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Learning Objects: Adaptive Retrieval through Learning Styles




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Learning Objects and E-Learning: an Informing Science Perspective




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The Development and Implementation of Learning Objects in a Higher Education Setting




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 2, 2006




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Reading in A Digital Age: e-Books Are Students Ready For This Learning Object?




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Pre-service Teachers' Learning Object Development: A Case Study in K-12 Setting




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An Integrated Approach for Automatic Aggregation of Learning Knowledge Objects




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Practical E-Learning for the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics at the University of Ljubljana




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Learning Object Patterns for Programming




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 3, 2007




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Learning Pod: A New Paradigm for Reusability of Learning Objects




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Validation of a Learning Object Review Instrument: Relationship between Ratings of Learning Objects and Actual Learning Outcomes




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Investigating the Use of Learning Objects for Secondary School Mathematics




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Repository 2.0: Social Dynamics to Support Community Building in Learning Object Repositories




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Building a Framework to Support Project-Based Collaborative Learning Experiences in an Asynchronous Learning Network




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Evaluation of Learning Objects from the User's Perspective: The Case of the EURIDICE Service




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A Model to Represent the Facets of Learning Object




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Modalities of Using Learning Objects for Intelligent Agents in Learning




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Towards A Comprehensive Learning Object Metadata: Incorporation of Context to Stipulate Meaningful Learning and Enhance Learning Object Reusability




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Ontology of Learning Objects Repository for Pedagogical Knowledge Sharing




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 4, 2008




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Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series




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Focused Crawling for Downloading Learning Objects




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 5, 2009




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Challenges of Integrating Technologies for Learning: Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series of Chais Conference 2010 Best Papers




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Learning Object Systems and Strategy: A Description and Discussion




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 6, 2010




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Using the Interactive White Board in Teaching and Learning – An Evaluation of the SMART CLASSROOM Pilot Project




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Learning and Teaching in the Technological Era: Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series of Chais Conference 2011 Best Papers




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Keeping an Eye on the Screen: Application Accessibility for Learning Objects for Blind and Limited Vision Students




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Design of an Open Source Learning Objects Authoring Tool – The LO Creator




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An Agent-based Federated Learning Object Search Service




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Modeling the Macro-Behavior of Learning Object Repositories




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 7, 2011




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An Object Oriented Approach to Improve the Precision of Learning Object Retrieval in a Self Learning Environment




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On-Line Project-Based Peer Assessed Competitions as an Instructional Strategy in Higher Education




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Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series of Chais Conference 2012 Best Papers




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Printable Table of Contents: IJELLO Volume 8, 2012




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Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series of Chais Conference 2013 Best Papers




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Connectivist Learning Objects and Learning Styles




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An Assistant for Loading Learning Object Metadata: An Ontology Based Approach




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Quantitative Aspects about the Interactions of Professors in the Learning Management System during a Final Undergraduate Project Distance Discipline




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A Data Mining Approach to Improve Re-Accessibility and Delivery of Learning Knowledge Objects




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Introduction to the IJELLO Special Series of Chais Conference 2014 Best Papers




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Assessing Online Learning Objects: Student Evaluation of a Guide on the Side Interactive Learning Tutorial Designed by SRJC Libraries




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Does 1:1 Computing in a Junior High-School Change the Pedagogical Perspectives of Teachers and their Educational Discourse?

Transforming a school from traditional teaching and learning to a one-to-one (1:1) classroom, in which a teacher and students have personal digital devices, inevitably requires changes in the way the teacher addresses her role. This study examined the implications of integrating 1:1 computing on teachers’ pedagogical perceptions and the classroom’s educational discourse. A change in pedagogical perceptions during three years of teaching within this model was investigated. The research analyzed data from 14 teachers teaching in a junior high school in the north of Israel collected over the course of three years through interviews and lesson observations. The findings show that the 1:1 computing allows teachers to improve their teaching skills; however, it fails to change their fundamental attitudes in regard to teaching and learning processes. It was further found that the use of a laptop by each student does not significantly improve the classroom’s learning discourse. The computer is perceived as an individual or group learning technology rather than as a tool for conducting learning discourse. An analysis of the data collected shows a great contribution to collaboration among teachers in preparing technology-enhanced lessons. The findings are discussed in terms of Bruner’s (Olson & Bruner, 1996) “folk psychology” and “folk pedagogy” of teachers and “the new learning ecology” framework in 1:1 classroom (Lee, Spires, Wiebe, Hollebrands, & Young, 2015). One of the main recommendations of this research is to reflect on findings from the teaching staff and the school community emphasizing 1:1 technology as a tool for significant pedagogical change. It seems that the use of personal technology per se is not enough for pedagogical changes to take place; the change must begin with teachers’ perceptions and attitudes.




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A Decade of Chais Conferences: Introduction to the IJELL Special Series of Chais Conference 2015 Best Papers

The seventh issue of the Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning (IJELL- formerly Interdisciplinary Journal of E-Learning and Learning Objects - IJELLO) special series includes a selection of best papers presented at the 10th Chais Conference for the Study of Innovation and Learning Technologies: Learning in the Technological Era. The Chais conference 2015 was held at The Open University of Israel, Raanana, Israel, on February 10-11, 2015, and was organized by its Research Center for Innovation in Learning Technologies. This preface presents the mission and activities of the Research Center for Innovation in Learning Technologies at the Open University of Israel. It describes the objectives and themes of the Chais conference 2015, explains the special series synergies with IJELL and the Informing Science Institute, chronicles the topics that have been published in the series, and introduces the papers included in this special selection.




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Analyzing the Quality of Students Interaction in a Distance Learning Object-Oriented Programming Discipline

Teaching object-oriented programming to students in an in-classroom environment demands well-thought didactic and pedagogical strategies in order to guarantee a good level of apprenticeship. To teach it on a completely distance learning environment (e-learning) imposes possibly other strategies, besides those that the e-learning model of Open University of Portugal dictates. This article analyses the behavior of the students of the 1st cycle in Computer Science while interacting with the object-oriented programming (OOP) discipline available to them on the Moodle platform. Through the evaluation of the level of interaction achieved in a group of relevant selected actions by the students, it is possible to identify their relevancy to the success of the programming learning process. Data was extracted from Moodle, numerically analyzed, and, with the use of some charts, behavior patterns of students were identified. This paper points out potential new approaches to be considered in e-learning in order to enhance programming learning results, besides confirming a high level of drop-out and a low level of interaction, thus finding no clear correlation between students’ success and the number of online actions (especially in forums), which reveals a possible failure of the main pillar on which the e-learning model relies.




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Introduction to the IJELL Special Series of Chais Conference 2016 Best Papers

This preface presents the papers included in the eighth issue of the Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning (IJELL) special series of selected Chais Conference best papers. The Chais Conference for the Study of Innovation and Learning Technologies: Learning in the Technological Era, is organized annually by the Research Center for Innovation in Learning Technologies, The Open University of Israel. The 11th Chais Conference was held at The Open University of Israel, Raanana, Israel, on February 16-17, 2016.




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Beyond the Walls of the Classroom: Introduction to the IJELL Special Series of Chais Conference 2017 Best Papers

Aim/Purpose: This preface presents the papers included in the ninth issue of the Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning (IJELL) special series of selected Chais Conference best papers. Background: The Chais Conference for the Study of Innovation and Learning Technologies: Learning in the Technological Era, is organized by the Research Center for Innovation in Learning Technologies, The Open University of Israel. The 12th Chais Conference was held at The Open University of Israel, Raanana, Israel, on February 14-15, 2017. Each year, selected papers of the Chais conference are expanded and published in IJELL. Methodology: A qualitative conceptual analysis of the themes and insights of the papers included in the ninth selection of IJELL special series of selected Chais Conference best papers. Contribution: The presentation of the papers of this selection emphasizes their novelty, as well as their main implications, describes current research issues, and chronicles the main themes within the discourse of learning technologies research, as reflected at the Chais 2017 conference. Findings: Contemporary research goes ‘beyond the walls of the classroom’ and investigates systemic and pedagogical aspects of integrating learning technologies in education on a large scale. Recommendation for Researchers: Researchers are encouraged to investigate broad aspects of seizing the opportunities and overcoming the challenges of integrating innovative technologies in education. Impact on Society: Effective application of learning technologies has a major potential to improve the well-being of individuals and societies. Future Research: The conceptual analysis of contemporary main themes of innovative learning technologies may provide researchers with novel directions for future research on various aspects of the effective utilization of learning technologies.