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Philosophy of Technology Enhanced Learning

> Website: http://ptel.noe-kaleidoscope.org

Workpackage leader
Jan Derry

Dr. Jan Derry
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Institute of Education, University of London - United Kingdom

 
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About Philosophy of Technology Enhanced Learning
The issue of knowledge — what it is, how it is created and acquired, and the different forms it takes — is of central importance to technology-enhanced learning, yet, in the past, these issues have largely been overlooked.  The overarching goal of our group is to examine knowledge in its various forms, focusing specifically on the interrelationship between knowledge and context.  Our aim is essentially practical: to produce understanding of the significance that new technologies have for knowledge and learning, enabling us to better steer these towards benefit in the e-society. While we look at the use of technology in formal education, we also have a broader conception of information technology — a world in which computers are increasingly invisible.

Achievements to date
We have brought together computer scientists, philosophers and sociologists in order to articulate common ground and define differences within the field, focusing on the concept of knowledge and context and how it figures in research and literature on new technologies; practical knowledge; and knowledge acquired both formally and informally. We have also fostered a diverse and committed team of researchers involved in other Kaleidoscope activities, who are investigating frameworks that address the changing natures of knowledge and learning in the e-society.
 
In addition we have developed, along with the Kaleidoscope Mobile Learning Initiative, a coordinated list of resources to introduce some of the issues raised by technology-mediated learning.  This has evolved from participation in symposia, as well as from meetings and discussions with members both within and outside our group. We have also outlined key research questions that have emerged in the fields of mobile learning and technology-enhanced learning more generally.

Contributions to the field
We are seeking to integrate the field at a European level, reaching across the Network to draw in researchers of varied disciplines and research traditions.  Thus the goals of the group are to:

  • Help researchers, scholars and students develop a robust understanding of learning and knowledge in the field of TEL.
  • Build a common research framework for TEL, through developing a shared understanding of the field and its associated terminology.
  • Bring together researchers and students in the field of technology-enhanced learning, in order to make explicit current concepts and methodologies and, in so doing, form critical research questions concerning the nature of knowledge involved in such learning.  

The benefit of Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope has provided access to a large network of people, from researchers to students, to scholars, allowing us to work within wide-ranging areas of expertise and interest.  This is fundamental for the development of a research field such as Philosophy of Technology Enhanced Learning, as well as for TEL itself.

Future issues to address
We are helping to establish PTEL as a productive and contemporary research activity in the European Union and the European Research Area. We are also collaborating with others in Kaleidoscope on a shared scientific policy — arising out of the work on the development of a theory of mobile learning, representation and the mediated mind (with a specific focus on research questions pertaining to the re-interpretation of both knowledge and context) — to move the field of TEL forward in a manner that is both strategic and comprehensive.

A message for European policy makers
In the past, the question of knowledge in education was either taken for granted or was perceived of as a rather esoteric debate on the margins of the social sciences and the humanities, of little practical significance for educational or social policy. However technological developments, combined with globalisation and the burgeoning knowledge economy, are changing the circumstances facing policy makers, who, increasingly, are making decisions taking them to the heart of debates about knowledge. We need to create sustainable, integrative educational scenarios that utilise new technologies effectively, rather than relying on the latest trends and technological fads.

A message for the public
Technology is central to our lives, as is learning. An explication of different perspectives (and the process of opening them to interrogation) is crucial to developing, expanding and enhancing an improved understanding of new technologies for learning.