2010
Authors
Pereira, J; Pereira, J; Costa, C; Silva, D; Varajao, J; Morgado, L;
Publication
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON E-LEARNING, VOL 1
Abstract
While much information is available on pedagogic uses of virtual worlds, with Second Life being the most common virtual world platform in current educational literature, an organization must consider its presence in this environment as more than the mere sum of individual educational efforts. Resources need to be shared between educational stakeholders, visual navigation needs to make sense, and the sense of being within an actual organization should be conveyed (not just the sense of being within a collection of personal spaces). But there is little information on how a virtual campus for an educational organization should be structured. Virtual campi in Second Life for adult education institutions don't typically reproduce their physical counterparts. While spaces such as lecture halls, amphitheatres, meeting places, and libraries are commonly found, the specific features of the medium imply an organization of spaces and usage that differ from physical campi. For instance, navigational affordances are different (ability to fly and gravity-immune objects, for instance), as are communicational features (specific limits on the reach of voice and text communication), and user involvement (how students and teachers use the spaces). We conducted a survey of several existing Second Life campi of adult education institutions (mostly universities), to establish what spaces are present in each and how they are used and organized. In this paper, we present the overall process, and the structure and instructions for data collection by all people involved. Then we detail the various kinds of spaces (by function, not by aesthetic) found in the campi and their prevalence. We also present data on user-oriented features of the campi, and cross-analyse this with their occurrence per space and campi. This survey was part of the process for specification and development of the virtual Second Life campus for project VITA, a EC-funded project to create and experiment learning actions directed to SME' managers for development of entrepreneurship competences. Thus, we conclude with an example of how the survey results can be used to support the development of campi, by briefly presenting the campus that was developed specifically for this project.
2008
Authors
Harrell, SV; Abrahamson, D; Morgado, L; Esteves, M; Valcke, M; Vansteenbrugge, H; Rosenbaum, E; Barab, S;
Publication
Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning Conference, CSCL
Abstract
Four research projects used Second Life", a 3D virtual-world platform, to investigate aspects of technology-enhanced STEM education. These European and USA studies, which differ in their pedagogical-philosophy commitments, theoretical frameworks, methodologies, and target content, critically examine a range of cognitive, affective, technical, and social factors pertaining to the prospects of students' and teachers' successful engagement with immersive microworlds. Specifically, each project describes students' successes and challenges in creating complex virtual artifacts and collaborating in real time with peers and the broader community. The design-based research studies of mathematical and computational literacy present sample student artifacts and discuss the learning they evidence. Collectively, we posit that overcoming the following obstacles could make virtual worlds both effective and exciting learning environments: professional development (technical skill, affective disposition), collaboration with school systems (logistics of access, allocation of resources), alignment with targeted content (harnessing students' creative divergence), and initial learning curves (issues of teacher-to-student ratio).
2010
Authors
Morgado, L; Cruz, M; Kahn, K;
Publication
AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY
Abstract
A common problem in computer programming use for education in general, not simply as a technical skill, is that children and teachers find themselves constrained by what is possible through limited expertise in computer programming techniques. This is particularly noticeable at the preliterate level, where constructs tend to be limited to extremely simple elements. Having worked for 4 years with over 150 children, aged 3 to 5, we present age-appropriate computer programming activities involving different computer programming techniques, from the basic (computer language syntax) to the advanced (client-server). These may contribute to expand the panorama on viable computer programming techniques available to children and educators, thus broadening the variety of educational activities and projects that can be approached in educational settings using computer programming.
2012
Authors
Vilela, A; Prada, R; Marques, A; Costa, H; Rafael, J; Morgado, L;
Publication
SISTEMAS Y TECNOLOGIAS DE INFORMACION, VOLS 1 AND 2
Abstract
2008
Authors
Bernardo, M; Morgado, L; Rabadao, C;
Publication
ACTAS DE LA III CONFERENCIA IBERICA DE SISTEMAS Y TECNOLOGIAS DE LA INFORMACION, VOL 1
Abstract
2010
Authors
Vilela, A; Cardoso, M; Martins, D; Santos, A; Moreira, L; Paredes, H; Martins, P; Morgado, L;
Publication
2nd International Conference on Games and Virtual Worlds for Serious Applications, VS-GAMES 2010
Abstract
Mass adoption of virtual world platforms for education and training implies efficient management of computational resources. In Second Life Grid and OpenSimulator, commonly used for this purpose, a key resource is the number of servers required to support educational spaces. Educational activities can take place at different altitudes over the same virtual land, for different classes. This way a single virtual world server can sustain several different educational spaces/classes, reducing the number of servers needed to make available different classrooms or other educational spaces. One issue whose importance is emphasized in such conditions is that of class privacy, bearing in mind that most privacy-management features of these platforms are land-based, not space-based. In this paper, we provide an overview of the issues to consider when planning privacy in these platforms and the methodologies that can be developed and implemented to ensure it at an adequate level, including the extra privacy possible in OpenSimulator regarding Second Life Grid. © 2010 IEEE.
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