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This book opens up a fruitful conversation by and between invited
academics from Europe and Latin America on the features of online
learning in higher education. The authors analyse online education
from interdisciplinary theoretical and empirical reflections to
reveal the existing tensions and turning this book into a valuable
artifact on how learning is shaped when technology comes in-between
diverse geographical and social contexts. Like any other human
activity, e-learning can be seen as a context-dependent educational
system with many objects in mutual interaction. Applying a cultural
psychology perspective to this provides new answers to questions
such as: How can cultural psychology shed new light on online
learning? Why do students and academics still opt for classic
classes? What inner boundaries are pushed when studying online? How
can online learning be influenced by affect? How do teachers and
students mold their identities when they move in and out of online
environments? This book reveals the existing tensions, resistances
and appropriation strategies that students and academics from
diverse backgrounds and places go through when attending online
learning courses in higher education and furthermore shows how
these theoretical frameworks can be successfully applied to
practice.
This book opens up a fruitful conversation by and between invited
academics from Europe and Latin America on the features of online
learning in higher education. The authors analyse online education
from interdisciplinary theoretical and empirical reflections to
reveal the existing tensions and turning this book into a valuable
artifact on how learning is shaped when technology comes in-between
diverse geographical and social contexts. Like any other human
activity, e-learning can be seen as a context-dependent educational
system with many objects in mutual interaction. Applying a cultural
psychology perspective to this provides new answers to questions
such as: How can cultural psychology shed new light on online
learning? Why do students and academics still opt for classic
classes? What inner boundaries are pushed when studying online? How
can online learning be influenced by affect? How do teachers and
students mold their identities when they move in and out of online
environments? This book reveals the existing tensions, resistances
and appropriation strategies that students and academics from
diverse backgrounds and places go through when attending online
learning courses in higher education and furthermore shows how
these theoretical frameworks can be successfully applied to
practice.
|
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