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Rosen, Yigal – Educational Technology, 2014
One of the greatest concerns in schools today is how teachers can bring together assessment and learning in a way that is meaningful for students' thinking skills, while focusing on content standards. Better understanding of how different types of technology based thinking tools can be used for improving classroom teaching and learning,…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Technological Advancement, Concept Mapping, Evidence
Francom, Gregory M.; Gardner, Joel L. – Educational Technology, 2013
Many recent models of learning and instruction center learning on real-world tasks and problems to support knowledge application and transfer. Among these models are problem-based learning and task-centered learning, two different approaches to learning that are often mistaken for one another. However, there are important distinctions between…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Problem Based Learning, Comparative Analysis, Teaching Methods
Polly, Drew – Educational Technology, 2011
Technology has been shown to positively influence student learning when students explore technology-rich tasks that simultaneously require them to use higher-order thinking skills (HOTS), such as analyzing or evaluating information or creating new representations of knowledge. Educational technology researchers have posited that in order for…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Thinking Skills, Task Analysis, Teaching Methods
Hannum, Wallace H. – Educational Technology, 2012
Instructional design models have been criticized for being too inflexible and taking too long to follow to be useful in today's fast-paced environment. As a result, some have rejected instructional design. This article offers an alternative view of instructional design as flexible and able to be accomplished in much shorter time periods than…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Change Strategies, Educational Change, Educational Practices
Rose, Ellen – Educational Technology, 2010
"Continuous partial attention" is a term that was coined in the late 1990s, to describe the increasingly dispersed nature of attention in online environments. The purpose of this article is to describe the concept, discuss its implications for online learning, and propose a new agenda for research in what has been called "the Age of Interruption."
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Attention, Educational Research