CAL evaluation: Future directions
Open Access
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in ALT-J
- Vol. 5 (1) , 40-47
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0968776970050107
Abstract
Scientific, experimental methodology was previously considered to be the only acceptable approach to educational research. Two important principles of experimental design are: • to balance individual differences within study populations and so achieve generalizable results, and • to attempt to isolate the effects of a single resource for evaluation purposes. Problems with this approach were reported in the literature of the 1970s (Elton and Laurillard, 1979; MacDonald and Jenkins, 1979) when the influence on learning of individual and contextual factors was recognized. Similar issues emerged during the 1980s and early 1990s, (Bates, 1981; Spencer, 1991) when the inability to identify which single or combined factors supported learning became a recurrent problem. It was clear that prior knowledge, approaches to learning, provision of appropriate scaffolding, complementary combinations of resources and various contextual factors all influenced the quality of learning outcomes. It was concluded that evaluations must be designed to account for these factors, rather than to balance or disregard them as was previously the norm (Kemmis, 1987, Gunn, 1995). DOI:10.1080/0968776970050107Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Computers in teaching and learning in U.K. higher educationComputers & Education, 1992
- Blocks to the effective use of information technology in higher educationComputers & Education, 1992
- Animations need narrations: An experimental test of a dual-coding hypothesis.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
- Modes, media and methods: the search for educational effectivenessBritish Journal of Educational Technology, 1991
- Situated Cognition and the Culture of LearningEducational Researcher, 1989
- Strategies for stimulating the motivation to learnPerformance + Instruction, 1987
- Towards a Better Research Framework for Evaluating the Effectiveness of Educational MediaBritish Journal of Educational Technology, 1981
- Trends in research on student learningStudies in Higher Education, 1979