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Glossary
Our Glossary
This is to be a Glossary of all terms used in Re.ViCa.
- benchmarking
- blended learning
- Bologna Process
- Ceased E-Learning Initiative
- change management
- Cloud computing
- College
- Commercial enterprise - see Private provider
- Consortium
- country
- country code
- critical success factor
- digital university
- distance learning
- e-learning
- Evolution of existing institution
- Failed E-Learning Initiative
- flatten
- force field analysis
- frugal innovation
- Further Education
- Giant E-Learning Initiative
- Higher Education
- interactive university
- International initiative
- International Standard Classification of Education
- key success factor
- liminality
- Major E-Learning Initiative
- Megaprovider
- multicampus university
- Multinational initiative
- National initiative
- Newly created institution
- Notable E-Learning Initiative
- open university
- overseas department
- pathfinder
- peak body
- penumbra
- Private provider
- Private nonprofit provider
- quality assurance
- realm
- redirect
- Technical and Further Education
- University
- University college
- virtual campus and synonyms in other languages
- Virtual learning environment
- virtual mobility
- virtual university
Other glossaries
The main "official" UK glossaries with coverage relevant to this report are:
- The LTSN “Glossary of Terms in Learning and Teaching in Higher Educa-tion” at http://www.ltsn.ac.uk/genericcentre/index.asp?id=17632.
- The LTSN-01 glossary at http://www.ltsn-01.ac.uk/resources/defs/search.
- The JISC glossary at http://www.jisc.ac.uk/index.cfm?name=about_glossary – however, this is oriented mainly to institutional terms.
- The CETIS “encyclopaedia” at http://www.cetis.ac.uk/encyclopedia.
In addition, several UK universities and related agencies have set up their own glossa-ries, presumably reflecting the lack of a clear model for the sector. Most of these are rather short; some of the best of these are at:
- Birkbeck College – http://www.bbk.ac.uk/ccs/elearn/glossary.htm.
- The LTSN Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism resource guide with its glos-sary at http://www.hlst.ltsn.ac.uk/projects/specialists/erskine_glossary.html.
Outside the UK academic and governmental sector, there are a number of glossaries of some use, though none are comprehensive and most have very brief entries. Look in particular at:
- The EduTech wiki run by the University of Geneva has a large number of definitions of useful terms and concepts in e-learning.
- The “e-learning site” glossary, a good mix of technical and pedagogic, at http://www.e-learningsite.com/elearning/glossary/glossary.htm, with a Euro-pean flavour.
- The “official” European glossary, useful for the pedago-political jargon, at http://www.elearningeuropa.info/glossary.php?lng=1.
- The glossary from the US-based American Society for Training and Develop-ment (ASTD) Learning Circuits Web site at http://www.learningcircuits.org/
glossary.
- The “Commonwealth of Learning” glossary, with a Commonwealth flavour, at http://www.col.org/resources/startupguides/glossary.htm – useful for the more traditional open- and distance-learning terms.
- The so-called “World Wide Learning” glossary of e-learning and technical terms at http://www.worldwidelearn.com/elearning/elearning-glossary.htm.
- The “Encyclopaedia of Educational Technology”, a structured collection of in-formative longer articles, at http://coe.sdsu.edu/eet/.
- The "Glossary of Terms Relating to Educational Development and Educational Technology" (PDF), prepared by IAC member Terence Karran for the World Bank Institute's Global Development Learning Network (GDLN) for Latin America and the Caribbean. It needs updating, but we want to include it as a resource until further updating. File:Glossary Karran 2006.pdf
- The Belgian site of the Higher Education Register has a Glossary which is available in English and Dutch and weaves related hyperlinks in its descriptions.
- Finally (for our purposes), the amusing and somewhat irreverent “e-Learning Guru” glossary at http://www.e-learningguru.com/gloss.htm.
Those unsatisfied with these lists can find many more on the Internet. A meta-glossary (list of glossaries) is at http://www.uwex.edu/disted/glossary.html – and there is a marvellous multilingual glossary of “open and distance learning” terms at http://stoner.phys.uaic.ro/idesc/glossary/.
SAGE has a comprehensive list of glossaries and encyclopedias under development, several of which are of relevance to our glossary work. See in particular 21st Century Education: A Reference Handbook by Thomas L. Good and the SAGE Glossary of the Social and Behavioral Sciences edited by Larry E. Sullivan (use the link given earlier in the paragraph).
See also Abbreviations
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