Computer-Supported Scripting of Interaction in Collaborative Learning Environments: Framework on multiple goal dimensions for computer-supported scripts
Abstract
Collaboration scripts aim to facilitate effective interaction patterns for collaborative learning that do not occur spontaneously. So far, diverse non-generic scripts have been conceptualized and investigated in CSCL environments. The specification of collaboration scripts aims to provide a common terminolgy for describing scripts and to abstract the core design principles of scripts to better understand effects and mechanisms of collaboration scripts and to apply and re-apply collaboration scripts in different learning environments. Beginning with a review of the original conception of scripts for collaborative learning and its evolution in context of CSCL, we present recent approaches towards a specification of scripts by Dillenbourg (2002), Dillenbourg and Jermann (in press) and Kollar, Fischer and Hesse (in press). The framework that we propose here can be regarded as an expanded and revised consolidation of these efforts. We then discuss the kind of activities that the instructional approach of scripting collaboration aims to foster. Our paper subsequently presents the components and mechanisms that constitute a script and illustrates them with example scripts. We finally give an outlook on the future task of formalizing scripts and conclude with a brief evaluation of the framework.
Domains
Technology for Human Learning
Origin : Files produced by the author(s)
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