Arin Basu edited extabstract.tex  almost 9 years ago

Commit id: 9c3f7a64191db50819d2d785f6ba269306b55d41

deletions | additions      

       

The organisation of the paper will be as follows. We shall provide a brief background history of the emergence of the Internet of Things (wikipedia entry here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_of_Things), and the concept of video self modelling and how their potential in modifying teaching and learning practices in tertiary sector and professional education (??). We shall then provide a systematic review of the effectiveness and efficacy of the available tools for educational practices, and finally, we shall provide a synthesis of how the more effective technologies can be blended with the principles and practices of video self modelling to foster more effective learning and can augur emergence of effective, cost-efficient learning tools.  The systematic review should focus on the following question, "\textit{Compared with traditional approaches, what is the overall effectiveness of wearable technology and Internet of Things based applications in fostering teaching and learnign for tertiary students and students at professional degrees (nursing, health, education)}?" We shall focus on select  English language interventional studies published in the last 10 years. We shall search electronic databases (ERIC, Medline/Pubmed/UC library databases), and in addition, hand search other databases, reference lists of he original documents, and search for fugitive literature by contacting domain experts and authors in the field. In the review, We shall critically appraise information from the literature and identify and rank order the publications on the risk of biases, and estimate summary effect sizes for different combinations of technological tools and learning/teaching outcome measures. We shall then discuss the results and implications of the systematic review in the light of the video self modelling as a pedagogical tool to enhance technology based learning and teaching practices.