Title of article
Rules, roles and tools: Activity theory and the comparative study of e-learning
Author/Authors
Angela Benson، نويسنده , , Cormac Lawler and Andrew Whitworth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
12
From page
456
To page
467
Abstract
Activity theory (AT) is a powerful tool for investigating ‘artefacts in use’, ie, the
ways technologies interrelate with their local context. AT reveals the interfaces
between e-learning at the macro- (strategy, policy, ‘campus-wide’ solutions)
and the micro-organisational levels (everyday working practice, iterative
change, individual adaptation). In AT, contexts are conceived of as activity
systems inwhich human, technological and organisational elements are interrelated
and largely inseparable. Both the subjects of the activity system (internal)
and the wider community (external) mediate their activities through
tools, rules and roles. This paper shows how a course management system
(CMS) exerts an influence over all three of these mediators, though the exact
nature of this influence depends on the particular configuration of each activity
system. This is illustrated with reference to two case study programmes,
both of which used Moodle as their CMS, but which had activity systems
structured in quite different ways; the programmes also had different relationships
with their external organisational environment.
Journal title
BJET
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
BJET
Record number
838629
Link To Document