Education in Second Life

Second Life is used as a platform for education by many institutions, such as colleges, universities, libraries and government entities.

Impact and current status

There are over one hundred regions used for educational purposes covering subjects such as chemistry[1] and English.[2][3] Instructors and researchers in Second Life favor it because it is more personal than traditional distance learning.[4] Research published in 2007 suggested that development, teaching and/or learning activities using Second Life were present in over 80 percent of UK universities.[5] As of 2008, at least 300 universities around the world teach courses or conduct research in SL.[6] New educational institutions have also emerged that operate exclusively within Second Life,[7] taking advantage of the platform to deliver content to a worldwide audience at low cost.[8]

Structure

Info Islands uses library programming sponsored by the Illinois' Alliance Library System and OPAL currently offered online to librarians and library users within Second Life. Another virtual continent called SciLands is devoted to science and technology education. While initially centered on the International Spaceflight Museum, it now hosts a number of organizations including NASA, NOAA, NIH, JPL, NPR, National Physical Laboratory, UK, and a host of other government agencies, universities, and museums. In December 2008, the United States Air Force launched MyBase, a Second Life island overseen by the Air Education and Training Command.[9]

Second Life's usefulness as a platform for pre-K–12 education is limited due to the age restrictions on the main grid and the difficulties of collaborating among various educational projects on the teen grid.

Educational disciplines

Accounting

Ernst & Young made a $500,000 donation to the North Carolina State University Accounting Department to implement Second Life into the curriculum in 2009.[10] This funding was utilized by Frank A Buckless along with Mr. Scott Showalter and Dr. Kathy Krawczyk to create a virtual warehouse for their students to audit.[11][12] The data collected from this study showed that students improved "inventory observation knowledge, interviewing, audit documentation, critical thinking, and group work skills".[13][14] This project follows incorporation of cost and financial accounting activities in virtual environments.[15]

Language

Language learning is the most widespread type of education in virtual worlds,[16]

Nursing

Second life has been utilized in nursing education to provide meaningful care experience without risk to patients.[17]

Dr. Constance M. Johnson received a R21 award to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of using a virtual environment to provide self-management interventions to people with type 2 diabetes.[18]

Dr. Estelle Codier (University of Hawaii) received a National League for Nursing grant award to study learning outcomes for student nurses in Second Life. Her book, "Teaching Healthcare in Virtual Space: Best Practices for Educators in Multi-User Virtual Environments" provides an outline of the pedagogical basis for teaching in MUVE, as well as chapters on development of MUVE teaching skills and others on how to develop learning activities in Second Life. July, 2016.

Controversy

Ban of educational institution

Woodbury University's virtual campus

Second Life has twice, in 2007 and 2010, banned a California educational institution, Woodbury University, from having a representation within Second Life. On 20 April 2010 four simulators belonging to the university were deleted and the accounts of several students and professors terminated, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. Dr. Edward Clift, the dean of Woodbury University's School of Media, Culture and Design, stated that their campus "was a living, breathing campus in Second Life", that included educational spaces designed mostly by students, including a mock representation of the former Soviet Union and a replica of the Berlin Wall. As Dr. Clift told The Chronicle of Higher Education, the virtual campus did not "conform to what Linden Lab wanted a campus to be".[19][20][21] Linden Lab said their decision to ban Woodbury University in April 2010 was "based on historical and recent events that constitute a breach of the Second Life community standards and terms of service."[20]

The university has since moved to a separate, dedicated OpenSimulator grid.[22]

Second Life Educators

Annabeth Robinson

Main Article: Annabeth Robinson

Annabeth Robinson is a Second Life performer and educator who lectures at Leeds College of Art.[23] She develops tools and techniques for improving virtual environment education including the widely used MetaLab Whiteboard. '[24]

Robin Winter

Robin Winter aka Shukran Fahid / Shukran Serendipity has worked with several organisations including Immersive Education and Imperial College to produce a number of training programmes for schools, universities, the NHS and the Ministry of Defense using both Second Life and Open Sim. Currently the CEO of Warm Winter Arts, he is bringing virtualisation into mobile applications and biological sciences.[25]

Estelle Codier

Dr. Estelle Codier is an Associate Professor at the University of Hawaii who has supervised over 500 health care learning activities in Second Life. Her book, "Teaching Healthcare in Second Life: Best Practices for Educators in Multi User Virtual Environments" outlines a pedagogical basis for teaching in Second Life and provides guidelines for developing teaching skills and learning activities in MUVE. July, 2016.[26]

gollark: ?remind 10y hi future.
gollark: It might be irrelevant but still run as some sort of compatibility mode for a more modern system.
gollark: It's *possible* that Discord and R. Danny stay running for a hundred years.
gollark: <@337621533369303042>
gollark: ++help delete

References

  1. "Chemistry in Second Life". Slusage.com. Archived from the original on 2010-03-23. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  2. "A Real School in Second Life". Languagelab.com. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  3. "English Literature in Second Life". Literaturealive.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  4. Lagorio, Christine (2007-01-07). "The Ultimate Distance Learning". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-02-14.
  5. Kirriemuir, John (2007-05-05). "Snapshots of Second Life use in UK HE and FE". Eduserv Foundation. Archived from the original on 2008-07-24. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  6. Michels, Patrick (2008-02-16). "Universities Use Second Life to Teach Complex Concepts". Government Technology. Retrieved 2008-11-15.
  7. Erard, Michael (2007-04-10). "A Boon to Second Life Language Schools". Education. Retrieved 2008-11-19.
  8. Cowan, Matt (2008-10-10). "The 'second wave' of Second Life". News. Retrieved 2008-11-19.
  9. "AETC opens virtual doors to MyBase". Af.mil. Retrieved 2009-03-08.
  10. Staff (Feb 2, 2009). "Ernst & Young grants money to NCSU for Second Life". Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  11. Khanna, Samiha (2016-02-09). "Research Spotlight: Virtual reality makes auditing come to life: Using Second Life in the classroom gives students hands-on experience". American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  12. Buckless, Frank; Krawczyk, Kathy; Showalter, Scott. (Mar 2012). "Accounting Education in the Second Life World". The CPA Journal: 65–71. Retrieved 2016-04-11.
  13. Buckless, Frank A.; Krawczyk, Kathy; Showalter, D. Scott (2014). "Using Virtual Worlds to Simulate Real-World Audit Procedures". Issues in Accounting Education. 29 (3): 389–417. doi:10.2308/iace-50785. ISSN 0739-3172.
  14. Wilson, Richard M.S. (29 April 2014). The Routledge Companion to Accounting Education. Routledge. pp. 273–. ISBN 978-1-134-51151-8.
  15. Rennie, Frank; Morrison, Tara (4 January 2013). E-Learning and Social Networking Handbook: Resources for Higher Education. Routledge. p. 118. ISBN 978-1-136-32018-7.
  16. "8D Taps Language Learners, Bots, Microtransactions". Virtual World News. 2009-05-29. Archived from the original on 2009-06-01. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  17. Tiffany, Jone; Hoglund, Barbara A. (2014). "Teaching/Learning in Second Life: Perspectives of Future Nurse-Educators". Clinical Simulation in Nursing. 10 (1): e19–e24. doi:10.1016/j.ecns.2013.06.006. ISSN 1876-1399.
  18. Vorderstrasse A, Shaw RJ, Blascovich J, Johnson CM (2014). "A theoretical framework for a virtual diabetes self-management community intervention". West J Nurs Res. 36 (9): 1222–37. doi:10.1177/0193945913518993. PMC 4296559. PMID 24451083.
  19. Foster, Andrea L. (July 13, 2007). "The Death of a Virtual Campus". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  20. Young, Jeff (April 21, 2010). "Woodbury U. Banned From Second Life, Again". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  21. Greer, Jeff (April 22, 2010). "California College Loses Second Life for a Second Time". U.S. News & World Report.
  22. "Other Grids". Blogspot. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  23. Hiles, J. "Blended Realities: A Virtual Tour of Education in Second Life" (PDF). Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  24. Kemp, J (2007). Second Life Education Workshop 2007. Second Life Community Convention. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.129.6374.
  25. "Virtual Patient And Medical Device Simulation In Second Life" (PDF). Imperial College. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  26. "Teaching Healthcare in Virtual Space". School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene. University of Hawaii. Retrieved 11 January 2020.

Codier, Estelle( 2016) Teaching Healthcare in Virtual Space: Best Practices for Educators in Multi-User Virtual Environments. University of Hawaii Press: Honolulu.ISBN 978-0-8248-5800-1

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