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</head>

<body lang=3DEN-US style=3D'tab-interval:.5in'>

<div class=3DSection1>

<p class=3DSection><a name=3D"_Toc99366415">Part </a><st1:place w:st=3D"on"=
><span
 style=3D'mso-bookmark:_Toc99366415'>I.</span></st1:place><span style=3D'ms=
o-bookmark:
_Toc99366415'> Design of Computer Support for Collaboration</span></p>

</div>

<b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'font-size:18.0pt;
font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";
mso-bidi-font-family:Arial;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-=
US;
mso-bidi-language:AR-SA'><br clear=3Dall style=3D'page-break-before:always;
mso-break-type:section-break'>
</span></b>

<div class=3DSection2>

<div style=3D'mso-element:para-border-div;border:none;border-bottom:solid w=
indowtext 1.5pt;
padding:0in 0in 1.0pt 0in'>

<p class=3Dchapternumber><span style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'>&nbsp;</span></p>

</div>

<p class=3DChapter><a name=3D"_Toc99366416">Introduction to Part I: Studies=
 of
Technology Design</a> </p>

<p class=3DNormalnoindent>The 21 chapters of this book were written over a =
number
of years, while I was finding my way toward a conception of group cognition
that could be useful for CSCL and CSCW. Only near the end of that period, in
editing the essays into a unified book, did the coherence of the undertaking
become clear to me. In presenting these writings together, I think it is
important to provide some guidance to the readers. Therefore, I will provide
brief introductions to the parts and the chapters, designed to re-situate t=
he
essays in the book&#8217;s mission. </p>

<h1>Theoretical Background to Part I</h1>

<p class=3DNormalnoindent>The fact that the theory presented in this book c=
omes
at the end, emanating out of the design studies and the empirical analysis =
of
collaboration, does not mean that the work described in the design studies =
of
the first section had no theoretical framing. On the contrary, in the early
1990&#8217;s when I turned my full-time attention to issues of CSCL, my
academic training in computer science, artificial intelligence (AI) and
cognitive science, which immediately preceded these studies, was particular=
ly
influenced by two theoretical orientations: situated cognition and
domain-oriented design environments.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Situated cogn=
ition</b>.
As a graduate student, I met with a small reading group of fellow students =
for
several years, discussing the then recent works of situated cognition <!--[=
if supportFields]><span
style=3D'mso-element:field-begin'></span><span
style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'>&nbsp;</span>ADDIN EN.CITE
&lt;EndNote&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Brown&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;19=
91&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;99&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE=
&gt;0&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;99&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&=
lt;AUTHOR&gt;John
S. Brown&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Paul
Duguid&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1991&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE=
&gt;Organizational
learning and communities-of-practice: Toward a unified view of working,
learning, and innovation&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;Organization
Science&lt;/SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;&lt;VOLUME&gt;2&lt;/VOLUME&gt;&lt;NUMBER&gt;=
1&lt;/NUMBER&gt;&lt;PAGES&gt;40-57&lt;/PAGES&gt;&lt;DATE&gt;February&lt;/DA=
TE&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Dreyfus&lt;/Author=
&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1991&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;456&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt=
;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;456&lt;/REFNUM=
&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Dreyfus,
Hubert&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1991&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE=
&gt;Being-in-the-World:
A Commentary on Heidegger&amp;apos;s Being and Time, Division
I&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Cambridge, MA&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;=
&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;MIT
Press&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;E=
hn&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1988&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;230&lt;/RecNum&=
gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;2=
30&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Pelle
Ehn&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1988&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE&gt=
;Work-Oriented
Design of Computer Artifacts&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Stockholm,
Sweden&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Arbetslivscentrum&lt;/PUBLIS=
HER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Lave&lt;/Author&g=
t;&lt;Year&gt;1991&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;31&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&l=
t;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;31&lt;/REFNUM&gt;=
&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Lave,
Jean&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Wenger,
Etienne&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1991&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITL=
E&gt;Situated
Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLIS=
HED&gt;Cambridge,
UK&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Cambridge University Press&lt;/P=
UBLISHER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Sch&amp;#xF6=
;n&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1983&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;83&lt;/RecNum&g=
t;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;83=
&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Donald
A.
Sch&amp;#xF6;n&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1983&lt;/YEAR&gt;&=
lt;TITLE&gt;The
Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in
Action&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;New York,
NY&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Basic
Books&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;S=
uchman&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1987&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;231&lt;/Rec=
Num&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&=
gt;231&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Lucy
Suchman&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1987&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITL=
E&gt;Plans
and Situated Actions: The Problem of Human-Machine
Communication&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Cambridge, UK&lt;/PLACE_P=
UBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Cambridge
University Press&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;=
Author&gt;Winograd&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1986&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt=
;76&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;=
&lt;REFNUM&gt;76&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Terry
Winograd&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Fernando
Flores&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1986&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE=
&gt;Understanding
Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation of
Design&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Reading,
MA&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Addison-Wesley&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;=
&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Donald&lt;/Author&gt;&lt=
;Year&gt;1991&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;80&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REF=
ERENCE_TYPE&gt;1&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;80&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;A=
UTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Merlin
Donald&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1991&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE=
&gt;Origins
of the Modern Mind: Three Stages in the Evolution of Culture and
Cognition&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Cambridge,
MA&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Harvard University
Press&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;/EndNote&gt;<span
style=3D'mso-element:field-separator'></span><![endif]-->(Brown &amp; Dugui=
d,
1991; Donald, 1991; Dreyfus, 1991; Ehn, 1988; Lave &amp; Wenger, 1991;
Sch&ouml;n, 1983; Suchman, 1987; Winograd &amp; Flores, 1986)<!--[if suppor=
tFields]><span
style=3D'mso-element:field-end'></span><![endif]-->, which challenged the
assumptions of traditional AI. These writings proposed the centrality of ta=
cit
knowledge, implicitly arguing that AI&#8217;s reliance on capturing explicit
knowledge was inadequate for modeling or replacing human understanding. They
showed that people act based on their being situated in specific settings w=
ith
particular activities, artifacts, histories and colleagues. Shared knowledg=
e is
not a stockpile of fixed facts that can be represented in a database and
queried on all occasions, but an on-going accomplishment of concrete groups=
 of
people engaged in continuing communication and negotiation. Furthermore,
knowing is fundamentally perspectival and interpretive. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Domain-orient=
ed
design environments</b>. I was at that time associated with the research la=
b of
the Center for Life-Long Learning &amp; Design (L<sup>3</sup>D) directed by
Gerhard Fischer, which developed the DODE (domain-oriented design environme=
nt)
approach to software systems for designers <!--[if supportFields]><span
style=3D'mso-element:field-begin'></span><span
style=3D'mso-spacerun:yes'>&nbsp;</span>ADDIN EN.CITE
&lt;EndNote&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Fischer&lt;/Author&gt;&lt;Year&gt;=
1998&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;224&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;&lt;REFERENCE_T=
YPE&gt;7&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;224&lt;/REFNUM&gt;&lt;AUTHORS&=
gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;G.
Fischer&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;K. Nakakoji&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt=
;J.
Ostwald&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;G. Stahl&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;T.
Sumner&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1998&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE=
&gt;Embedding
critics in design environments.&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_AUTHORS&gt;&lt;S=
ECONDARY_AUTHOR&gt;Maybury,
M. T&lt;/SECONDARY_AUTHOR&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_AUTHOR&gt;Wahlster,
W.&lt;/SECONDARY_AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/SECONDARY_AUTHORS&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_TITLE&gt=
;Readings
in Intelligent User Interfaces&lt;/SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&g=
t;New
York&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Morgan
Kaufman&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;PAGES&gt;537-561&lt;/PAGES&gt;&lt;URL&gt;http:=
//www.cis.drexel.edu/faculty/gerry/publications/journals/ker/index.html&lt;=
/URL&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Fischer&lt;/Auth=
or&gt;&lt;Year&gt;1993&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;9&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt=
;&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;3&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;9&lt;/REFNUM&g=
t;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Fischer,
Gerhard&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Nakakoji,
Kumiyo&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Ostwald,
Jonathan&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Stahl,
Gerry&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;Sumner, Tamara&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS=
&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1993&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITLE&gt;Embedding
computer-based critics in the contexts of
design&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;Conference on Human Factors in
Computing Systems (INTERChi
&amp;apos;93)&lt;/SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Amsterdam,
NL&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Addison Wesley&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;=
&lt;PAGES&gt;157-164&lt;/PAGES&gt;&lt;KEYWORDS&gt;&lt;KEYWORD&gt;Generic
critics, specific critics, interpretive critics, design environments,
specification, construction, domain
orientation,&lt;/KEYWORD&gt;&lt;KEYWORD&gt;perspectives, critiquing
systems.&lt;/KEYWORD&gt;&lt;/KEYWORDS&gt;&lt;URL&gt;http://www.cis.drexel.e=
du/faculty/gerry/publications/conferences/1990-1997/chi93/CHI93.html&lt;/UR=
L&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt;Cite&gt;&lt;Author&gt;Fischer&lt;/Author&=
gt;&lt;Year&gt;1994&lt;/Year&gt;&lt;RecNum&gt;254&lt;/RecNum&gt;&lt;MDL&gt;=
&lt;REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;0&lt;/REFERENCE_TYPE&gt;&lt;REFNUM&gt;254&lt;/REFNUM&=
gt;&lt;AUTHORS&gt;&lt;AUTHOR&gt;G.
Fischer&lt;/AUTHOR&gt;&lt;/AUTHORS&gt;&lt;YEAR&gt;1994&lt;/YEAR&gt;&lt;TITL=
E&gt;Domain-oriented
design environments&lt;/TITLE&gt;&lt;SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;Automated Software
Engineering&lt;/SECONDARY_TITLE&gt;&lt;PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;Boston,
MA&lt;/PLACE_PUBLISHED&gt;&lt;PUBLISHER&gt;Kluwer Academic
Publishers&lt;/PUBLISHER&gt;&lt;VOLUME&gt;1&lt;/VOLUME&gt;&lt;NUMBER&gt;2&l=
t;/NUMBER&gt;&lt;PAGES&gt;177-203&lt;/PAGES&gt;&lt;/MDL&gt;&lt;/Cite&gt;&lt=
;/EndNote&gt;<span
style=3D'mso-element:field-separator'></span><![endif]-->(Fischer<i
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-style:normal'> et al.</i>, 1993; Fischer, 1994; Fisc=
her<i
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-style:normal'> et al.</i>, 1998)<!--[if supportField=
s]><span
style=3D'mso-element:field-end'></span><![endif]-->. The idea was that one =
could
build a software system to support designers in a given domain&#8212;say,
kitchen design&#8212;by integrating such components as a drawing sketchpad,=
 a
palette of icons representing items from the domain (stovetops, tables, wal=
ls),
a set of critiquing rules (sink under a window, dishwasher to the right), a
hypertext of design rationale, a catalog of previous designs or templates, a
searching mechanism, and a facility for adding new palette items, among oth=
ers.
My dissertation system, <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-f=
amily:
"Times New Roman"'>Hermes</span></span>, was a system that allowed one to p=
ut
together a DODE for a given domain, and structure different professional
perspectives on the knowledge in the system. I adapted <span class=3DSource=
><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Hermes</span></span> to cr=
eate a
DODE for lunar habitat designers. Software designs contained in the studies=
 of
part I more or less start from this approach: <span class=3DSource><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>TCA</span></span> was a DO=
DE for
teachers designing curriculum and <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-b=
idi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>CIE</span></span> was a DODE for computer network design=
ers.
</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>This theoretical background is presented primarily in
chapter 4. Before presenting that, however, I wanted to give a feel for the
problematic nature of CSCL and CSCW by providing examples of designing soft=
ware
to support constructivist education (chapter 1), computational support for
learning (chapter 2) or algorithms for selecting group members (chapter 3).=
</p>

<h1>The Studies in Part I</h1>

<p class=3DNormalnoindent>The eight case studies included in part I provide
little windows upon illustrative experiences of designing software for
collaborative knowledge building. They are not controlled experiments with
rigorous conclusions. These studies hang together rather like the years of a
modern-day life, darting off in unexpected directions, but without ever los=
ing
the connectedness of one&#8217;s identity, one&#8217;s evolving, yet enduri=
ng
personal perspective on the world. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>Each study contains a parable: a brief, idiosyncratic =
and
inscrutable tale whose moral is open to&#8212;indeed begs
for&#8212;interpretation and debate. They describe fragmentary experiments =
that
pose questions and that, in their specificity and materiality, allow the
feedback of reality to be experienced and pondered. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>Some of the studies include technical details that may=
 not
be interesting or particularly meaningful to all readers. Indeed, it is har=
d to
imagine many readers with proper backgrounds for easily following in detail=
 all
the chapters of this book. This is an unavoidable problem for interdiscipli=
nary
topics. The original papers for part I were written for specialists in comp=
uter
science, and their details remain integral to the argumentation of the spec=
ific
study, but not necessarily essential to the larger implications of the book=
.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>The book is structured so that readers can feel free t=
o skip
around. There is an intended flow to the argument of the book&#8212;summari=
zed
in these introductions to the three parts&#8212;but the chapters are each
self-contained essays that can largely stand on their own or be visited in
accordance with each reader&#8217;s particular needs.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>Part I explores, in particular ways, some of the major=
 forms
of computer support that seem desirable for collaborative knowledge buildin=
g,
shared meaning making and group cognition. The first three chapters address=
 the
needs of individual teachers, students and group members, respectively, as =
they
interact with shared resources and activities. The individual perspective is
then systematically matched with group perspectives in the next three chapt=
ers.
The final chapters of part I develop a mechanism for moving knowledge among
perspectives. Along the way, issues of individual, small-group and community
levels are increasingly distinguished and supported. Support for group
formation, perspectives and negotiation is prototyped and tested.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 1, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>TCA</span></b></span>. The book starts with a gentle
introduction to a typical application of designing computer support for
collaboration. The application is the <span class=3DSource><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Teachers Curriculum Assist=
ant</span></span>,
a system for helping teachers to share curriculum that responds to educatio=
nal
research&#8217;s recommendation of constructivist learning. It is a CSCW sy=
stem
in that it supports communities of professional teachers cooperating in the=
ir
work. At the same time, it is a CSCL system that can help to generate, refi=
ne
and propagate curriculum for collaborative learning by students, either onl=
ine
or otherwise. The study is an attempt to design an integrated knowledge-bas=
ed
system that supports five key functions associated with the development of
innovative curriculum by communities of teachers. Interfaces for the five
functions are illustrated.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 2, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>Essence</span></b></span>. The next study turns to compu=
ter
support for students, either in groups or singly. The application, <span
class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>State=
 the
Essence</span></span>, is a program that gives students feedback on summari=
es
they compose from brief essays. Significantly increasing students&#8217; or
groups&#8217; time-on-task and encouraging them to create multiple drafts of
their essays before submitting them to a teacher, the software uses a
statistical analysis of natural language semantics to evaluate and compare
texts. Rather than focusing on student outcomes, the study describes some of
the complexity of adapting an algorithmic technique to a classroom educatio=
nal
tool.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 3, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>CREW</span></b></span>. The question in this study is: h=
ow
can software predict the behavior of a group of people working together und=
er
special conditions? Developed for the American space agency to help them se=
lect
groups of astronauts for the international space station, the <span
class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Crew<=
/span></span>
software modeled a set of psychological factors for subjects participating =
in a
prolonged space mission. <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-=
family:
"Times New Roman"'>Crew</span></span> was designed to take advantage of
psychological data being collected on outer-space, under-sea and Antarctic
winter-over missions confining small groups of people in restricted spaces =
for
prolonged periods. The software combined a number of statistical and AI tec=
hniques.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 4, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>Hermes</span></b></span>. This study was actually written
earlier than the preceding ones, but it is probably best read following the=
m.
It describes at an abstract level the theoretical framework behind the desi=
gn
of the systems discussed in the other studies&#8212;it is perhaps also crit=
ical
of some assumptions underlying their mechanisms. It develops a concept of
situated interpretation that arises from design theories and writings on
situated cognition. These sources raised fundamental questions about
traditional AI, based as it was on assumptions of explicit, objective,
universal and rational knowledge. <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-b=
idi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>Hermes</span></span> tried to capture and represent taci=
t,
interpretive, situated knowledge. It was a hypermedia framework for creating
domain-oriented design environments. It provided design and software elemen=
ts
for interpretive perspectives, end-user programming languages and adaptive
displays, all built upon a shared knowledge base.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 5, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>CIE</span></b></span>. A critical transition occurs in t=
his
study, away from software that is designed to amplify human intelligence wi=
th
AI techniques. It turns instead toward the goal of software designed to sup=
port
group interaction by providing structured media of communication, sharing a=
nd
collaboration. While <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-fami=
ly:"Times New Roman"'>TCA</span></span>
attempted to use an early version of the Internet to allow communities to s=
hare
educational artifacts, <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-fa=
mily:
"Times New Roman"'>CIE</span></span> aimed to turn the Web into a shared
workspace for a community of practice. The specific community supported by =
the <span
class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>CIE</=
span></span>
prototype was the group of people who design and maintain local area comput=
er
networks (LANs), for instance at university departments.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 6, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>WebGuide</span></b></span>. <span class=3DSource><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>WebGuide</span></span> was=
 a
several-year effort to design support for interpretive perspectives, focusi=
ng
on the key idea proposed by <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-fo=
nt-family:
"Times New Roman"'>Hermes, computational perspectives,</span></span> and tr=
ying
to adapt the perspectivity concept to asynchronous threaded discussions. The
design study was situated within the task of providing a shared guide to the
Web for small workgroups and whole classrooms of students, including the
classroom where <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"T=
imes New Roman"'>Essence</span></span>
was developed. Insights gained from adoption hurdles with this system motiv=
ated
a push to better understand collaboration and computer-mediated communicati=
on,
resulting in a <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Ti=
mes New Roman"'>WebGuide</span></span>-supported
seminar on mediation, which is discussed in this study. This seminar began =
the
theoretical reflections that percolate through part II and then dominate in
part III. The <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Tim=
es New Roman"'>WebGuide</span></span>
system was a good example of trying to harness computational power to suppo=
rt
the dynamic selection and presentation of information in accordance with
different user perspectives. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 7, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>Synergeia</span></b></span>. Several limitations of <span
class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>WebGu=
ide</span></span>
led to the <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times =
New Roman"'>Synergeia</span></span>
design undertaking. The <span class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-f=
amily:
"Times New Roman"'>WebGuide</span></span> perspectives mechanism was too
complicated for users, and additional collaboration supports were needed, in
particular support for group negotiation. An established CSCW system was
re-designed for classroom usage, including a simplified system of class, gr=
oup
and individual perspectives, and a mechanism for groups to negotiate agreem=
ent
on shared knowledge-building artifacts. The text of this study began as a
design scenario that guided development of <span class=3DSource><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Synergeia</span></span> an=
d then
morphed into its training manual for teachers.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>Study 8, </b>=
<span
class=3DSource><b style=3D'mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'><span style=3D'mso-=
bidi-font-family:
"Times New Roman"'>BSCL</span></b></span>. This study takes a closer look at
the design rationale for the negotiation mechanism of the previous study. T=
he <span
class=3DSource><span style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>BSCL<=
/span></span>
system illustrates designs for several important functions of collaborative
learning: formation of groups (by the teacher); perspectives for the class,
small work groups and individuals; and negotiation of shared knowledge arti=
facts.
These functions are integrated into the mature <span class=3DSource><span
style=3D'mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"'>BSCW</span></span> software
system, with support for synchronous chat and shared whiteboard, asynchrono=
us
threaded discussion with note types, social awareness features, and shared
workspaces (folder hierarchies for documents). The central point of this st=
udy
is that negotiation is not just a matter of individuals voting based on the=
ir
preconceived ideas; it is a group process of constructing knowledge artifac=
ts
and then establishing a consensus that the group has reached a shared
understanding of this knowledge, and that it is ready to display it for oth=
ers.</p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal>The chapters of part I demonstrate a progression that =
was
not uncommon in CSCL and CSCW around the turn of the century. A twentieth
century fascination with technological solutions reached its denouement in =
AI
systems that required more effort than expected and provided less help than
promised. In the twenty-first century, researchers acknowledged that systems
needed to be user-centric and should concentrate on taking the best advanta=
ge
of human and group intelligence. In this new context, the important thing f=
or
groupware was to optimize the formation of effective groups, help them to
articulate and synthesize different knowledge-building perspectives, and
support the negotiation of shared group knowledge. This shift should become
apparent in the progression of software studies in part I. </p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><o:p>&nbsp;</o:p></p>

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