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Collaborative Learning

This page includes examples of Web-enabled collaborative learning from


TopArchitecture and Landscape Architecture

Visions for a Sustainable City

Michael Stern, University of Virginia, and Neal Payton, Catholic Unversity of America, LAR702 (Town Planning in Post-Suburban America), University of Virginia

This collaborative project focuses on Owings Mills, Maryland, as a case study of urban design in the suburban context. Owings Mills is seen as especially relevant in exemplifying the phenomenon of "edge cities"—new decentralized urban developments concentrated around highway interchanges surrounding older central cities (in this case, Baltimore). Six student teams, consisting of graduate students of landscape architecture from the University of Virginia and graduate and undergraduate students of architecture from Catholic University of America, are asked to develop an urban design master plan for the Owings Mills Town Center. The goal of the assignment is to produce specific design solutions that integrate urban and natural systems into a habitable public landscape. The students keep in contact via e-mail and online conferencing, and they publish their reports and master plans on the course Web site. The assignment and the master plans it produced suggest ways of using the Web to share information and resources among groups as well as to create a comprehensive overview of key issues in town planning and urban development.

This project was conducted in 1995 with the help of the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (IATH) at the University of Virginia, where it now resides; it was then and still is an excellent example of using Web-based media to teach practitioner knowledge and skills in a professional field.

This example features the use of text and images.


TopAnthropology

Museums and Social Science

Raymond Bucko, S.J., Anthropology 305 (Museums and Social Science), Le Moyne College

This course examines how social theory has influenced the development of museums, their evolution as institutions responsive to cultural sensibilities, and the social meanings associated with the definition of collections and the arrangement of artifacts. Students are asked to work in teams and examine how social theory is involved in creating displays in museums they visit. The assignments involve actual visits to physical museums as well as perusal of online museums and exhibits; a significant portion of the term project requires that they create a virtual museum Web site with a catalogue text that reflects the theoretical underpinnings of the objects they are reviewing.

The course and its assignments suggest ways that students can use the information about museums presented on their Web sites to access and interrogate the philosophies and purposes behind them. In addition, having to co-present virtual museum Web sites encourages a collaborative approach to knowledge formation.

This example features the use of Web sites, text, images, and downloaded media.


TopPolitical Science

Digital Agora's Political Byte Newsstand

Political Science Department, Acadia University

The Digital Agora is a multimedia resource providing eight political science courses at Acadia University with extensive online materials and tools for interactive learning. The Political Byte Newsstand is the central page for online student newspapers associated with different courses. Here, students and student teams post class assignments in the form of editorials, essays, feature columns, and reports. Each course has one newspaper, and its contents are styled according to that course's topic and requirements. Class assignments are published in these newspapers, which are available at any one time to all eight classes as well as to the general public. Visitors to this site get a rich sense of the assignments to which students are responding; they can also see how the opportunity to post assignments as publications enhances knowledge and skill development.

The Digital Agora, especially its Political Byte Newsstand, is designed to facilitate intra- and inter-institutional, computer-mediated collaborative learning. As stated in the site synopsis, the emphasis is on "everyone learning, and everyone contributing," and it is easily seen that work for course requirements in the Digital Agora goes far beyond traditional student-professor exchanges.

Further examples on this site from the Digital Agora appear in Conceptual Learning and in Data Gathering and Synthesis.

This example features the use of databases and scripts.


TopLocal History

Pictorial Tour of the 1890s in Bowling Green, Ohio

William Grant, The American 1890s, American Culture Studies, Bowling Green State University

Bowling Green in the 1890s earned the sobriquet of "The Beautiful Crystal City" due to its glassmaking factories and a thriving local economy. This project was begun in 1996 as part of a graduate American Culture Studies seminar aimed at introducing students to the use of HTML for scholarly purposes. After an introductory HTML assignment in which students composed an encyclopedic entry for The American 1890s: A Chronology, the seminar was broken into working groups and each group was assigned to a quadrant of central Bowling Green to develop the materials that would eventually be unified into the Crystal City site. The project focuses on the architectural heritage of Bowling Green, researching the surviving historical buildings and their builders, owners, and tenants so as to link the cultural and social history of Bowling Green to the contemporary city.

The Crystal City site suggests ways in which ongoing collaborative Web projects can serve the needs of faculty and departments using the built environment as a resource in teaching history and culture.

This example features the use of text and images.


This project is a joint initiative of the Center for the Virtual University and the Center for Teaching and Learning at UMUC.

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