This document was last modified on 3 March, 1999.

The AusWeb series of World Wide Web Research Conferences.

Web-based simulations as teaching and learning media in Political Science


Roni Linser [contact author] Department of Political Science, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, 3052, AUSTRALIA. E-Mail: ronilins@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au

Som Naidu, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Multimedia Education Unit, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, 3052, AUSTRALIA. E-Mail: s.naidu@meu.unimelb.edu.au


Keywords

Web-based Simulations, Political Science, Teaching and Learning Media, Computer Mediated Communication (CMC), Collaborative Learning.


Abstract

This paper describes the experience of using a web-based simulation in the political Science department at the University of Melbourne. It compares the effects of using traditional media for teaching and learning with those that issue from CMC via the Internet and WWW. Consequently it argues that the effectiveness of using CMC in the teaching and learning environment is dependent on the design by which it is implemented. Using Web-based simulations as a teaching tool for Political Science demonstrates that CMC can be both a stimulating and effective pedagogical experience. A simulation designed for collaborative learning in context will not only motivate and encourage students to learn, but as a result, will also be a more effective tool in teaching and learning than traditional means used in the discipline.


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