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   Book Info

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Learning, Culture, and Community in Online Education: Research and Practice  
Author: Caroline A. Haythornthwaite
ISBN: 0820468479
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Book Description
In 1996 the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign began an Internet-based teaching program, allowing students across the United States-and the world-to earn a Master's degree from a distance. The program, known as LEEP (Library Education Experimental Project), has been an outstanding success, and as an early innovation in Internet use, provides important lessons on how to flourish in an online environment.Learning, Culture and Community in Online Education brings together significant new research on online education, using the LEEP program as a model to reveal a wealth of information about innovative online practices. Contributions by administrators, philosophers, faculty, librarians, technical staff, and researchers in the traditions of education, computer science, folklore, information science, and sociology, reveal the many perspectives to be taken into account when creating and maintaining distance learning programs. More than an analysis of the LEEP program, this book is an essential introduction to the variety of social and educational phenomena that occur within the socio-technical environments that support online learners.




Learning, Culture, and Community in Online Education: Research and Practice

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Learning, Culture and Community in Online Education brings together significant new research on online education, using the LEEP program as a model to reveal a wealth of information about innovative online practices. Contributions by administrators, philosophers, faculty, librarians, technical staff, and researchers in the traditions of education, computer science, folklore, information science, and sociology, reveal the many perspectives to be taken into account when creating and maintaining distance learning programs. More than an analysis of the LEEP program, this book is an essential introduction to the variety of social and educational phenomena that occur within the socio-technical environments that support online learners.

SYNOPSIS

Taking as a model the 8-year-old Internet-based master's program at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, contributors from that school and others in the US provide an introduction to the social and educational phenomena that occur in the socio-technical environments that support online learners. The 17 essays explore best practices and offer insights related to the technology, culture, and folklore of distance education. The work would have benefited from a subject index. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

     



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