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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian Linxen is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian Linxen.


Medical Teacher | 2013

Mobile learning in resource-constrained environments: A case study of medical education

Christoph Pimmer; Sebastian Linxen; Urs Gröhbiel; Anil Kumar Jha; Günter Burg

Background: The achievement of the millennium development goals may be facilitated by the use of information and communication technology in medical and health education. Aims: This study intended to explore the use and impact of educational technology in medical education in resource-constrained environments. Methods: A multiple case study was conducted in two Nepalese teaching hospitals. The data were analysed using activity theory as an analytical basis. Results: There was little evidence for formal e-learning, but the findings indicate that students and residents adopted mobile technologies, such as mobile phones and small laptops, as cultural tools for surprisingly rich ‘informal’ learning in a very short time. These tools allowed learners to enhance (a) situated learning, by immediately connecting virtual information sources to their situated experiences; (b) cross-contextual learning by documenting situated experiences in the form of images and videos ─ and re-using the material for later reflection and discussion and (c) engagement with educational content in social network communities. Conclusion: By placing the students and residents at the centre of the new learning activities, this development has begun to affect the overall educational system. Leveraging these tools is closely linked to the development of broad media literacy, including awareness of ethical and privacy issues.


human factors in computing systems | 2015

How WEIRD is HCI?: Extending HCI Principles to other Countries and Cultures

Christian Sturm; Alice H. Oh; Sebastian Linxen; José Abdelnour Nocera; Susan M. Dray; Katharina Reinecke

A large majority of articles published at prominent HCI venues such as CHI and CSCW reports on studies with WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) participants, ignoring that the results might not apply to other subject populations. This workshop aims to have the following two main outcomes: (1) A list of major principles that HCI researchers often build on and that are unlikely to apply to users in other countries and cultures. (2) An action plan that describes how we can extend these previous findings, such as by collaborating across countries and cultures, conducting large-scale online experiments, or creating a culture of replications and extensions with more diverse subject populations. Furthermore, the workshop aims to establish an interest group with the goal to improve the external validity of HCI research and to inform the design of further research studies in this area.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2017

Facebook for supervision? Research education shaped by the structural properties of a social media space

Christoph Pimmer; Jennifer Chipps; Petra Brysiewicz; Fiona Walters; Sebastian Linxen; Urs Gröhbiel

Abstract This study analyses the use of a group space on the social networking site Facebook as a way to facilitate research supervision for teams of learners. Borrowing Lee’s framework for research supervision, the goal was to understand how supervision and learning was achieved in, and shaped by, the properties of a social networking space. For this purpose, the discourse between supervisor and learners was analysed along with the structural properties afforded by the space. Using the empirical findings and further literature, a conceptual framework was developed that illustrates the ways in which functional supervision, enculturation, emancipation, critical thinking and relationship development are achieved and formed by the interplay of the technological, functional, multimodal and the wider sociocultural, political and sociolinguistic structures associated with social media space.


British Journal of Educational Technology | 2012

Facebook as a learning tool? A case study on the appropriation of social network sites from mobile phones in developing countries

Christoph Pimmer; Sebastian Linxen; Urs Gröhbiel


Nurse Education Today | 2014

Informal mobile learning in nurse education and practice in remote areas—A case study from rural South Africa

Christoph Pimmer; Petra Brysiewicz; Sebastian Linxen; Fiona Walters; Jennifer Chipps; Urs Gröhbiel


The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning | 2016

Supervision on Social Media: Use and Perception of Facebook as a Research Education Tool in Disadvantaged Areas.

Christoph Pimmer; Jennifer Chipps; Petra Brysiewicz; Fiona Walters; Sebastian Linxen; Urs Gröhbiel


human factors in computing systems | 2014

Mental models for web objects in different cultural settings

Sebastian Linxen; Silvia Heinz; Livia J. Müller; Alexandre N. Tuch; Klaus Opwis


Archive | 2014

Mobile phones as learning tools.

Petra Brysiewicz; Christoph Pimmer; Jennifer Chipps; Fiona Walters; Sebastian Linxen; Urs Gröhbiel


Archive | 2013

The neglected grass root adoption of mobile phones as learning tools in resource-limited settings. A study from advanced midwifery education in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Christoph Pimmer; Urs Gröhbiel; Fiona Walters; Sebastian Linxen; Jennifer Chipps


Mensch & Computer Workshopband | 2017

Interkulturelle Erforschung und Gestaltung von Benutzungsschnittstellen (UI) und Benutzererfahrung (UX).

Rüdiger Heimgärtner; Christian Sturm; Christa Womser-Hacker; Sebastian Linxen; Thomas Mandl

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Fiona Walters

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Jennifer Chipps

University of the Western Cape

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Petra Brysiewicz

The Joanna Briggs Institute

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