E-Learning Provocateur

article thumbnail

Instructivism, constructivism or connectivism?

E-Learning Provocateur

In a previous article , I provided the following examples of potential information sources that the learner could incorporate into their personal learning network: Social bookmarks. Social and professional networks such as Facebook and Twitter. News feeds, podcasts, blogs, wikis and discussion forums.

Wiki 279
article thumbnail

Connectivism and the modern learner

E-Learning Provocateur

Recently, I read a blog article about connectivism by Debora Gallo. However, I accept Siemens’ subsequent point that the discourse since his article was published has helped to create a context of understanding. Consider the following: Create a social bookmarking account to share useful websites.

Learner 242
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Theory-informed design tips

E-Learning Provocateur

In my previous article , I proposed a Taxonomy of Learning Theories to organise a few of the myriad of theories into some semblance of order, and to assist instructional designers in using theory to inform their work. • Create a social bookmarking account. • Encourage social networking.

Theory 156
article thumbnail

Online courses must die!

E-Learning Provocateur

Don’t forget podcasts, RSS feeds, slideshows, infographics, animations, articles and real-life case studies. Not to mention blogs, wikis, discussion forums and social bookmarks. So your PDFs can go in there, but so too can your audio clips, videos, puzzles, games, quizzes and simulations.