Each year a considerable amount of money is spent on the production of several national and international University rankings that may deeply influence the students’ enrollment. However, all such rankings are based almost exclusively on numerical indicators weakly related to the quality of the learning process and do not consider the perceptions of the “end users”: the learners. Recently, as part of the activity promoted by the Observatory on the Smart City Learning, we have produced an alternative approach to benchmark the learning ecosystems based on the satisfaction of the needs described by the Maslow’s Pyramid and on the achievement of the state of “flow” by the actors involved in the learning processes. Here we report on the first validation of such a benchmarking approach that has been tested in six European Campuses involving more than 800 students. The critical analysis of the outcomes allowed us, among other results, to identify the set of the most relevant indicators out of those that were initially proposed and the identification of a “smartness” axis on the plan of the first two principal components derived from a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) applied to the collected data.

Smartness of Learning Ecosystems and its bottom-up emergence in six European Campuses / Giovannella, Carlo; Andone, D.; Dascalu, M.; Popescu, E.; Rehm, M.; Roccasalva, Giuseppe. - In: ID&A INTERACTION DESIGN & ARCHITECTURE(S). - ISSN 1826-9745. - ELETTRONICO. - (2015), pp. 1-13. (Intervento presentato al convegno Workshop on Smart Learning Ecosystems in Smart Regions and Cities at EC-TEL. tenutosi a Toledo nel 11-18 settembre 2015).

Smartness of Learning Ecosystems and its bottom-up emergence in six European Campuses

GIOVANNELLA, CARLO;ROCCASALVA, GIUSEPPE
2015

Abstract

Each year a considerable amount of money is spent on the production of several national and international University rankings that may deeply influence the students’ enrollment. However, all such rankings are based almost exclusively on numerical indicators weakly related to the quality of the learning process and do not consider the perceptions of the “end users”: the learners. Recently, as part of the activity promoted by the Observatory on the Smart City Learning, we have produced an alternative approach to benchmark the learning ecosystems based on the satisfaction of the needs described by the Maslow’s Pyramid and on the achievement of the state of “flow” by the actors involved in the learning processes. Here we report on the first validation of such a benchmarking approach that has been tested in six European Campuses involving more than 800 students. The critical analysis of the outcomes allowed us, among other results, to identify the set of the most relevant indicators out of those that were initially proposed and the identification of a “smartness” axis on the plan of the first two principal components derived from a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) applied to the collected data.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2629010
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