Courseware projects in advanced educational computing environments

Mary Elizabeth Hopper, Purdue University

Abstract

This study explored how issues from older educational computing projects became intertwined with new problems during courseware projects in advanced computing environments. The following projects were the focus of this study: (1) Engineering Specific Career-Planning and Problem-Solving Environment, Educational Research and Information Systems, Purdue University; (2) Context 32, Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship, Brown University; (3) TODOR and Mechanics 2.01 Problem Set Solutions, Athena, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; (4) The Physical Geology Tutor, Center for Educational Computing Initiatives, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Interviews with 19 key participants and information from major documents were used to construct a model describing the relationships between educational goals, technical characteristics, and organizational structures. Successful projects began with goals for providing both improved representations of the discipline and increased learner involvement. Critical technical characteristics of software included appropriate functionality, usability for interaction and creation, and adaptability for availability or the change inherent in distributed computing environments. The courseware that was created consisted of complex learning environments that required regular use and maintenance to survive. The authors who developed the learning environments needed to maintain them and acquire the resources upon which regular delivery depended. Three different organizational structures were found which provided for the continuation of informational, technical, human, and financial resources. Within these organizational structures, learners sometimes became authors, while authors became the managers of ongoing "knowledge ecologies" where major educational, technical and organizational factors needed to be continuously balanced. Future courseware projects should be viewed as experiments in knowledge ecology and be treated as opportunities to further define the framework of concepts developed through this study.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Lawler, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Curricula|Teaching|Educational software|Information Systems

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