Research Journal/Paper
I chose the journal Computers & Education. It contains papers about the educational use of computers and concerning subjects. The 2011 impact factor of the journal is 2,621.From the same journal, I chose the paper What drives a successful e-Learning? An empirical investigation of the critical factors influencing learner satisfaction. Its goal is to identify critical factors ensuring successful design of E-learning. The authors use 13 hypotheses which cover learner, instructor, course, technology, design and environmental factors. These provide a basis throughout the paper.
I think that the 13 hypotheses they used were too general and were not
very concrete. Due to the hypotheses, the conclusions were also a bit too
general and not concrete enough. The 13 hypotheses were answered with “yes” or
“no” in a final table regarding if it was significant for E-learning. For
example, they concluded that course quality was significant. I think that this is
pretty obvious and maybe not such a vital hypotheses to have in your paper in
the first place. A great use of methods were somewhat wasted due to the lack of
useful hypotheses. Despite the discussion part in the paper I believe that
there weren’t much deep knowledge being presented. The paper serves best as a
comparison between the 13 general hypotheses and not so much a presenter of
innovative critical factors for E-learning, as was told. Improved, and not so
obvious, hypotheses would have made the paper much better, since I feel that
they made the whole paper too general and not very applicable.
Russell's book
1.
Russell explains that what our senses acknowledge as objects actually are
our minds receiving sense-data of them. We are not acquainted with the physical
object, but merely the sense-data of it. These sense-data are different for
every person and depend on how we experience an object. All our different
senses are affected by where, how and under which conditions we are
experiencing an object. I believe Russell introduces this term because it is
important to know that it is in our minds that we create an understanding of an
object, where we (after receiving sense-data) take physical laws and pre-known
knowledge into account.
2.
Propositions are known to us by knowledge by description. That means
that we are not acquainted with the object in the proposition and therefore do
not really know the truth (facts) about it. What we do know (have facts about)
is things regarding the object in the proposition, since we might be acquainted
with these. Propositions with “a priori” knowledge can be true without us
having experience of it. A statement of fact is something experienced and
acquainted with, which has led to a belief. If the belief corresponds to some
fact, that believe is true.
3.
Russell defines “definite descriptions” as words or sentences
describing a specific person or object (“the so-and-so”, as he mentions).
Sentences like “the president of USA” or words like “London” are examples of
definite descriptions, as they represent specific things. Definite descriptions
are things that you have no knowledge of by direct acquaintance. The knowledge
comes from acquaintance with things regarding the object, which could be
acquaintance by sense-data, memory, or texts read about it.
4.
The philosophic and scientific views of knowledge do agree in many
cases. One example where they did not is where philosophers primarily thought
that nothing was infinite, until science proved that time and space could be
looked upon as endless and infinitely dividable. Philosophic knowledge isn’t
exact. Russell mentions that one opinion alone doesn’t make something true
knowledge, but that many matching opinions make knowledge more probable.
I believe that the main question "What drives a successful e-Learning?" may be too broad and uncertain in the first place. Perhaps that´s why both the hypotesies and the conclusion as a result of these became excessively general as well. During our bachelor thesis we were told that one of the most important things is to minimize the main question, obviously because it makes it easier for us to answer our own question. That may be the big issue here. The author can´t really answer his question in a good way because of the uncertainty.
SvaraRadera