In order to promote pedagogically informed use technology, educators need to develop an active, inquisitive, design-oriented mindset (Laurillard, 2008). Design Patterns have been demonstrated as powerful mediators of theory-praxis conversations (Goodyear et al., 2006) yet widespread adoption by the practitioner community remains a challenge. Over several years, the authors and their colleagues have facilitated many workshops in which participants shared experiences, captured these as design narratives, extracting design patterns and applied them to novel teaching challenges represented as design scenarios (Winters &Mor, 2009; Mor &Winters, 2008). This paper presents the core elements of the methodology that emerged from these workshops: the Participatory Patterns Workshops (PPW) methodology.
%0 Journal Article
%1 yishaymorstevenwarburtonforthcomingparticipatory
%A Mor, Yishay
%A Warburton, Steven
%A Winters, Niall
%D 2012
%E Hawkridge, D.G.
%E Verjans, S.
%E Wilson, G.
%J Research in Learning Technology
%K design education eduplopdk inaglobe ld-grid learning methodology myown oldsmooc oldsmooc-w1 oldsmooc_w1 ppw snap workshops
%P 163-175
%T Participatory Pattern Workshops: A Methodology for Open Learning Design Inquiry
%U http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/19197
%V 20
%X In order to promote pedagogically informed use technology, educators need to develop an active, inquisitive, design-oriented mindset (Laurillard, 2008). Design Patterns have been demonstrated as powerful mediators of theory-praxis conversations (Goodyear et al., 2006) yet widespread adoption by the practitioner community remains a challenge. Over several years, the authors and their colleagues have facilitated many workshops in which participants shared experiences, captured these as design narratives, extracting design patterns and applied them to novel teaching challenges represented as design scenarios (Winters &Mor, 2009; Mor &Winters, 2008). This paper presents the core elements of the methodology that emerged from these workshops: the Participatory Patterns Workshops (PPW) methodology.
@article{yishaymorstevenwarburtonforthcomingparticipatory,
abstract = {In order to promote pedagogically informed use technology, educators need to develop an active, inquisitive, design-oriented mindset (Laurillard, 2008). Design Patterns have been demonstrated as powerful mediators of theory-praxis conversations (Goodyear et al., 2006) yet widespread adoption by the practitioner community remains a challenge. Over several years, the authors and their colleagues have facilitated many workshops in which participants shared experiences, captured these as design narratives, extracting design patterns and applied them to novel teaching challenges represented as design scenarios (Winters &Mor, 2009; Mor &Winters, 2008). This paper presents the core elements of the methodology that emerged from these workshops: the Participatory Patterns Workshops (PPW) methodology.},
added-at = {2012-06-24T02:06:06.000+0200},
author = {Mor, Yishay and Warburton, Steven and Winters, Niall},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2cb696e087ce34bd3c703c1cac8ad690c/yish},
editor = {Hawkridge, D.G. and Verjans, S. and Wilson, G.},
interhash = {65f80ec242caaf9bc7448cd9e99cdf12},
intrahash = {cb696e087ce34bd3c703c1cac8ad690c},
journal = {Research in Learning Technology},
keywords = {design education eduplopdk inaglobe ld-grid learning methodology myown oldsmooc oldsmooc-w1 oldsmooc_w1 ppw snap workshops},
pages = {163-175},
timestamp = {2022-11-20T15:16:12.000+0100},
title = {Participatory Pattern Workshops: A Methodology for Open Learning Design Inquiry},
url = {http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/19197},
volume = 20,
year = 2012
}