Thesis-1998-Pang.pdf (9.73 MB)
The guiding process in discovery hypertext learning environments for the Internet
thesis
posted on 2015-06-12, 09:01 authored by Kingsley K.W. PangHypertext is the dominant method to navigate the Internet, providing user freedom
and control over navigational behaviour. There has been an increase in converting
existing educational material into Internet web pages but weaknesses have been
identified in current WWW learning systems. There is a lack of conceptual support
for learning from hypertext, navigational disorientation and cognitive overload. This
implies the need for an established pedagogical approach to developing the web as a
teaching and learning medium.
Guided Discovery Learning is proposed as an educational pedagogy suitable for
supporting WWW learning. The hypothesis is that a guided discovery environment
will produce greater gains in learning and satisfaction, than a non-adaptive hypertext
environment. A second hypothesis is that combining concept maps with this specific
educational paradigm will provide cognitive support. The third hypothesis is that
student learning styles will not influence learning outcome or user satisfaction. Thus,
providing evidence that the guided discovery learning paradigm can be used for many
types of learning styles.
This was investigated by the building of a guided discovery system and a framework
devised for assessing teaching styles. The system provided varying discovery steps,
guided advice, individualistic system instruction and navigational control. An 84
subject experiment compared a Guided discovery condition, a Map-only condition
and an Unguided condition. Subjects were subdivided according to learning styles,
with measures for learning outcome and user satisfaction. The results indicate that
providing guidance will result in a significant increase in level of learning. Guided
discovery condition subjects, regardless of learning styles, experienced levels of
satisfaction comparable to those in the other conditions. The concept mapping tool
did not appear to affect learning outcome or user satisfaction.
The conclusion was that using a particular approach to guidance would result in a
more supportive environment for learning. This research contributes to the need for a
better understanding of the pedagogic design that should be incorporated into WWW
learning environments, with a recommendation for a guided discovery approach to
alleviate major hypertext and WWW issues for distance learning.
History
School
- Science
Department
- Computer Science
Publisher
© Kingsley King Wai PangPublisher statement
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Publication date
1998Notes
A Doctoral Thesis. Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy of Loughborough UniversityEThOS Persistent ID
uk.bl.ethos.297591Language
- en