posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00authored byGayani Samarawickrema, R Benson, C Brack
This paper reports on a collaborative staff development activity run across two Australian universities, for academic staff integrating Web 2.0 technologies into their teaching. It describes a three-week long virtual workshop on teaching with wikis, where participants in two groups developed a group project as students and then assessed the work as teachers. Participants were guided through a central Wikis in Higher Education wiki which provided the resources and communication supports. The experience suggested that teaching in a Web 2.0 space requires new thinking about pedagogy and that peer learning and the development of an online community are helpful for effective professional development. In closing, the paper reflects on the successes and limitations of this virtual workshop model.
History
Journal
Australasian journal of educational technology
Volume
26
Pagination
44 - 49
Location
Como, W.A.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
1449-3098
eISSN
1449-5554
Language
eng
Notes
An Outstanding Paper Award recipient, ascilite Auckland 2009 ConferenceCopyright in individual articles contained in Australasian Journal of Educational Technology is vested in each of the authors in respect of his or her contributions. Copyright in AJET is vested in ASET (1985-86), AJET Publications (1987-1996), and ASCILITE and ASET (from 1997). No part of AJET may be reprinted or reproduced without permission from the publishers, except that authors (or an author's employer at the time of publication) may make multiple copies of their own articles (subject to identifying each copy as an article which was published originally in AJET).
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2010, Copyright in AJET as a journal resides with ASCILITE