Description
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Most modern approaches to learning and instruction - and approaches to computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) in particular - foresee collaboration on complex problems to facilitate individual construction of multi-perspective, application-related knowledge. Learners are often overwhelmed by working on complex problems, however, and rather aim towards satisficing minimal requirements of a learning task. Therefore, CSCL needs to be scaffolded for learners to actually interact and work on problems together in a way, which is effectively facilitating individual knowledge construction. CSCL scripts pose an approach to directly facilitate specific processes of collaborative knowledge construction. The question under investigation here is, what kind of processes should be supported by such CSCL scripts, social or epistemic processes or both?
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Weinberger, Armin Dr. Armin Weinberger is associate professor at the Chair of Instructional Technology, Faculty of Behavioral Sciences, University of Twente, The Netherlands, formerly working at the LMU and the KMRC, Germany, investigating CSCL scripts, argumentative knowledge construction, cross-cultural education, and methodological issues in small group learning.