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Issues in Distance Learning through student-initiated interactions and reflections,
in real-time in class,
and in delayed-time using an electronic bulletin board system (BBS). Pea’s
(1994) distributed multimedia learning environments involve a dialectical opposition between the symbol-processing and constructivist viewpoints, to enable students to construct and transform knowledge through progressive discourse.
Effective learning, however, requires both knowledge of learner styles and advance preparation on the part of the teacher and site facilitator.
Teachers and site facilitators are better able to make curriculum decisions to suit the preferences of their students, such as grouping certain students
productively for project work, or assigning particular students to individual research projects, if they can determine the students‘ prevalent learning modes. Site facilitators have the advantage of eye-to-eye contact and per- sonal contact with students in their classrooms, whereas studio teachers must often rely on televised images,
telephone conversations, or electronic messaging for feedback on student preferences.
If a teacher recognizes the existence of these alternate learning styles,
and if he attempts to make a match between these modes and the content to be learned, then he can develop a local instructional theory. As with most distance learning situations, a localized theory has a greater prospect of success than a general instructional theory intended to function satisfacto-
rily in variety of settings, with a variety of practitioners (Owens & Straton,
1980, p. 160).
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