Anders Norberg has a teaching background in philosophy and comparative religion and as a director of studies at upper secondary level and in adult education, but serves now as an education strategist for the Council of Skellefteå in Northern Sweden, working together with regional universities in the further development of a young multi-university campus. He has been in education development for 20 years, at Campus Skellefteå, at Umeå University and in several European R&D projects. His special area of interest is education access and logistics in connection to new technology and he is also a conference organizer and lecturer on these topics. Since 1996, she has served as the liaison for faculty research of distributed learning and teaching effectiveness at UCF. Patsy specializes in statistics, graphics, program evaluation, and applied data analysis. She has extensive experience in research methods including survey development, interviewing, and conducting focus groups and frequently serves as an evaluation consultant to school districts, and industry and government organizations. She has also received funding from several government and industrial agencies including the National Science Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. She has co-authored numerous articles and chapters on blended and online learning and frequently presents on these topics.
Charles D. DziubanA TIME-BASED BLENDED LEARNING MODEL 3 ABSTRACT Purpose: This paper outlines a time-based strategy for blended learning that illustrates course design and delivery by framing students learning opportunities in synchronous and asynchronous modalities.Design/Methodology/Approach: This paper deconstructs the evolving components of blended learning in order to identify changes induced by digital technologies for enhancing teaching and learning environments.Findings: This paper hypothesizes that blended learning may be traced back to early medieval times when printed material provided the first asynchronous learning opportunities. However, the digitalization of contemporary learning environments results in a de-emphasis on teaching and learning spaces. When time becomes the primary organizing construct for education in a technology-supported environment, blending possibilities emerge around five components: migration, support, location, learner empowerment, and flowResearch limitation/Implications: This study enables the readers to conceptualize blended learning as a combination of modern media, communication modes, times and places in a new kind of learning synthesis in place of traditional classrooms and technology with the teacher serving as a facilitator of a collective learning process.Practical Implications-The major implication of this paper is that modern learning technologies have freed students and educators from the lock in of classroom space as the being the primary component of blended learning, thereby emphasizing learning rather than teaching in the planning process.Originality/Value: This paper proposes a new model of blended learning ...