diagnosis-solution problem diagnosis-solution problem
Diese Seite wurde seit 9 Jahren inhaltlich nicht mehr aktualisiert.
Unter Umständen ist sie nicht mehr aktuell.
BiblioMap
Definitionen
Diagnosis-solution problems are similar to troubleshooting. Most diagnosis-solution problems require identifying a fault state, just like troubleshooting. However, in troubleshooting, the goal is to repair the fault and get the system back online as soon as possible, so the solution strategies are more restrictive. Diagnosis-solution problems usually begin with a fault state similar to troubleshooting (e.g. symptoms of a sick person). The physician examines the patient and considers patient history before making an initial diagnosis. In a spiral of data collection, hypothesis generation, and testing, the physician focuses in a specific etiology and differential diagnosis of the patient’s problem. At that point, the physician must suggest a solution. Frequently, there are multiple solutions and solution paths, so the physician must justify a particular solution. It is this ambiguity in solution paths that distinguishes diagnosis-solution problems from trouble shooting.
Von Jane Howland, David H. Jonassen, Rose M. Marra, Joi Moore im Buch Learning to Solve Problems with Technology (2nd ed.) (2003) im Text Problem Solving Is Meaningful Learning auf Seite 23Diagnosis-solution problems are similar to troubleshooting. Most
diagnosis-solution problems require identifying a fault state, just like
troubleshooting. However, in troubleshooting, the goal is to repair the fault and get the system back online as soon as possible, so the solution strategies are more restrictive. Diagnosis-solution problems usually begin with a fault state similar to troubleshooting (e.g. symptoms of a sick person). The physician examines the
patient and considers patient history before making an initial diagnosis. In a spiral of data collection, hypothesis generation, and testing, the physician focuses in a specific etiology and differential diagnosis of the patient’s problem. At that point, the physician must suggest a solution. Frequently, there are multiple solutions and solution paths, so the physician must justify a particular solution. It is this ambiguity in solution paths that distinguishes diagnosis-solution
problems from trouble shooting.
Von David H. Jonassen im Text Toward a Design Theory of Problem Solving (2000) Verwandte Objeke
Verwandte Begriffe (co-word occurance) | designs problemdesigns problem(0.66), strategic performance problemstrategic performance problem(0.53), rule-using problemrule-using problem(0.44), troubleshooting problemtroubleshooting problem(0.33), decision making problemdecision making problem(0.29), case analysis problemcase analysis problem(0.25), logical problemlogical problem(0.24), story problemstory problem(0.19), algorithmic problemalgorithmic problem(0.16), Dilemma(0.04) |
Relevante Personen
Häufig erwähnende Personen
Häufig co-zitierte Personen
Statistisches Begriffsnetz
Zitationsgraph
4 Erwähnungen
- Toward a Design Theory of Problem Solving (David H. Jonassen) (2000)
- Learning to Solve Problems with Technology (2nd ed.) - A Constructivist Perspective (David H. Jonassen, Jane Howland, Joi Moore, Rose M. Marra) (2003)
- 2. Problem Solving Is Meaningful Learning (Jane Howland, David H. Jonassen, Rose M. Marra, Joi Moore)
- Learning to Solve Problems - An Instructional Design Guide (David H. Jonassen) (2004)
- Learning to Solve Problems - A Handbook for Designing Problem-Solving Learning Environments (David H. Jonassen) (2010)