KM&EL 2011 - Special Issue on Creating, Supporting, Managing, and Sustaining Virtual Learning Communities
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Category KM&EL 2011
Deadline: August 20, 2011 | Date: December 31, 2011
Venue/Country: Call for Papers, U.S.A
Updated: 2011-05-01 13:50:47 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
Knowledge Management & E-Learning: An International Journal (KM&EL)Special Issue onCreating, Supporting, Managing, and Sustaining Virtual Learning CommunitiesGuest EditorXun Ge, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorInstructional Psychology and TechnologyDepartment of Educational PsychologyThe University of OklahomaU. S. A.Email: xge
ou.eduWe are living in an information-rich digital age full of wondrouspower, capabilities, and possibilities of emerging technologies. Web2.0 technologies, characterized by participatory information sharingand collaboration and users generating content and creating knowledgein virtual communities, have opened our eyes to a new open world(Bonk, 2009). Examples of web 2.0 include social networking sites,blogs, wikis, video sharing sites, virtual worlds, and digital objectrepositories. These emerging technologies have provided us numerouspossibilities for learning and instruction and for creating engagingand optimal learning opportunities and alternative and innovativeinstructional experiences for K-12 education, higher education,corporate, government, and military training. The world has enteredinto what Bonk (2009) describes as “We-All-Learn” trends, whichencourage open participation and compel educators to reflect onlearning and instruction from a new perspective. Learners are nolonger passive information recipients, whose role is to memorize orconsume information, but rather active participants, whose role is todirect their own learning, construct and create knowledge, andcontribute to a virtual community; whereas teachers are guides,coaches, and mentors to facilitate learning.However, the potentials of the emerging web 2.0 technologies have notbeen fully recognized and tapped. Often we find online instructionsimply duplication of face-to-face lectures, in which technology issimply an appendage to education instead of playing a more central andtransforming role. Many instructors have not changed their mindset toaccommodate the participatory culture and the new paradigm of learningand instruction; and little has been done beyond posting syllabi,assignments, and grading to a learning management system or a web sitethat is supposed to be used for collaborative learning. It is arguedthat new technologies not only make us more productive, but also helpus become more reflective and creative.? Most importantly,technologies have afforded us with tools to accomplish goals we wouldhave not been able to without them. As early as in the 80s, Pea (1985)argued that technology should not only be used to amplify our thinkingbut also to reorganize our mental functioning. Therefore, we areprompted to fully take advantage of web 2.0 affordances to developinnovative learning environments and build virtual learningcommunities that will motivate and engage learners meaningfully andinteractively in their learning experiences and focus on developingthe 21st century skills that emphasize innovation, creativity,communication, collaboration, critical thinking, decision making, andproblem solving.Yet, using emerging technologies to build a virtual learning community(VLC) is a multifaceted innovation. It not only involves the use ofnew technologies, but also new method of learning and new ways ofthinking of learning and instruction. It presents multiple levels ofchallenges to both learners and instructors. Subsequently, there aremany issues awaiting to be examined, studied, and addressed, includinglearners’ perceptions, motivation and identity when participating in aVLC, strategies and methods of designing, building, managing, andevaluating a VLC to develop students critical thinking, problemsolving, and creativity, and teachers’ beliefs about participatoryculture of a virtual learning environment.This special issue of the KM&EL international journal is dedicated tothe building of VLCs using emerging technologies. In this specialissue, a VLC is defined as both informal, such as one that supportsongoing professional development, and formal, such as one as found ina formal course setting that lasts a semester. In this call, we invitemanuscripts that report empirical studies (both quantitative andqualitative studies) of investigating issues and challenges related tothe building of a VLC, the use or design of tools scaffold the growthof a VLC, and methods and efforts to create, build, manage, sustainand evaluate a VLC. In addition, this special issue welcomesmanuscripts discussing conceptual frameworks or theoretical constructsrelated to VLC building.Recommended topics of interest include, but not limited to:Impact of a Virtual Learning CommunityLearners/members' perceptions and their impact on their participation in a VLCLearners/members' motivation in a VLCLearners' identity development in a VLCTeacher or a facilitator's role in a VLCRole of a VLC on critical thinking and problem solving skill developmentImpact of peer interactions on metacognition and self-regulation in a VLCVLC and reflective learnersDesigning and Evaluating a Virtual Learning CommunityTools and strategies to build, manage, and sustain a VLCTools and strategies to promote identity development in a VLCTools and strategies to facilitate peer interactions, collaborationand other VLC activitiesTools and strategies to facilitate reflection and self-regulation in a VLCTools and strategies to support complex problem solving in a VLCTools and methods to evaluate the effectiveness of a VLCConceptual Frameworks or Theoretical Constructs about a VirtualLearning CommunityCommunity of learners and practiceCommunity of inquiryTypes of communities and their characteristics (e.g., task-based,knowledge-based, and practice-based, etc.)Various constructs and factors influencing the success of a VLCReferencesBonk, C.J. (2009). The world is open: How Web technology isrevolutionizing education. Jossey-Base.Pea, R.D. (1985). Beyond amplification: Using the computer toreorganize mental functioning. Educational Psychologist, 20(4),167-182.Important DatesSubmission due: 20th August, 2011Notification of decision: 20th October, 2011Finalization: 20th November 2011Publication schedule: December 2011Submission InstructionsManuscripts should be sent by email to the Guest Editor, Dr. Xun Ge(xge
ou.edu).Papers must not have been published, accepted for publication, orpresently be under consideration for publication elsewhere. A standarddouble-blind review process will be used for selecting papers to bepublished in this special issue. Authors should follow theinstructions outlined in the KM&EL Journal Website (seeURLhttp://www.kmel-journal.org/ojs/index.php/online-publication/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions
)For more information about the KM&EL Journal, please visit the web site:http://www.kmel-journal.org/ojs/index.php/online-publication
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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