What Web 2.0 Can Teach Us About Learning

April 18, 2007

The Chronicle article “What Web 2.0 Can Teach Us About Learning” is an interesting article looking at the use of course management systems and Web 2.0 tools in the classroom. Edward Maloney explains that most course management systems (BlackBoard and WebCT) have been utilized as a means to disperse media and not as an interactive teaching tool. The article provides some insights into the future uses of Web 2.0 in the classroom.


• How have you used Web 2.0 Tools to teach online or in a face to face (F2F) classroom?
• What are some limitations of course-management software (BlackBoard)?
• What works well for your students? What have they said?
• Click on the COMMENTS link below to get started!


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3 thoughts on “What Web 2.0 Can Teach Us About Learning

  1.    Anonymous  |  April 18th, 2007 at 6:21 pm     

    Just so you and your readers are aware, there are multiple CMS or LMS (Learner Management Systems) out there. Blackboard owns WebCT, so that is really only one of about a hundred. Scholar360, Desire2Learn, Moodle, etc. to name just a few.

  2.    Anonymous  |  April 18th, 2007 at 8:57 pm     

    I don’t know about the limitations of Blackboard, but I believe many use it improperly. Links like tools/grades are available in some course shells even though an instructor isn’t publishing grades on blackboard. It just makes some instructors look like they don’t know how to effectively use blackboard. It is clutter to have options that one isn’t putting any content in.
    I haven’t done enough research though to know if another LMS would be more effective than blackboard.

  3.    Anonymous  |  April 18th, 2007 at 9:00 pm     

    As for Web 2.0 tools i have had experience using Google Docs for collaboration. Its easy to upload a excel document and then add collaborators. This allows people to edit the documents you upload. It’s great for working on budgets, or collecting data with multiple people…



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