Aytaç Göğüş
Sabancı University
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Featured researches published by Aytaç Göğüş.
Information Development | 2017
Abdulrahman Essa Al Lily; Jed Foland; David Stoloff; Aytaç Göğüş; Inan Deniz Erguvan; Mapotse Tomé Awshar; Jo Tondeur; Michael Hammond; Isabella Margarethe Venter; Paul Jerry; Dimitrios Vlachopoulos; Aderonke A Oni; Yuliang Liu; Radim Badosek; María Cristina López de la Madrid; Elvis Mazzoni; Hwansoo Lee; Khamsum Kinley; Marco Kalz; Uyanga Sambuu; Tatiana Bushnaq; Niels Pinkwart; Nafisat Afolake Adedokun-Shittu; Pär-Ola Zander; Kevin Oliver; Lúcia Pombo; Jale Balaban Sali; Sue Gregory; Sonam Tobgay; Mike Joy
This article theorizes the functional relationship between the human components (i.e., scholars) and non-human components (i.e., structural configurations) of academic domains. It is organized around the following question: in what ways have scholars formed and been formed by the structural configurations of their academic domain? The article uses as a case study the academic domain of education and technology to examine this question. Its authorship approach is innovative, with a worldwide collection of academics (99 authors) collaborating to address the proposed question based on their reflections on daily social and academic practices. This collaboration followed a three-round process of contributions via email. Analysis of these scholars’ reflective accounts was carried out, and a theoretical proposition was established from this analysis. The proposition is of a mutual (yet not necessarily balanced) power (and therefore political) relationship between the human and non-human constituents of an academic realm, with the two shaping one another. One implication of this proposition is that these non-human elements exist as political ‘actors’, just like their human counterparts, having ‘agency’ – which they exercise over humans. This turns academic domains into political (functional or dysfunctional) ‘battlefields’ wherein both humans and non-humans engage in political activities and actions that form the identity of the academic domain.
Educational Technology Research and Development | 2013
Aytaç Göğüş
Cognitive scientists investigate mental models (how humans organize and structure knowledge in their minds) so as to understand human understanding of and interactions with the world. Cognitive and mental model research is concerned with internal conceptual systems that are not easily or directly observable. The goal of this research was to investigate the use of Evaluation of Mental Models (EMM) to assess the mental models of individuals and groups in solving complex problems and to compare novices and experts models as bases for providing feedback to learners. This study tested a qualified web-based assessment tool kit, Highly Interactive Model-based Assessment Tools and Technologies (HIMATT), in an as yet untested domain—mathematics. In this study, university students and their mathematics instructors used two tools in HIMATT, Dynamic Evaluation of Enhanced Problem Solving (DEEP) and Text-Model Inspection Trace of Concepts and Relations (T-MITOCAR). The research questions include: Do novice participants exhibit common patterns of thoughts when they conceptualize complex mathematical problems? Do novices conceptualize complex mathematical problems differently from experts? What differences in DEEP and T-MITOCAR patterns and responses exist according to the measures of HIMATT? Findings suggest that EMM and HIMATT could effectively support formative assessment in a complex mathematical domain. Finally, this study confirms a common assumption of cognitive scientists that the tool being used could affect the tool user’s understanding of the problem being solved. In this case, while DEEP and T-MITOCAR led to somewhat different expert models, both tools prove useful in support of formative assessment.
Archive | 2015
Aytaç Göğüş
This chapter reviews the essential learning outcomes that students develop through a 21st century liberal education, along with principal themes in the literature about higher education in the 21st century. This chapter shows examples of high impact liberal education practices in both European and American colleges and universities. This chapter also discusses the role of emerging technologies and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) fields in liberal education. Questions to be addressed include the following: What kind of liberal education curriculum and learning environment can better prepare university students for success in the 21st century workplace? Why is liberal education necessary? What is the role of emerging technologies to meet the liberal education learning outcomes? Principle themes in the literature and implications of liberal education are discussed.
Educational Technology Research and Development | 2013
Nicolae Nistor; Aytaç Göğüş; Thomas Lerche
Archive | 2008
Aytaç Göğüş; Huriye Arikan
Archive | 2012
Aytaç Göğüş
Archive | 2009
Aytaç Göğüş; Tiffany A. Koszalka; J. Michael Spector
Archive | 2009
Aytaç Göğüş; Nihat Gökhan Göğüş
Archive | 2012
Aytaç Göğüş
Archive | 2012
Aytaç Göğüş