Dear colleagues,

We have just published an article in the journal Computers & Education on 
blended synchronous learning, which involves enabling remote students to 
participate in live, face-to-face (campus-based) classes by means of rich-media 
synchronous technologies such as video conferencing, web conferencing, or 
virtual worlds.

We have taken up the journal’s open access option, which has allowed the 
article to be released under a Creative Commons 
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (BY-NC-ND) license. The article, which 
reports on outcomes from a collective case study involving seven 
discipline-based implementations of blended synchronous learning at Australian 
universities, can be downloaded free of charge at the following URL:

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2015.03.006

Please feel free to share this with others who you think might be interested. 
More information about the Blended Synchronous Learning project, including 
instructions on how to become part of our Collaborator Network, can be found at 
http://blendsync.org .

Kind regards,


The BlendSync Team:
Matt Bower (Macquarie University)
Gregor Kennedy (The University of Melbourne)
Barney Dalgarno (Charles Sturt University)
Mark J. W. Lee (Charles Sturt University)
Jacqueline Kenney (Macquarie University)

—

Suggested article citation: Bower, M., Kennedy, G. E., Dalgarno, B., Lee, M. J. 
W., & Kenney, J. (2015). Design and implementation factors in blended 
synchronous learning environments: Outcomes from a cross-case analysis. 
Computers & Education. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2015.03.006

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