posted on 2023-03-23, 18:16authored byDebbi Weaver
This paper outlines the use of WebCT in a collaborative assessment project between an Australian and two US universities. Informed by global trends, criminal justice practitioners increasingly move through different jurisdictions and cultural contexts. We wanted to work with students and have students work with each other in ways that prepared them to operate in international surroundings in relation to international law and the transnationalisation of criminal justice agencies. The Global Project required students to engage in a series of online activities with the aim of fostering online and international co -operation between students. Moreover, as students were studying globalisation and criminal justice, it was designed to engage students in the processes and experiences of globalisation. The use of online learning technologies in fostering the internationalisation of curriculum and developing alternative group learning strategies has offered a series of challenges which require critical reflection on the ways we globalise learning.
History
Publication Date
2004-07-01
Proceedings
Proceedings of World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia and Telecommunications 2004, Lugano, Switzerland, pp. 3438-3444
Publisher
Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACC).
Pagination
3438-3444
Rights Statement
Open Access. The accepted version of this work has been reprinted here with permission. This paper may be downloaded for personal use only. Permission to reproduce this article must be sought from Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education. This paper was published in the Proceedings of the World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia and Telecommunications 2004, Lugano, Switzerland, pp. 3438-3444. Copyright (2004) AACE.