I found
Robert Ackland's "
Web Social Science: Concepts, Data and Tools for Social Scientists in the Digital Age" (SAGE Publications, 2013), on the new books stand at the
ANU Library.
This is very relevant to the pedagogy of e-learning, as the techniques
for carrying out social research can be applied to research into the
effectiveness of on-line learning. The introductory chapter includes a
potted history of the Internet and the web, but more importantly
discusses what virtual communities and on-line social networks are. This
could be useful for illuminating a discussion of what on-line education
is.
What is on-line education?
Ackland discusses how a "community" develops "common beliefs, norms
and shared understandings. Ackland sees an on-line group of being less
cohesive than a community being "... a group of people who conduct
personal computer-mediated interactions, where the interaction is
focused on a topic that reflects the community of interests of the group
...". Therefore I suggest the students in an on-line course could be
considered an on-line group, with the aim of a vocational educators
being to have the students become part of community. Social science
research techniques could therefore be used to evaluate the
effectiveness of education, by seeing how cohesive the group is and how
well those students become part of the community.
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