Computer-supported instructional communication
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According to Rummel and Krämer (2010), “Research on instructional communication focuses on the study of interaction in learning environments (Mottet et al. 2005). Characteristic goals when analyzing instructional communication are: (1) understanding variables associated with successful communication in instructional settings and (2) deducing principles in order to design instructional communication more effectively.”
See also: computer-supported collaborative learning, computer-mediated communication
Links
- Nikol Rummel and Nicole Krämer (2010) (eds). Special Issue: Computer-supported instructional communication. A multidisciplinary account of relevant factors, Educational Psychology Review 22 (1). ISSN 1573-336X
Bibliography
- Bromme, H., Hesse, F. W., & Spada, H. (2005). Barriers, biases and opportunities of communication and cooperation with computers: Introduction and overview. In R. Bromme, F. W. Hesse, & H. Spada (Eds.), Barriers and biases in computer
- Mottet, T. P., Richmond, V. P., & McCroskey, J. C. (2005). Handbook of instructional communication: Rhetorical and relational perspectives. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
- Rummel, Nikol and Nicole Krämer (2010). Computer-Supported Instructional Communication: A Multidisciplinary Account of Relevant Factors, Educational Psychology Review 22:1–7 DOI 10.1007/s10648-010-9122-y