Explore
Self-Directed Learning in the era of the COVID-19 pandemic
Yolani Geldenhuys, Elize Küng, Lloyd Conley, Lounell White, Jako Olivier, Nothile Abrijard Tivelele Kunene, Marietjie Havenga, Adri du Toit, Anitia Lubbe, Byron J. Bunt, Anette Hay, René Koraan, Getsia Zazo, Ninette Crous, Celia Lourens, Gerda Reitsma, Rhea Koch, Yolande Heymans, Gontse Mokwatsi, Sanette Brits, Susanna M Hanekom, Elizabeth Ivy Smit, Josef de Beer (editor), Neal Petersen (editor), Elsa Mentz (editor), Robert J Balfour (editor)
2022
0 Ungluers have
Faved this Work
Login to Fave
The COVID-19 pandemic severely impacted teaching and learning at higher
education institutions (HEIs), and this book disseminates research findings on
a series of cross-campus online initiatives of the North-West University (NWU)
to ensure high-quality self-directed learning, whilst simultaneously attending
to the need for inclusion and diversity in this challenging context. The golden
thread running through the 13 chapters is how this HEI responded to the
pandemic in a creative way through its investment in online virtual student
excursions, based on problem-based, cooperative learning and gamification
principles to support self-directed learning. Whereas virtual excursions usually
refer to learning opportunities where ‘a museum, author, park or monument is
brought to the student’ (Hehr 2014:1), the virtual excursion in our context is an
activity system (Engeström 1987) where students’ learning is scaffolded
across the zone of proximal development (Vygotsky 1978) and where their
‘social and pedagogical boundaries are stretched or expanded’ (De Beer &
Henning 2011:204). Students engage as Homo ludens, the playing human
(Huizinga 1955), in learning activities embedded in an ill-structured problem,
and through reflective activities, they are encouraged to reflect on their own
naïve understandings or biases. This ‘tension’, or in Veresov (2007) parlance,
‘dramatical collisions’, provides a fertile learning space for self-directed
learning.
This book is included in DOAB.
Why read this book? Have your say.
You must be logged in to comment.