Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Roland vanOostveen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Roland vanOostveen.


International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education | 2017

Democratizing digital learning: theorizing the fully online learning community model

Todd J. B. Blayone; Roland vanOostveen; Wendy Barber; Maurice DiGiuseppe; Elizabeth Childs

The integration of digital technologies at institutions of higher education are profoundly influencing formal learning on a global scale. Social-constructivist models of fully online learning are well-positioned to address the demands of government, and economic and social-development organizations for civically-engaged individuals with strong problem-solving, critical-thinking and collaboration competencies. With an established record of performance at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT), Canada, the Fully Online Learning Community (FOLC) is one such model.This paper theorizes FOLC as a response to several problematics, including (a) the aforementioned demand for greater educational focus on higher-order competency development, (b) the deficiencies of distance education and MOOCs as learning models, and (c) a quest for new learning models that strengthen deliberation skills and deepen democratic experience. As a divergent fork of the Community of Inquiry model, FOLC describes collaborative learning as a symbiosis of social and cognitive interactions amplified through effective use of synchronous and asynchronous digital affordances. Furthermore, it models democratized learning communities that reduce transactional distance between learners and educators, incorporates authentic assessment, and encourages negotiated technology affordances and cognitive outcomes while distributing responsibility for constructive criticality.Having positioned FOLC conceptually, and addressed current limitations, a research agenda for extending its empirical foundations, and leveraging UOIT’s EILAB affordances, is presented. The underlying argument is that self-regulating and transformative learning communities can be established and sustained in fully online environments, and that such communities (a) produce a diversity of beneficial learning outcomes, and (b) deepen the democratic functioning of learners and their social contexts.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2017

Surveying digital competencies of university students and professors in Ukraine for fully online collaborative learning

Todd J. B. Blayone; Olena Mykhailenko; Roland vanOostveen; Oleksiy Grebeshkov; Olena Hrebeshkova; Oleksandr Vostryakov

ABSTRACT Collaborative-constructivist online learning appears well aligned with Ukraine’s post-revolutionary aspirations for globalised and transformed higher education. This study explores digital competencies of students and professors at Kyiv National Economic University, Ukraine, to probe readiness for fully online collaborative learning. The General Technology Competency and Use profile tool was completed by 244 participants to measure digital experience and confidence across four categories of human–computer activity. To assess readiness, reported levels of competencies were related to the three dimensions of successful collaborative learning described by the Community of Inquiry model. Despite some key differences between students and teachers, general findings include moderate-to-low levels of self-reported technical, social and informational competency, accompanied by consistently low levels of epistemological competency. These findings suggest that neither students nor teachers are adequately prepared for achieving high levels of social, cognitive and teaching presence in a fully online learning environment. It is recommended that digital-competency development become an educational priority.


International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education | 2018

Profiling the digital readiness of higher education students for transformative online learning in the post-soviet nations of Georgia and Ukraine

Todd J. B. Blayone; Olena Mykhailenko; Medea Kavtaradze; Marianna Kokhan; Roland vanOostveen; Wendy Barber

This study profiles the digital readiness of university students in Georgia and Ukraine for fully online collaborative learning, theorized as an educational pathway to democratic transformation. The Digital Competency Profiler was used to gather data from 150 students in Georgia and 129 in Ukraine about their digital competences. The analysis grouped students into high-, medium- and low-readiness segments for 52 actions in technical, communicational, informational and computational dimensions. Findings show that large percentages of Georgian and Ukrainian students are ill-prepared for many online-learning activities, and there is generally greater readiness on mobile devices than desktops/laptops. However, large percentages of Ukrainian students appear in high-readiness segments for communicating online and using social networks. In Georgia, many students report high-readiness for technical and computational interactions. Therefore, the researchers recommend using the digital-readiness data in tandem with a well-chosen, online-learning framework to align these patterns of strengths with future educational innovation.


Education and Information Technologies | 2018

Professional development learning environments (PDLEs) embedded in a collaborative online learning environment (COLE): Moving towards a new conception of online professional learning

Roland vanOostveen; Francois Desjardins; Shawn M. Bullock

Teaching, and education in general, remain firmly rooted in the practices of the past and continue to resist the implementation of strategies and theories arising from educational research. Consequently, significant reforms have been slow to take hold in educational systems around the world. Much of the reluctance can be attributed to a widely-held misconception of the nature of learning. This project attempts to address this misconception through the development of Professional Development Learning Environments (PDLEs are a series of learning tasks and a video-based case study) embedded in an online learning environment that requires the collaboration of users to solve problems. To use a Problem-Based-Learning (PBL) approach in an online context requires a major paradigm shift as well as using tools that were not designed specifically for such a student-driven, process-centred pedagogical paradigm. This becomes a problem when online resources and systems are used for supporting in-service teacher in their pursuit of furthering their education. Although the current theories of learning and teaching may present the philosophical content of such courses, the online strategies used often conflict with the theory. To study the formal implementation of PBL as a social-constructivist pedagogical approach, into an online learning environment to provide the tools for e-learning that would be closer in design to the current thinking on the very nature of learning, the PDLEs were modified to become small reusable video clips with a structure designed to facilitate PBL and focus learners’ attention on higher order thinking skills rather than specifically on content. These modified PDLEs are referred to as Problem-Based Learning Objects (PBLOs). The PBLOs were embedded into a prototype of a Collaborative Online Learning Environment (COLE) which was developed simultaneously. The entire system was pilot tested with small groups. Preliminary results show that although many technical difficulties remain to be solved, using the environment does show evidence of some effect on beliefs about personal theories of learning, causing shifts from technical issues to those surrounding processes of learning. Our preliminary research has called attention to the potential ability of PBLO/COLE to disrupt conventional, transmission-based conceptions of online learning as content delivery. At the same time, however, our preliminary work has also indicated that learners who are not used to the collaborative opportunities provided within PBLO/COLE may still hold traditional orientations to teaching and learning as a “gold standard” to which all other options are compared. A purposeful direction for our future research will entail working with learners in PBLO/COLE over a sustained period so that they may engage in an online experience grounded in principles of socio-constructivism.


EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology | 2008

Collaborative Online Learning Environment:Towards a process driven approach and collective knowledge building

Francois Desjardins; Roland vanOostveen


EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology | 2015

Faculty and student use of digital technology in a “laptop” university

Francois Desjardins; Roland vanOostveen


EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology | 2010

Exploring Graduate Student’s Use of Computer-Based Technologies for Online Learning

Francois Desjardins; Roland vanOostveen; Shawn Michael Bullock; Maurice DiGiuseppe; Lorayne Robertson


The College Quarterly | 2016

Becoming Close with Others Online: Distributed Community Building in Online PBL Courses.

Roland vanOostveen; Elizabeth Childs; Jessica Clarkson; Kathleen Flynn


EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology | 2013

Exploring University Students’ Use of Ict

Maurice DiGiuseppe; Elita Partosoedarso; Roland vanOostveen; Francois Desjardins


The College Quarterly | 2017

Purposeful Action Research: Reconsidering Science and Technology Teacher Professional Development.

Roland vanOostveen

Collaboration


Dive into the Roland vanOostveen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francois Desjardins

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maurice DiGiuseppe

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Todd J. B. Blayone

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lorayne Robertson

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olena Mykhailenko

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shawn Michael Bullock

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wendy Barber

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge