A Convergent Participation Model for Evaluation of Learning Objects
John Nesbit, Karen Belfer and John Vargo
Abstract
The properties that distinguish learning
objects from other forms of educational software - global accessibility, metadata
standards, finer granularity and reusability - have implications for evaluation.
This article proposes a convergent participation model for learning object evaluation in
which representatives from stakeholder groups (e.g., students, instructors, subject matter
experts, instructional designers, and media developers) converge toward more similar
descriptions and ratings through a two-stage process supported by online collaboration tools.
The article reviews evaluation models that have been applied to educational software and media,
considers models for gathering and meta-evaluating individual user reviews that have recently
emerged on the Web, and describes the peer review model adopted for the MERLOT repository.
The convergent participation model is assessed in relation to other models and with respect
to its support for eight goals of learning object evaluation: (1) aid for searching and
selecting, (2) guidance for use, (3) formative evaluation, (4) influence on design practices,
(5) professional development and student learning, (6) community building, (7) social
recognition, and (8) economic exchange.
Citation
Nesbit, J. C., Belfer, K., & Vargo, J. (2002).
A convergent participation model for evaluation of learning objects. Journal of Learning and
Technology, 28 (3), 105-120., 25 (3).
Contact
Associate ProfessorInteractive Arts and Technology
Simon Fraser University
604-268-7410