Just as teachers have different styles for teaching, so too students have different styles for learning. Rather than address these different general learning styles, we focused on one of the primary student activities -- recording information. We identified several different recording, or note-taking, styles that a student could employ, each distinguished by the amount of recording that goes on.
Different teaching styles provide more or less support for the various recording styles. For example, the highlighting student probably receives good support in a presentation style lecture in which they can annotate their own copy of the slides during the lecture.
Human-Computer Interaction |
Artificial Intelligence |
Future Computing Environments |
|
teaching style | presentation | public notes | discussion |
enrollment | 25 grad students | 60 undergrad CS majors | 15 grad students |
live recording (teacher) | ClassPad on LiveBoard captured navigation and annotation (Fig. 1) | LCD projector to display Web notes; no capture | LCD projector to display outline and Web pages; no caputre |
live recording (students) | ClassPad on pen-based PC captured navigation and annotation (Fig. 1) | paper notes; no capture | outline annotator on MessagePad to capture outline entry notes (right side of Fig. 1) |
live recording (classroom) | single digital audio stream recording | single analog audio-video stream recording | single analog audio-video stream recording |
post-production | log file, annotated slides and keyword text used by PERL script to create audio-enhanced, searchable Web notes (Fig. 2) | audio and video links added to HTML notes manually (Fig. 3); video digitized to QuickTime packets | PERL script transforms Newton data into audio-enhanced outline with notes (Fig. 3) |