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Featured researches published by Ruth Raitman.


international conference on information technology and applications | 2005

Employing Wikis for Online Collaboration in the E-Learning Environment: Case Study

Ruth Raitman; Naomi Augar; Wanlei Zhou

This paper examines the various ways in which students reflect on their very recent experiences in collaborating in an online e-learning environment. Wikis, fully editable Websites, are easily accessible, require no software and allow its contributors, in these case students, to feel a sense of responsibility and ownership. Wikis are everywhere, but, unfortunately, the online literature has not yet begun to focus enough on wikis (Mattison 2003). Whereas students are used to the WebCT based university Elearning environment, Deakin Studies Online (DSO), this case study, completed in Nov 2004, was conducted to test the wiki platform as a means of online collaboration in the tertiary education environment. A full analysis of the results is presented, as are recommendations for improving the platform in an effort to employ wikis and utilize them to their full and absolute potential


international conference on advanced learning technologies | 2005

Security in the online e-learning environment

Ruth Raitman; Leanne Ngo; Naomi Augar; Wanlei Zhou

This paper addresses the role of security in the collaborative e-learning environment, and in particular, the social aspects of security and the importance of identity. It represents a case study, completed in Nov 2004, which was conducted to test the sense of security that students experienced whilst using the wiki platform as a means of online collaboration in the tertiary education environment. Wikis, fully editable Web sites, are easily accessible, require no software and allow its contributors (in this case students) to feel a sense of responsibility and ownership. A comparison between two wiki studies will be made whereby one group employed user login and the other maintained anonymity throughout the course of the study. The results consider the democratic participation and evolution of the work requirements over time, which in fact ascertains the nonvalidity of administrative identification.


international conference on web-based learning | 2004

From e-Learning to Virtual Learning Community: Bridging the Gap

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou

’Community’ has become a buzz word in the E-Learning arena. This paper examines the concept of virtual community, in the context of E-Learning. It defines what constitutes a virtual community and virtual learning community. A model comprising four essential criteria that define a virtual learning community is proposed. These criteria are discussed with relation to Deakin University’s E-Learning system. The paper concludes by highlighting the factors that may help bridge the gap between Deakin’s present provision of E-Learning to the development of a virtual learning community.


International handbook of virtual learning environments | 2006

Wikis: Collaborative Virtual Learning Environments

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou

Ward Cunningham used the word wiki (the Hawaiian word meaning quick) to name the collaborative tool he developed for use on the internet in 1994. Wikis are fully editable websites. Users can visit, read, re-organize and update the structure and content (text and pictures) of a wiki as they see fit. This functionality is called open editing (Leuf & Cunningham, 2001). All a user needs to edit and read a wiki, is a web browser. Consequently, the wiki has great potential for use as a collaborative virtual learning environment. Wikis abound on the internet. A well known wiki is Wikipedia an online collaborative encyclopaedia, where anybody can read, edit, re-organize and update the encyclopaedia content (Wikipedia, 2004).


web based communities | 2006

Developing wikis to foster web-based learning communities: an iterative approach

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou

This paper discusses ongoing research at Deakin University, which focuses on developing wikis to foster web-based learning communities. Research to date has used wikis to facilitate collaborative icebreaker exercises, discussions, and to create knowledge repositories. Student feedback has contributed to the iterative revision of the wiki interface, the icebreaker exercise and the development of new tasks for students to complete using the wiki. The analysis and discussion of the experiments presented in this paper focuses on usage trends such as the signature, viewing and editing patterns exhibited by the student cohort. The community building potential of wikis is discussed, highlighting the specific wiki features that can be used to foster a sense of community in a web-based learning environment. Finally, issues surrounding the development of web-based learning communities, which have emerged through the wiki study, are discussed and future directions are outlined.


international conference on web-based learning | 2003

Exploring the foundations of practicing online collaboration

Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou; Paul Nicholson

In collaborative learning, instruction is learner-centered rather than teacher-centered and knowledge is viewed as a social construct, facilitated by peer interaction, evaluation and mutual support [1]. Such computer supported collaborative learning (CSCL) enables and encourages learners to confer, reflect and help to develop meaningful learning in an environment where significant learning can be achieved through interactions supported by electronic communication and discourse [2]. This paper proposes a theory that supports educational collaboration in a peer-to-peer computing environment, thus blending the two disciplines.


Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education. Conference (21st : 2004 : Perth, W.A.) | 2004

Teaching and learning online with wikis

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou


Web-based intelligent e-learning systems: technologies and applications | 2006

Building Virtual Learning Communities

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Elicia Lanham; Wanlei Zhou


Archive | 2005

TOWARDS BUILDING WEB BASED LEARNING COMMUNITIES WITH WIKIS

Naomi Augar; Ruth Raitman; Wanlei Zhou


international conference on computers in education | 2004

Constructing wikis as a platform for online collaboration in an e-learning environment

Ruth Raitman; Naomi Augar; Wanlei Zhou

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