Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this papers is to provide an overview of how students and teachers in Taiwan conceptualize learning, especially in technology-enhanced learning environments. Their conceptions of learning reveal the extent to which the prevalence of technological use in education has facilitated students to cultivate a more advanced conception of learning and develop a deeper learning approach. Design/methodology/approach It reviews a total of nine relevant case studies, covering the contexts of conventional schools (from elementary schools to college, and cram schools) as well as technology-enhanced environments (internet-assisted learning and mobile learning); and participants from Grade 2 students to adult learners as well as teachers. Their conceptions of learning and preferred learning approaches are summarized. Findings Results of the studies show the Taiwanese students’ and teachers’ conceptions of learning in general and of technology-enhanced learning in particular. The students tended to be passive learners to receive instructions and considered examinations as a short-term goal for their study, with surface learning approaches commonly adopted. Despite technology may help to promote their cultivation of a more sophisticated conception of learning, many of them still opted for rote memorization and practice as the major ways to study. The potentials of technology in enhancing learning thus have not been fully realized. Originality/value The results shed light on an Asian-specific educational culture which is exam oriented. They reveal the challenges regarding the use of technology in education, which hinder the promotion of students’ advanced conceptions of learning. They also highlight the directions of future work to create a more accessible and gratifying technology-enhanced environment.

Highlights

  • Technology-enhanced learning is one of the key emphases in contemporary education across the globe

  • This paper aims to examine – in the context of Taiwan where technology-enhanced learning has been commonplace – how students and teachers conceptualize their daily routine of “learning,” and the major distinction toward the conceptions of learning in various educational contexts especially with the adoption of technology

  • Study 1 – an exploration of elementary school students’ conceptions of learning: a drawing analysis (Wang and Tsai, 2012) This study interviewed 101 elementary students aged 10-12 regarding their conceptions of learning based on two questions: what is “learning,” and what is the meaning, or the actual situation, of “learning” reveals to you

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Summary

Introduction

Technology-enhanced learning is one of the key emphases in contemporary education across the globe. In Taiwan, the adoption of technology for learning is in a rising trend during the past decade. Asian Association of Open Universities Journal Vol 12 No 2, 2017 pp. Published in the Asian Association of Open Universities Journal. This paper reviews a collection of relevant studies on conceptions of learning, which covered various responses from students and teachers in Taiwan through interviews, questionnaires, and drawings. It captures their conceptions in diverse educational stages and angles, in the settings of conventional classroom learning and technology-enhanced learning environments. The results shed lights on the needs of future research that extends the scope and depth of the study of conceptions of learning

Conception of learning
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