Abstract
Parts of the classroom of the future may be built online allowing for computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL). A central challenge in CSCL is a lack of transactivity, i.e., learners have problems building on the reasoning of their peers. A means of fostering CSCL are scripts that specify, sequence, and distribute roles and activities among a group of (online) learners. This article identifies five instructional design principles that explain script effects and inform script design: 1) regulation of learning activities; 2) complementary procedural knowledge; 3) process-oriented instruction; 4) substitution of coordination efforts; and 5) awareness induction.
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CITATION STYLE
Weinberger, A. (2011). Principles of Transactive Computer-Supported Collaboration Scripts. Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy, 6(3), 189–202. https://doi.org/10.18261/issn1891-943x-2011-03-06
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