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SMART CLASSROOM: CONVERGING SMART TECHNOLOGIES, NOVEL CONTENT AND ADVANCED PEDAGOGIES FOR FUTURE OF EDUCATION Smart Classroom: Converging Smart Technologies, Novel Content and Advanced Pedagogies for Future of Education Jungwoo Lee, Yongki Park, Myung Suk Cha {jlee@yonsei.ac.kr, pykasd@gmail.com, dextercha@yonsei.ac.kr} Yonsei University, Graduate School of Information Engineering Research Park B187N, 50 Yonsei-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, 120-749, Republic of KOREA Tel. 82-2-2123-8398 Fax. 82-2-2123-8308 1 SMART CLASSROOM: CONVERGING SMART TECHNOLOGIES, NOVEL CONTENT AND ADVANCED PEDAGOGIES FOR FUTURE OF EDUCATION ABSTRACT Information and communications technology (ICT) is affecting every part of our society. Education is not an exception in this trend, but its impact is found to be fragmented at best. The purpose of this study is to conceptualize and develop the idea of smart classroom that integrates emerging information technologies with novel content and newly advancing pedagogies. System requirements are elicited from popular but advanced pedagogical cases and the system architecture is proposed based on the analyses of such requirements. The analyses are focused around pedagogies under development, and future applications of the proposed system are discussed at the end of this paper. Keywords: Smart Learning, Smart Classroom, Smart Technologies, Smart Pedagogies, Future of Education 2 SMART CLASSROOM: CONVERGING SMART TECHNOLOGIES, NOVEL CONTENT AND ADVANCED PEDAGOGIES FOR FUTURE OF EDUCATION 1. Introduction The development of information and communications technology (ICT) is bringing new changes to the every part of our society beyond technological advances themselves. More than half of the mobile subscribers in South Korea are smartphone users who get information on the internet every day and build and maintain social relations using their smartphones. The advancement of ICT is also influencing the education sector (Kim, Lee, & Kim, 2011). The emergence and growth of e-learning are probably the most prominent changes in the field of education. With the progress of ubiquitous technologies and the advancement of instructional practices, e- learning is expanding its range of discussion into smart learning (Noh, Ju, & Jung, 2011). However, despite the growth and evolution of e-learning, ICT has not yet brought remarkable changes in the actual school settings. Although a variety of information and communication tools have been made available in classrooms as a result of the development of ICT, the use of such tools remains discrete and limited to the pre-existing instructional approaches rather than make innovative changes in teaching practices. Smart learning is a new paradigm emerging through the convergence of smart pedagogies, smart content and smart information technologies. Smart pedagogies represent advanced pedagogies, and smart content is being studied from diverse perspectives with the evolution of e-learning. In respect of information technologies, there have been many conceptual variations of smart learning, such as e-learning, m-learning and u-learning. This study aims to define a new classroom environment that is created by the convergence of advanced pedagogies, educational content getting smart, and information technologies and derive the classroom system’s architecture and functionality from the analysis of scenario-based requirements. 2. Literature Review Our literature review for analysis of the smart classroom system’s requirements focused preferentially on the development of pedagogies. In other words, the literature review was conducted with focus on smart pedagogies—which are novel teaching and learning methods developed and promoted according to changes in educational environment. 2.1 Learner-Centered Learning 3 SMART CLASSROOM: CONVERGING SMART TECHNOLOGIES, NOVEL CONTENT AND ADVANCED PEDAGOGIES FOR FUTURE OF EDUCATION Until now, education has mainly relied on instructor-centered approaches in which knowledge is delivered one-sidedly from instructors to learners. The face of education is changing with the development and maturity of educational culture. No explanation of learner-centered learning would be complete without a discussion of constructive learning. In constructive learning, teachers are encouraged to help their students have a better understanding of given information and work out new things—or transform old things—using such information. Therefore, constructive learning is learner-focused and learner-centered learning in which individual learners are viewed as constructors of knowledge (Park, 2001). Constructive learning should involve six different factors: a problem to be solved, a related case, a solution and relevant information, a cognitive tool, a conversation and cooperative system for exchange and a social/contextual support system (Noh et al., 2011) (Jonassen, 1997). When organizing and conducting a class, the teacher should confirm how well the entire class is learning. This is associated with the argument that instructors should consider learners’ points of view when defining learning. Accordingly, attention should be paid to how the learning content is accepted from learners’ perspective and how it should be applied. The dichotomous evaluation of “right” and “wrong” in conventional learning is no longer helpful to learners who pursue a wide range of values. Therefore, evaluations should be uncritically made between instructors and learners and the instructors should be able to identify the quantity and quality of their students’ learning in a continuous manner (Park, 2001). Consequently, the smart classroom system must be designed to enable bidirectional learning involving organic communication between instructors and learners, not one-sided teaching. 2.2 Cooperative Learning Cooperative learning is an instructional approach that has learners work together in small groups to achieve shared learning goals (D. W. Johnson, 1988). This approach invites group members to get outcomes by setting and working towards a common goal and stresses their collaborative evaluation of the outcomes. Learners are all on an equal footing; great emphasis is placed on the responsibility of individuals; and produced results should be beneficial to all members of the group who are encouraged to take collective responsibility for the results. All this makes cooperative learning different from other common instructional practices (David W. Johnson & Johnson, 1990). Cooperative learning is also distinguished from collaborative learning. In cooperative learning, the 4
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