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HOIT
2003 Abstracts
Paper titles,
authors, and abstracts are posted below. The abstracts are organized
in the session in which they will
appear.
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KEYNOTE
SPEAKERS' ABSTRACTS |
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1.
TeacherBridge:
Knowledge Management in Communities of Practice
Authors:
Kibum Kim, Philip L. Isenhour, John M. Carroll, Mary Beth
Rosson, and Daniel R. Dunlap
Abstract:
The TeacherBridge (Basic Resources for Integrated Distributed
Group Environments) motivates collaboration and supports online
tools for teachers' professional resource management by providing
a socio-technical infrastructure for community networks. While
this project focuses initially on local science and mathematics
teachers, resources developed are designed to be globally
diffused to a wide variety of online communities. This paper
discusses the characteristics of online communities of educators
and how home networking technology and knowledge management
systems can support collaboration and knowledge sharing in
such communities. We study examples of existing and well-known
online communities of educators and introduce our own system,
TeacherBridge, which supports teacher professional development
by supporting peer-based collaboration and community. We also
analyze and evaluate the characteristics of TeacherBridge
with activity theory [12] and minimalism [37]. Activity theory
provides an analytical framework for how TeacherBridge can
be used as a socio-technical infrastructure for online communities
of educators; minimalism guides the development of successful
online communities that are easily accessible and facilitate
teacher participation in knowledge sharing activities
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2.
Digital
Connections Between Home, Work and Community: Multi-wave Research
Findings and Policy Directions
Authors:
Thomas Horan and Kimberly Wells
Abstract:
This paper draws upon a series of studies that have been undertaken
in Minnesota to better understand the implications for home-based
online activities relating to work (e.g. telecommuting) and
community activities (e.g. distance education).
Three
waves of data collection activities were conducted: a survey
of telecommuters in public and private organizations, a series
of follow-on indepth interviews with telecommuters and colleagues
from these organizations, and two focus groups with community
stakeholders on broader planning challenges to integrated
online community services. Key findings from these waves are
as follows.
In
phase I, data were collected from 797 participants drawn from
a large public agency and large private sector firm. In terms
of organization performance, respondent job satisfaction and
productivity were perceived as greater among telecommuters
than non-telecommuters, but organizational commitment was
not. Findings suggest, however, that telecommuting constraints
described in the literature (managerial reluctance, job requirements,
isolation fear, and risk to promotion) impose obstacles to
telecommuting in this sample.
In phase II, follow-up interviews were conducted with individuals
from these two employers. Analyses were conducted to explore
the organizational relationships among telecommuting work
groups (that is, when one group member is telecommuting).
Results indicate that management strategies can play an important
role in ensuring the effective work of telecommuting work
teams. The interviews also revealed a generally strong view
held by telecommuters on their productivity while telecommuting,
but several organizational tradeoffs were revealed in terms
of team-cohesion.
In
phase III, a set of community focus groups explored the community
context for a range of potentially home-based electronic services,
such as teleworking, distance education, telemedicine, and
smart travel. These services were explored within substantive
context of digital places and the procedural context of two
design studios with community representatives in Minnesota.
The design studios revealed a general understanding by community
stakeholders about the value of a community network that could
enhance the delivery of electronic services. However, several
barriers were raised to the effective deployment of such networks,
and these barriers formed the basis of planning recommendations
relating to infrastructure strategy, service delivery and
stakeholder involvement.
In
summary, home demand needs to be seen within the context of
the service and work networks that deliver these services
(such as education, telemedicine); an integrated approach
to planning these services can provide positive externalities
making the entire system more efficient; there are tradeoffs
between electronic and face-to-face interactions that need
to be recognized in the design of such home-community systems;
and managerial and local policies can play an important role
in bringing quality community services to the "last mile"-the
home.
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3.
A
Survey of Computer Use in the Homes of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Year
Undergraduate Students
Authors:
Jacqui Taylor and Becky House
Abstract:
Aims:
A survey was conducted to investigate the extent that
computers are used in home environments by undergraduate students.
The primary aim of the survey was to identify how computers
were being used for educational purposes within the home.
A secondary aim of the survey was to collect information on
the social use of computers by students (in home and university
contexts) to enable an evaluation of the impact of the computer
on communication and social networks.
Background:This
paper develops one of the findings identified in a previous
study which investigated the use of online seminars by students
in Higher Education (Taylor, 2002). In this previous research
students were able to participate in seminars electronically
'any time, any place, any where'. Student feedback indicated
that many students participated using a home computer, rather
than use a computer within the University environment. The
survey reported here was subsequently designed to explore
this unexpected finding. A literature review was conducted
to identify surveys published during the last five years recording
trends of computer and Internet usage and attitudes towards
the media from student populations. While useful in general
terms, very few of these surveys collected data regarding
the use of computers to support education within the home
environment. Students studying full-time at 'physical' Universities
(i.e. excluding distance learning institutions) are increasingly
spending more of their time studying at home, gaining access
to University teaching and learning materials via the internet.
Also, such students are increasingly using their own computers
at home to complete coursework rather than using University
laboratory computers or open access resources. As designers
of teaching and learning materials, tutors usually make assumptions
about the contexts of student learning or like to have some
control over the contexts of student learning. However, evidence
(e.g. Taylor, 2002) suggests that the context of learning
may be increasingly diverse. Policy makers, researchers and
practitioners in Higher Education need accurate information
regarding the current and predicted usage of computers in
off-campus contexts. Similarly, they need qualitative information
as to how students are studying within the home environment
to design effective materials and to put in place appropriate
support mechanisms.
The
Survey: The survey collected quantitative data to identify
the extent and type of computer usage within the home and
University environments. Background data was also collected
to enable participants' responses to computer-usage items
to be compared for gender, age, and year at University. Previous
research has identified individual differences (e.g. age and
gender) to be a significant factor in students' use and attitudes
toward networked learning in Higher Education. Also, by comparing
the data collected from 1st, 2nd and 3rd year students it
was hoped that a picture could be built of how computer use
changed over the three years of an undergraduate degree, to
give some predictive value to the results. Finally, qualitative
data was collected to better understand students' educational
use of computers and to identify their needs from HE establishments.
Discussion: The results have important implications
to tutors with regard to their planning of teaching and learning
and the support that they provide to students. The discussion
section of this paper explores the ways in which context is
relevant to common theories of teaching and learning in Higher
Education. The results also have important implications at
a strategic level, with regard to resourcing and staffing
issues.
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4.
Designing
for One's Dotage: Ubicomp and Residential Care Facilities
Authors:
Richard Beckwith and Scott Lederer
Abstract:
This paper reports the results of an ethnographic study of
a community living with ubiquitous computing. The community
is contained within a sensor-rich environment and, most importantly,
the sensors themselves are central to how people think about
the environment. This widespread use of technology is being
done in an effort to enhance the quality of life for the residents
and the accountability of the staff. Our research into the
lives of these people is meant to support interface and service
design for a ubiquitous computing environment.
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