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Designing for Learning in a Networked World discusses central theoretical concepts and draws on current debates about competences necessary to thrive in contemporary society.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part 1. Common framework 
Chapter 1. Introduction: competence demands in today's networked world 
Chapter 2. Design in educational research – clarifying conceptions and presuppositions 
Chapter 3. Networked learning in a networked world 
Chapter 4. Assessing network technologies for learning 
Part 2. Skills for a networked world 
Chapter 5. Teaching in a networked world – skills, knowledge and beliefs 
Chapter 6. Participatory skills for learning in a networked world 
Chapter 7. Facilitating participation: Redefinition of library competence in a networked world 
Chapter 8. Digital literacy – cognitive strategies, genre skills and situated practice 
Chapter 9. Computational Literacy skill set – an incremental approach 
Part 3. Case studies: designing for developing skills in a networked world 
Chapter 10. Guided tinkering as a design for learning programming 
Chapter 11. Designing for transition from day-care to school 
Chapter 12. Design principles for designing simulated social practices 
Chapter 13. Guidance practices for citizens’ interactions with e-government solutions 
Chapter 14. Intermediaries and intermediating tools as instruments for digital literacy in Bangladesh 
Chapter 15. Conclusion: designing for learning in a networked world
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Nina Bonderup Dohn is Associate Professor in the Department of Design and Communication at the University of Southern Denmark. 
Zusammenfassung
Designing for Learning in a Networked World discusses central theoretical concepts and draws on current debates about competences necessary to thrive in contemporary society.
Zusatztext
"The networked world calls urgently for the kind of design that this volume systematically proposes. Globalization, overpopulation, climate change, economic inequality, political bubbles and religious fanaticism demand new forms of interpretation, comprehension and collective response. They require educated citizens who can critically analyze conflicting views, follow intricate lines of argumentation, understand complex models of evolving phenomena and organize effective democratic reactions. Networked learning with collaboration and computer support can only succeed in preparing students with the necessary social practices, participatory skills and transformed knowledge abilities through careful, innovative educational design such as clearly detailed in this book."
Gerry Stahl, Professor Emeritus, Drexel University.
"This is an impressively thoughtful and determinedly practical book: an illustration of what can be achieved when applied philosophy meshes with messy practices. The spaces where technology, education and design are co-evolving can be hard to picture, let alone describe. The contributors to this book have jointly succeeded in reframing and expanding our conceptions of some crucial aspects of learning and teaching in a networked world. Their example prompts and provides for greater self-scrutiny in the heady work of educational innovation."
Peter Goodyear, Professor of Education, The University of Sydney.