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A time‐based blended learning model

Anders Norberg (Education Strategist with the Campus Development Unit, Skellefteå Council, Skellefteå, Sweden)
Charles D. Dziuban (Director of the Research Initiative for Teaching Effectiveness, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA)
Patsy D. Moskal (Associate Director of the Research Initiative for Teaching Effectiveness, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA)

On the Horizon

ISSN: 1074-8121

Article publication date: 16 August 2011

4581

Abstract

Purpose

This paper seeks to outline a time‐based strategy for blended learning that illustrates course design and delivery by framing students' learning opportunities in synchronous and asynchronous modalities.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper deconstructs the evolving components of blended learning in order to identify changes induced by digital technologies for enhancing teaching and learning environments.

Findings

This paper hypothesizes that blended learning may be traced back to early medieval times when printed material provided the first asynchronous learning opportunities. However, the digitalization of contemporary learning environments results in a de‐emphasis on teaching and learning spaces. When time becomes the primary organizing construct for education in a technology‐supported environment, blending possibilities emerge around five components: migration, support, location, learner empowerment, and flow.

Research limitations/implications

This study enables the readers to conceptualize blended learning as a combination of modern media, communication modes, times and places in a new kind of learning synthesis in place of traditional classrooms and technology with the teacher serving as a facilitator of a collective learning process.

Practical implications

The major implication of this paper is that modern learning technologies have freed students and educators from the lock in of classroom space as being the primary component of blended learning, thereby emphasizing learning rather than teaching in the planning process.

Originality/value

This paper proposes a new model of blended learning in which physical teaching environments give way to time. Time and synchronicity become the primary elements of the learning environments. In addition, the authors suggest that the time‐based model as an educational “new normal” results in technologies as enablers rather than disruptors of learning continuity.

Keywords

Citation

Norberg, A., Dziuban, C.D. and Moskal, P.D. (2011), "A time‐based blended learning model", On the Horizon, Vol. 19 No. 3, pp. 207-216. https://doi.org/10.1108/10748121111163913

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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