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What does best practice in online education look like? How can
educators make use of the affordances offered by online
environments to bring out the best in the children they teach?
These questions are answered in this new textbook, written with
experienced teachers, novice educators and teacher educators in
mind. Meskill and Anthony offer a wealth of examples of what
successful online teaching looks like, and provide a rich source of
practical, conversation-based strategies for optimizing online
learning. This book will inspire anyone teaching or planning to
teach fully online, or in a blended or hybrid format, by
demonstrating how well constructed online conversations constitute
powerful teaching.
Digital Screen Mediation in Education explores the complex role of
visual mediation in today's digitally enhanced classrooms. While
the notion that technology tools have agency-that they act to
induce learning-pervades contemporary conversations about pedagogy,
this unique volume reframes instructional agency around teachers.
The book's theoretically reinforced and multidisciplinary approach
to enhancing effective instruction with screen-based technologies
spans aesthetics, technical knowledge, teacher empowerment, social
media, and beyond. Researchers in educational technology,
instructional design, online learning, and digital pedagogies as
well as prospective and practicing educators will find a rigorous
treatment of how skilled, thoughtful teaching with, through, and
around digital screens can bring about successful learning
outcomes.
Online Teaching and Learning shows how learning through the
internet depends on complex human interactions for success. The
text uses sociocultural theory as its foundational stance to
empirically examine the dynamics of these interactions. It seeks to
understand meaning making in all of its social, linguistic and
cultural complexity. Each chapter examines how it is that
culturally and historically situated meanings get negotiated
through social mediation in online instructional venues. It extends
the ways we think and talk about online teaching and learning.
What does best practice in online education look like? How can
educators make use of the affordances offered by online
environments to bring out the best in the children they teach?
These questions are answered in this new textbook, written with
experienced teachers, novice educators and teacher educators in
mind. Meskill and Anthony offer a wealth of examples of what
successful online teaching looks like, and provide a rich source of
practical, conversation-based strategies for optimizing online
learning. This book will inspire anyone teaching or planning to
teach fully online, or in a blended or hybrid format, by
demonstrating how well constructed online conversations constitute
powerful teaching.
This new edition of Teaching Languages Online supports the
professional development of language educators as they teach all or
part of their courses online. Containing extensive additions, this
revised edition includes new models, illustrations and heuristics
to further support research-based conceptualization, creativity and
practice. In non-technical prose with emphasis on excellence in
pedagogical practice, the text takes both the new and experienced
language instructor through the nuts and bolts of online teaching
practices, using a wide range of examples to illustrate these
practices. As well as providing new resources and models, this new
edition also considers the impact of broader technological and
pedagogical changes, including mobility (learning on the move) and
learning in 3D environments.
Second Edition. Teaching and Learning in Real Time describes
different aspects of the use of technology in language teaching.
Online Teaching and Learning shows how learning through the
internet depends on complex human interactions for success. The
text uses sociocultural theory as its foundational stance to
empirically examine the dynamics of these interactions. It seeks to
understand meaning making in all of its social, linguistic and
cultural complexity. Each chapter examines how it is that
culturally and historically situated meanings get negotiated
through social mediation in online instructional venues. It extends
the ways we think and talk about online teaching and learning.
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