PBL and Networked Learning: Potentials and Challenges in the Age of Mass Collaboration and Personalization

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Abstract

Problem‐based learning (PBL), active learning, and various orchestrations of learning and technology (blended learning, e‐learning, distance education) have become increasingly pervasive in debates across the entire educational spectrum. Widely within education there is a growing interest in adopting moreactive, student‐centered approaches to teaching and learning, and new technologies and media are viewed as a means to realize these ideals. This interest in technology as an enhancement to learning lives among practitioners, researchers, and policy makers. It is fueled by both research and practice‐based experiences but equally by commercial interest as education is an increasinglyinteresting and massive market for traditional and new stakeholders. This has led to a growing concern with solutionism, meaning the belief that a particular pedagogical challenge or problem can be fixed through a technological solution, or that technology implementation in‐and‐of‐itself will result in innovative pedagogy and classroom practices (Jones, 2015; Selwyn, 2014).
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Wiley Handbook of Problem-Based Learning
EditorsMahnaz Moallem, Woei Hung, Nada Dabbagh
PublisherWiley
Publication date11 Apr 2019
Pages593-615
Chapter26
ISBN (Print)9781119173212
ISBN (Electronic)978-1-119-17323-6, 9781119173243
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Apr 2019
SeriesWiley Handbooks in Education

Keywords

  • PBL
  • Networked Learning
  • Mass collaboration
  • Problem Based Learning (PBL)

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