| Embodied learning on the network: Experiences from the fieldBenjamin A. Kehrwald, School of Education, University of South Australia,
       For many, if not most, professions, practice is embodied. Embodied learning   associated with embodied professional practice poses a number of challenges for   networked educators working in professional degree programs. The consideration   of embodied learning forces a shift from a focus on cognitive, 'in the head'   learning, to a more holistic view which includes whole body experiences,   embodied practice and embodied cognition. This shift calls into question the   ways learning is defined and the means by which learning is structured,   facilitated, supported and assessed within educational programs. These questions   can be difficult to address in networked learning situations where the physical   has been supplemented or replaced with the virtual, where participant   experiences are mediated by technology and in which good practices in learning   design and facilitation are less well established. The purpose of this paper   is to provide a basis for understanding embodied learning and the ways in which   it may be supported and facilitated in networked learning situations. This paper   provides the conceptual foundations of a continuing project on the design and   development of networked courses which support embodied learning. The paper is   structured in three parts. The first part provides background through a   description of embodied learning and its links to professional practice. The   case in point is an initial (pre-service) teacher education program at the   University of South Australia. The second part identifies commonalities between   networked learning and embodied learning with reference Goodyear's (2002)   framework for understanding ‘good learning' as active, cumulative, individual,   self-regulated and goal-oriented. The third part draws upon recent experiences   designing and developing networked courses within a teacher education program at   The University of South Australia. The discussion identifies challenges   associated with practical work to design, develop and implement embodied   learning including a) explicitly identifying intended learning outcomes   associated with embodied learning; b) the relationship between ‘real' (embodied,   physical) and ‘virtual' aspects of the learning experience; c) identifying   appropriate learning environments for embodied learning; d) providing access to   necessary physical artefacts to support embodied learning and e) creating   records of performance as part of the learning (and assessment process). The   discussion includes in-context responses to those challenges and a list of   tentative conclusions which guide ongoing work related to these challenges.
 
 KeywordsEmbodied learning, learning design, educational  design
 
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