Collaborative Learning amongst Distance Learners of Mathematics
ARTICLE
Kurien Philip, Sugata Mitra
Open Learning Volume 27, Number 3, ISSN 0268-0513
Abstract
This paper describes the effects of collaborative support on groups of distance learners of General Certificate of Secondary Education mathematics. Two experiments are described. In each case, learners were provided with teleconferencing with peers, experts and mentors in addition to structured study materials. No improvements were noticed in course completion rates and the learners were seen to disengage from the teleconference over time. When provided with a virtual learning environment, learners were, once again, found not to use the practice or support features of the system. The results from our experiments are intriguing in that they seem to indicate that scaffolding in the form of structured material, collaborative environments, and a virtual learning environment does not seem to affect performance in any way other than an improvement in revenue realisation. (Contains 11 figures and 5 tables.)
Citation
Philip, K. & Mitra, S. (2012). Collaborative Learning amongst Distance Learners of Mathematics. Open Learning, 27(3), 227-247. Retrieved August 15, 2024 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/68739/.
![](https://editlib-media.s3.amazonaws.com/sources/eric.png)
ERIC is sponsored by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) of the U.S. Department of Education.
Copyright for this record is held by the content creator. For more details see ERIC's copyright policy.
Keywords
- Achievement Gains
- Aptitude Treatment Interaction
- Cooperative learning
- distance education
- Educational Experiments
- Foreign Countries
- Instructional Effectiveness
- Intervention
- learner engagement
- Learning Experience
- mathematics education
- Program Descriptions
- Program Effectiveness
- Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
- Secondary School Mathematics
- Student Improvement
- Teleconferencing
- Virtual Classrooms