools and services based on Web 2.0 (mainly blogs, wikis, social networking tools) are increasingly used in formal education to create personal learning environments, providing self-directed learners with more freedom, choice, and control over their learning. In such distributed and personal...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter Normak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athabasca University Press 2013-07-01
Series:International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
Subjects:
PLE
LMS
Online Access:http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1397/2527
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spelling doaj-d5c6d4e7a43445f49c776a13e1e1961e2020-11-25T00:33:32ZengAthabasca University PressInternational Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning1492-38312013-07-01143Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning EnvironmentVladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter NormakVarious tools and services based on Web 2.0 (mainly blogs, wikis, social networking tools) are increasingly used in formal education to create personal learning environments, providing self-directed learners with more freedom, choice, and control over their learning. In such distributed and personalized learning environments, the traditional role of the teacher is being transformed into that of a facilitator. This change inevitably means a reduced level of control on the part of the teacher. This is evidenced, for example, in difficulties experienced in retaining the necessary levels of control when the learning process moves away from institutionally maintained systems to blog-based personal learning environments. In conducting a course in a formal education setting however, it is still essential for the teacher to retain control over certain learning activities, such as course enrolment, assignments, and the assessment process.A course management plug-in for the WordPress blog platform called LePress was designed and developed as a possible solution to this problem. By using LePress, teachers are able to more easily manage and coordinate courses in a distributed blog-based environment. Teachers are able to regain control over some important aspects of online course management, while maintaining the learners’ freedom and choice for self-directed learning. This paper documents the results of a survey of a group of 37 teachers who used LePress for at least six months. The study demonstrates that by using LePress, teachers experienced an enhanced level of control over several aspects of the course and this reinforced their perception about the ease of use of the system. http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1397/2527Teacher controlPLELMSblog-based learningperceived easy to use
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter Normak
spellingShingle Vladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter Normak
Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
Teacher control
PLE
LMS
blog-based learning
perceived easy to use
author_facet Vladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter Normak
author_sort Vladimir Tomberg, Mart Laanpere, Tobias Ley, and Peeter Normak
title Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
title_short Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
title_full Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
title_fullStr Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
title_full_unstemmed Sustaining Teacher Control in a Blog-Based Personal Learning Environment
title_sort sustaining teacher control in a blog-based personal learning environment
publisher Athabasca University Press
series International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
issn 1492-3831
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Various tools and services based on Web 2.0 (mainly blogs, wikis, social networking tools) are increasingly used in formal education to create personal learning environments, providing self-directed learners with more freedom, choice, and control over their learning. In such distributed and personalized learning environments, the traditional role of the teacher is being transformed into that of a facilitator. This change inevitably means a reduced level of control on the part of the teacher. This is evidenced, for example, in difficulties experienced in retaining the necessary levels of control when the learning process moves away from institutionally maintained systems to blog-based personal learning environments. In conducting a course in a formal education setting however, it is still essential for the teacher to retain control over certain learning activities, such as course enrolment, assignments, and the assessment process.A course management plug-in for the WordPress blog platform called LePress was designed and developed as a possible solution to this problem. By using LePress, teachers are able to more easily manage and coordinate courses in a distributed blog-based environment. Teachers are able to regain control over some important aspects of online course management, while maintaining the learners’ freedom and choice for self-directed learning. This paper documents the results of a survey of a group of 37 teachers who used LePress for at least six months. The study demonstrates that by using LePress, teachers experienced an enhanced level of control over several aspects of the course and this reinforced their perception about the ease of use of the system.
topic Teacher control
PLE
LMS
blog-based learning
perceived easy to use
url http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1397/2527
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