Virtual Laboratories in Tertiary Education: Case Study Analysis by Learning Theories
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. The Use of Virtual Labs in the Tertiary Sector
2.2. Learning Theories
- Using object and props (objective sense), and
- Interacting with humans (subjective sense).
3. Case Study
3.1. Teaching Using a Commercial VLab
- The forensics tools required students to have administrator level access to the host computers, which was not possible to allow in the campus based general purpose labs,
- On-line students faced the issue of licensing fees for the tools for full functionality,
- On-line students faced difficulty in downloading huge amounts of data required for the investigations, especially over slow internet connections,
- Most of the tools are not platform independent, running only on Windows Operating System (OS) computers, while some others only ran on Linux OS.
MindTap: Cengage Learning’s Virtual Lab
- Live virtual machine (VM) labs activities: this is an interactive learning environment where students can practice their problem-solving skills on live IT systems in real time. To create virtual labs, hardware and virtualization techniques are necessary, which for the live VM labs have been implemented using Cisco hardware and virtualized operating systems of Windows, Linux, and UNIX. The virtual operating systems are hosted on VMware and Hyper-V, creating virtual machines, that are accessible via a web browser [31].
- Study module to learn the theoretical concepts: this provides students an opportunity to review the main concepts on the weekly topic.
- Apply module to practice the learned concepts: this provides a set of quizzes that students take to test their learning on the weekly topic. Students receive instant scores for their completed quiz, and feedback on any incorrect answers, whereas the instructors can see the their class performance on the quizzes.
- A news module: this provides access to latest digital forensics magazine articles, news items, blog posts and RSS feeds.
3.2. Custom-Built, Cloud Hosted VLab
4. Discussion and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Engagement Level | Number of Logins | Time Spend | Activities |
---|---|---|---|
Low | 10 | 0.33 | 2% |
Low | 20 | 4.52 | 3% |
Medium | 28 | 10.26 | 11% |
Medium | 42 | 3.36 | 9% |
High | 121 | 20.49 | 15% |
High | 138 | 51.53 | 20% |
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Hassan, J.; Devi, A.; Ray, B. Virtual Laboratories in Tertiary Education: Case Study Analysis by Learning Theories. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 554. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080554
Hassan J, Devi A, Ray B. Virtual Laboratories in Tertiary Education: Case Study Analysis by Learning Theories. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(8):554. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080554
Chicago/Turabian StyleHassan, Jahan, Anamika Devi, and Biplob Ray. 2022. "Virtual Laboratories in Tertiary Education: Case Study Analysis by Learning Theories" Education Sciences 12, no. 8: 554. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080554
APA StyleHassan, J., Devi, A., & Ray, B. (2022). Virtual Laboratories in Tertiary Education: Case Study Analysis by Learning Theories. Education Sciences, 12(8), 554. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080554