1st Edition

Intelligent Instruction Computer Theory And Practice

Edited By Marshall J. Farr, Joseph Psotka Copyright 1992

    This text records the dramatic new prospects for computers in instruction in school, the workplace and high technology research facilities. If offers teachers and trainers a vision of how their professions will be fundamentally altered by these new systems and how their roles will be changed. The challenges and opportunities exposed by these developments in intelligent instruction by computer are many. Topics discussed include: apprenticeship and training in the workplace; automated tutoring in interactive environment; two approaches to simulation composition for training; and transfer, adaption, and use of intelligent tutoring technology.

    Introduction. Part 1 Theoretical approaches: apprenti ceship training in the workplace - computer-coached practice environment as a new form of apprenticeship; automated tutoring in interactive environments - a task- centred approach. Part 2 Tools and environments: two approaches to simulation composition for training. Part 3 Implementations and evaluations: semantically constrained exploration and heuristic guidance; transfer, adaptation and use of intelligent tutoring technology - the case of Grace. Part 4 Implications for future research and development.

    Biography

    Marshall J. Farr, Joseph Psotka