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Publication Details
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| Author(s): |
Stefano Ceri, Florian Daniel, Maristella Matera, and Alessandro Raffio |
| Title: |
Providing Flexible Process Support to Project-Centered Learning |
| Reference: |
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering, Volume 21, Number 6, June 2009, IEEE Press, Pages 894-909. |
| Abstract: |
While business process definition is becoming more and more popular as
an instrument for describing human activities, there is a growing need
for software tools supporting business process abstractions to help
users organize and monitor their desktop work. Tools are
most effective when they embed some knowledge about the process, e.g.
in terms of the typical activities required by the process, so that
users can execute the activities without having to define them.
Tools must be light-weight and flexible, so as to enable users to create
or change the process as soon as there is a new need.
In this article, we first describe an application-independent
approach to flexible process support by discussing the
abstractions required for modeling, creating, enacting, and
modifying flexible processes. Then, we show our approach at work
in the context of project-centered learning. In this application,
learners are challenged to perform concrete tasks in order to
master specific subjects; in doing so, they have to conduct
significant projects and cope with realistic (or even real-life)
working conditions and scenarios. Often, students are
geographically dispersed or under severe timing constraints,
because these activities intertwine with their normal university
activity. As a result, they need communication technology in order
to interact and workflow technology in order to organize their
work. The developed platform provides a comprehensible,
e-learning-specific set of activities and process templates, which
can be combined through a simple Web interface into
project-centered collaboration processes. We discuss how the
general paradigm of flexible processes was adapted to the learning
concept, implemented, and experienced by students. |
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