Lee, M. and McCoughlin, C. (2010) Web 2.0 Based e-Learning: Applying Social Informatics for Tertiary Learning Hershey PA: IGI Global, 415 pp, US$180 hardback
Description (from publisher)
Educational communities today are rapidly increasing their interest in Web 2.0 and e-learning advancements for the enhancement of teaching practices.
Web 2.0-Based E-Learning: Applying Social Informatics for Tertiary Teaching provides a useful and valuable reference to the latest advances in the area of educational technology and e-learning. This innovative book offers an excellent resource for any practitioner, researcher, or academician with an interest in the use of the Web for providing meaningful learning experiences.
Topics Covered
Comment
I am one of the chapter authors. A copy of my chapter, ‘Understanding Web 2.0 and its implications for e-Learning’ can be downloaded free from here, with the publisher’s permission. Any comments or feedback on my chapter, or the book in general, will be welcomed.
Chapters
1. | Back to the Future |
Pages 1-20 | |
Nada Dabbagh (George Mason University, USA) Rick Reo ( George Mason University, USA) |
2. | Understanding Web 2.0 and its Implications for E-Learning |
Pages 21-42 | |
Tony Bates (Tony Bates Associates, Canada) |
3. | Pedagogy 2.0 |
Pages 43-69 | |
Catherine McLoughlin (Australian Catholic University, Australia) Mark Lee ( Charles Sturt University, Australia) |
4. | Learner-Generated Contexts |
Pages 70-84 | |
Rose Luckin (University of London, UK) Wilma Clark ( University of London, UK) Fred Garnett ( University of London, UK) Andrew Whitworth ( University of Manchester, UK) Jon Akass ( Media Citizens Ltd, UK) John Cook ( London Metropolitan University, UK) Peter Day ( University of Brighton, UK) Nigel Ecclesfield ( Becta, UK) Tom Hamilton ( University of Sussex, UK) Judy Robertson ( Heriot-Watt University, UK) |
5. | Considering Students’ Perspectives on Personal and Distributed Learning Environments in Course Design |
Pages 85-108 | |
Terje Väljataga (Tampere University of Technology, Finland & Tallinn University, Estonia) Kai Pata ( Tallinn University, Estonia) Kairit Tammets ( Tallinn University, Estonia) |
6. | Personal Knowledge Management Skills in Web 2.0-Based Learning |
Pages 109-127 | |
Maria Cigognini (University of Florence, Italy) Maria Pettenati ( University of Florence, Italy) Palitha Edirisingha ( University of Leicester, UK) |
7. | Teaching and Learning Information Technology through the Lens of Web 2.0 |
Pages 128-148 | |
Mark Frydenberg (Bentley University, USA) |
8. | University Students’ Self-Motivated Blogging and Development of Study Skills and Research Skills |
Pages 149-179 | |
Shailey Minocha (The Open University, UK) Lucinda Kerawalla ( The Open University, UK) |
9. | Using Wikis in Teacher Education |
Pages 180-191 | |
Steve Wheeler (University of Plymouth, UK) |
10. | Mobile 2.0 |
Pages 192-208 | |
John Pettit (The Open University, UK) Agnes Kukulska-Hulme ( The Open University, UK) |
11. | Meeting at the Wiki |
Pages 209-227 | |
Ana Oskoz (University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA) Idoia Elola ( Texas Tech University, USA) |
12. | Podcasting in Distance Learning |
Pages 228-246 | |
Catherine McLoughlin (Australian Catholic University, Australia) Mark Lee ( Charles Sturt University, Australia) Belinda Tynan ( University of New England, Australia) |
13. | Using Web 2.0 Tools to Enhance the Student Experience in Non-Teaching Areas of the University |
Pages 247-266 | |
Lisa Cluett (The University of Western Australia, Australia) Judy Skene ( The University of Western Australia, Australia) |
14. | “You Can Lead the Horse to Water, but … ” |
Pages 267-283 | |
Henk Huijser (University of Southern Queensland, Australia) Michael Sankey ( University of Southern Queensland, Australia) |
15. | Facebook or Faceblock |
Pages 284-300 | |
Peter Duffy (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong) |
16. | Catering to the Needs of the “Digital Natives” or Educating the “Net Generation”? |
Pages 301-318 | |
Thomas Ryberg (Aalborg University, Denmark) Lone Dirckinck-Holmfeld ( Aalborg University, Denmark) Chris Jones ( The Open University, UK) |
17. | Activating Assessment for Learning |
Pages 319-342 | |
Denise Whitelock (The Open University, UK) |
18. | Dancing with Postmodernity |
Pages 343-364 | |
Henk Eijkman (University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Australia) |
19. | Web 2.0 and Professional Development of Academic Staff |
Pages 365-379 | |
Belinda Tynan (University of New England, Australia) Cameron Barnes ( University of New England, Australia) |
20. | When the Future Finally Arrives |
Pages 380-393 | |
Matt Crosslin (The University of Texas at Arlington, USA) |
21. | Stepping over the Edge |
Pages 394-415 | |
Gráinne Conole (The Open University, UK) |
I notice that this research is not open access. Do you have a list of links analogous to the one you posted, but to open access versions of the chapters (in institutional or thematic repositories, for example)?
Alternatively, would you send me a copy of your chapter?
Hi, Ewout
Unfortunately this is not an open access publication. I had already written the chapter before I got the contract and I was very unhappy about the copyright conditions and the eventual price, but it was too late by then.
However, you can get a full copy of my chapter by clicking on: http://resources.igi-global.com/marketing/pdfs/lee/2.pdf
if you contact the other authors, they can give you a similar url for their chapter.
I hope you find the chapter useful,
Best regards
Thanks, Tony, I´m sorry if I sounded snarky. I don´t want to lecture other people how they should publish their work. But when I clicked the links and discovered that I had no (in any practical sense) access I must admit I felt a bit excluded.
Apparently the publisher has decided that they only want to market this to academic libraries. But this means that 99% of your potential readership must send emails to authors asking for private copies.
There is a temporary solution: I just download the whole book by guessing the obvious URLs for the other chapters. Still, a ridiculous situation.
As any IGI publication, sooo expensive. 🙁 I see that they have taken down the PDFs, obviously…
So the only solution is asking author by author. 🙂
My best,
Marcello
Ye, Marcello, I’ve learned my lesson – I’ll never do an article or publication for IGI again. They pay NO royalties and charge ridiculous prices for the book, and really restrict authors’ rights to republish.