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What is Meaningful Learning

Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Second Edition
Achieving a deep understanding of complex ideas. Meaningful learning implies that knowledge can be manipulated and applied to a variety of situations and contexts.
Published in Chapter:
Pedagogical Perspectives on M-Learning
Geraldine Torrisi-Steel (Griffith University, Australia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-026-4.ch485
Abstract
The advent of multimedia on desktop computers in the late 1980s and early 1990s heralded an era of educational technology that held the promise of revolutionising the business of teaching and learning by facilitating a shift from traditional teacher-centred methods to more effective student-centred approaches. During the mid-late 1990s the popularisation of the Internet, added to educational technology a new dimension of “connectedness” between people and between people and information resources. Online learning and e-learning became icons of the era. In late 1990s and early 2000s major players in the mobile phone industry worked on developing a wireless infrastructure to allow for wireless communication between devices, WAP (wireless application protocol) being one of the principle outcomes. This set the stage for the wireless Internet and for another new dimension to educational technology, mobility. Thus, the maturation of multimedia, the Internet and communication technologies together with development and availability of ubiquitous computing devices and wireless networking birthed the notion of mobile learning (m-learning) or “learning on the move.” Like many other media technologies before, m-learning is considered to have the potential to reshape teaching and learning, in this instance, holding promise of unprecedented connectivity and learning interactions between learners, learners and educators, information and computing resources, anywhere, anytime. This article seeks to facilitate the realisation of the pedagogical potential of m-learning by proposing a model for the construction of m-learning spaces. The proposed model is founded upon a pedagogical framework directing attention to guiding philosophies, technology integration, and the capabilities of mobile devices.
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Instructional Technology and Meaningful Learning: A Synthesis for Teacher Educators for the 21st Century
The ability of the learner to retain information and apply what they learned to solve problems in different contexts beyond the classroom
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Augmented Reality Gaming in Education for Engaged Learning
Learning that is active, constructive, intentional, and authentic.
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Application of Playful Robotics to Advance Cognitive Development and Meaningful Learning Among Early Learners
Knowledge and skills gained through authentic experiences with playful interactions with peers.
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Culturally Responsive Pedagogy, Universal Design for Learning, Ubiquitous Learning, and Seamless Learning: How These Paradigms Inform the Intentional Design of Learner-Centered Online Learning Environments
The provision of learning experiences that emphasize active learning, personal relevance of learning, authentic contexts, constructivist approaches to learning, collaboration, and goal-direction.
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Concept Maps and Meaningful Learning
The knowledge to be learnt must make some sense to the student.
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Multimedia Learning: Simulated vs. Real-World Digital Logic Circuit Curriculum
The process of meaningful learning occurs when students build knowledge and cognitive processes which are required to prefer a problem-solving task.
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Intentionality in Blended Learning Design: Applying the Principles of Meaningful Learning, U-Learning, UDL, and CRT
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Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning and Assessment: A Strategy for Developing Online Learning Communities in Continuing Education
Learning that is robust and transferable to real-life professional practices and contexts; in online learning contexts, it is manifested as active, collaborative and reflective discourse in ways that foster self-regulation.
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Ambient Pedagogies, Meaningful Learning and Social Software
An approach to learning which emphasises the human social and cognitive processes that are in play, such as ‘thinking’, ‘meaning making’, ‘understanding’ and ‘collaborative inquiry’, and articulates the value of knowledge representations in these terms. So this term foregrounds the processes that give rise to the, usually collaborative, development of knowledge and understanding, in contrast to approaches that locate meaning and knowledge ostensibly within media and content
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Faculty Development for Dynamic Curriculum Design in Online Higher Education
Acquiring and understanding knowledge and skills in a way that allows learners to apply them in real-world contexts and make connections to existing knowledge.
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Intersubjective Meaning-Making in Dyads Using Object-Typed Concept Mapping
According to Ausubel (1968), it is a non-arbitrary, non-verbatim, substantive incorporation of new knowledge into cognitive structure requiring deliberate effort to link new knowledge with higher order concepts in cognitive structure.
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Meeting Higher Education Expectations in the Digital Age and Reliability of Assessment in E-Learning Settings
Learning that is robust and transferable to real-life professional practices and contexts; in online learning contexts, it is manifested as active, collaborative, and reflective discourse in ways that foster self-regulation.
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Learning ICT-Mediated Communication through Computer-Based Simulations
A learning process characterized by certain process characteristics.
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Teaching Digital Natives Using Technology: Learning Requirements, Multimedia Design Elements, and Effectiveness
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The Vignette TaBLE: Team-Based Blended Learning Experiences With Classroom Mentors and Teacher Candidates
The opposite of rote learning (memorizing facts without regard to their connection to the whole concept) and refers to the method of learning where new knowledge acquisition is related to prior knowledge. It is based in the theory that connected learning facilitates the recall of all information grouped together in the learner’s brain.
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Constructivism, Technology, and Meaningful Learning
Is learning that occurs when a learning task can be related in a non- arbitrary manner to what the learner already knows; meaningful learning is active, constructive, intentional, authentic, and collaborative.
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Towards a Theory of Formative Assessment in Online Higher Education
Learning that is robust and transferable to real-life professional practices and contexts; in online learning contexts, it is manifested as active, collaborative and reflective discourse in ways that foster self-regulation.
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Didactic Proposal for Physical Education for Three-Year Olds in Early Childhood Education
It is a work methodology in which the students' previous knowledge is the base of it, and it will be used to progressively increase the content's difficulty and thus put the experience into practice so that they can spontaneously introduce them to their daily lives.
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Active Learning, Student Engagement, and Motivation: The Importance of Caring Behaviors in Teaching
Learning that has value for students because it is understood and connected to prior learning experiences.
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Digital Tools for Meaningful Learning of Preservice Teachers
A process of meaning making by which PTs can understand information and use it to connect with their lived experiences and interests.
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A First Step towards Integrating Educational Theory and Game Design
Meaningful learning has occurred when a learner has gained the relevant knowledge, and can also use that knowledge to solve problems; the knowledge can be transferred to new problems and new learning situations.
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Multimedia Design of Assistive Technology for Those with Learning Disabilities
The remembering and deep understanding of instructional material; occurs when important aspects of the material are cognitively recognized, when the material is organized into a coherent structure, and then integrated with relevant existing knowledge (Marshall, 1996; Mayer, 2001; Mayer & Moreno, 2003; Wittrock, 1990).
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Online Strategic Discussion Forum: Models, Strategies, and Applications
The learner’s ability to connect newly acquired knowledge to their prior knowledge and experiences as well as apply and relate new information to professional real-world situations.
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