Abstract

<p>Learning object economies are marketplaces for the sharing and reuse of learning objects (LO). There are many motivations for stimulating the development of the LO economy. The main reason is the possibility of providing the right content, at the right time, to the right learner according to adequate quality standards in the context of a lifelong learning process; in fact, this is also the main objective of education. However, some barriers to the development of a LO economy, such as the granularity and editability of LO, must be overcome. Furthermore, some enablers, such as learning design generation and standards usage, must be promoted in order to enhance LO economy. For this article, we introduced the integration of distributed learning object repositories (DLOR) as sources of LO that could be placed in adaptive learning designs to assist teachers’ design work. Two main issues presented as a result: how to access distributed LO, and where to place the LO in the learning design. To address these issues, we introduced two processes: LORSE, a distributed LO searching process, and LOOK, a micro context-based positioning process, respectively. Using these processes, the teachers were able to reuse LO from different sources to semi-automatically generate an adaptive learning design without leaving their virtual environment. A layered evaluation yielded good results for the process of placing learning objects from controlled learning object repositories into a learning design, and permitting educators to define different open issues that must be covered when they use uncontrolled learning object repositories for this purpose. We verified the satisfaction users had with our solution.</p>

Highlights

  • Basic Concepts of Learning Objects EconomyThrough the years, the concept of the learning object (LO) has been considered by many diverse and qualified people

  • Let us introduce an example: 0.2368 is the average similarity measure calculated among the 10 learning objects retrieved using the metadata—in this case, abbreviated keywords from Merlot

  • The similarity of its micro-context was calculated with respect to the general course micro-context

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Summary

Introduction

Basic Concepts of Learning Objects EconomyThrough the years, the concept of the learning object (LO) has been considered by many diverse and qualified people. Wiley (2000) reinforced the concept of reuse by introducing the definition for “object” from the object-oriented programming paradigm of computer science, where it is understood as a component that can be reused in multiple contexts. In this manner, a learning object is presented as a small instructional component that can be reused in different learning contexts when required. Unified cuMicroContext defines the possible micro-context in the curricular structure (CS) provided by the teacher. First possible micro-context in the learning design Unified modelling language. Concept Second possible micro-context in the learning design Unified Modelling Language

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