New issue of eLearning Papers: "The New Learning Generation"
Guest editor: Yves Punie, IPTS
Children and adolescents in modern societies are growing up
in a world where digital technologies are ubiquitous. The widespread
use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) and online
services by youngsters in their everyday life for leisure,
entertainment and social interaction is impacting their learning needs,
requirements and expectations. They need to learn skills and
competences for self-development, participation in society and for
future jobs. They are also increasingly using ICT for any learning
purpose, often outside the classroom. This gives rise to a "new
learning generation" (also labelled New Millennium Learners by
OECD/CERI) and to new ways of learning, including informal modes, which
are strongly enabled albeit not determined by the possibilities offered
by ICT...
Talent competences in the new eLearning generation
by Sylvia van de Bunt-Kokhuis, Mary Bolger
A learning community for teens on a virtual island - The SchomePark Teen Second
Life Pilot project
by Julia Gillen, Peter Twining, Rebecca Ferguson, Oliver W
Butters, Gill Clough, Mark Gaved, Anna Peachey, Dan Seamans, Kieron
Sheehy
Storytelling and Web 2.0 Services: A synthesis of old and new
ways of learning
by Vojko Strahovnik, Biljana Mećava
Web 2.0 Learning Environment: Concept, Implementation,
Evaluation
by Marc Rittberger, Ingo Blees
Personal Learning Environments for Overcoming Knowledge
Boundaries between Activity Systems in Emerging Adulthood
by
Elvis Mazzoni, Pietro Gaffuri