posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00authored byPeter Smith, Karin Barty, Elizabeth Stacey
This research was designed to assess whether the older adult learning in IT environments and online represents a different pedagogy from that of younger learners, as has been suggested by some authors in the literature. The study was conducted in a community learning and employment centre in an Australian rural town, and involved interviews with six teachers of older adults, and nine older learners. The results did not support the need for a particular pedagogy for older learners, instead supporting an approach to teaching that was based around teachers identifying learner characteristics and needs and responding to them as individuals. This finding has been interpreted in the context of already published iterative and interactive teaching models, and has considerable implications for the effective teaching and learning of older adults. Those implications are discussed in the paper.<br>
History
Location
Prague, Czech Republic
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication
Copyright notice
2007, ETIC Prague
Editor/Contributor(s)
C Abbott, Z Lustigova
Pagination
162 - 169
Start date
2007-09-26
End date
2007-09-28
ISBN-13
9788025403914
ISBN-10
8025403912
Title of proceedings
iTET 2007 : Proceedings of the Joint Working Conference : Information technologies for education and training
Event
Information Technologies for Education and Training Conference (2007 : Prague, Czech Republic)