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This paper will discuss a framework and methodology for understanding the use of computers in collaborative learning. In particular, we are interested in how learning occurs when students work together using a computer microworld. Collaborative settings provide a particularly rich environment for studying learning. Many theorists (see Brown and Palinscar, in press) have proposed that learning occurs when students have to explain, develop, or justify their ideas to others. In a collaborative setting, students communicate their ideas in order to coordinate their activity towards shared goals. When dilemmas arise in the course of productive work, the combination of communication and activity can lead to learning (Vygotsky 1978, Dewey 1923, Mead 1934).
Singer et al. (Fri,) studied this question.