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Digital collaboration inside and outside educational systems

This article takes its outset in findings from an ongoing research project investigating the use of digital and multimodal resources in teacher education (TE) in Norway. The material studied is mandatory assignments in different courses in TE, asking how teacher students collaborate through digital...

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Published in:E-learning and digital media 2015-03, Vol.12 (2), p.226-241
Main Authors: Birkeland, Nils Rune, Drange, Eli-Marie Danbolt, Tønnessen, Elise Seip
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Language:English
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creator Birkeland, Nils Rune
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description This article takes its outset in findings from an ongoing research project investigating the use of digital and multimodal resources in teacher education (TE) in Norway. The material studied is mandatory assignments in different courses in TE, asking how teacher students collaborate through digital media in their production of texts for learning, and how the design of these literacy practices can be influenced through the teachers’ design of the assignments. In focus group interviews the researchers found that the students preferred organizing collaborative processes through Facebook groups rather than through the university’s learning management system. This created a space between formal and informal learning, often mediated by “power users” performing a curatorial function on behalf of the group. Furthermore, the quality of the processes seemed to depend on how the assignments were designed for different modes and for individual or group work. The tasks that inspired genuine collaborative learning were characterized by a certain complexity in terms of multimodality and technology, or professional knowledge combining academic and practical experience. In other cases tasks to be performed in groups were split between the students, and probably did not add the same value to individual learning. This is discussed as an encounter between the teachers’ design of the assignments and the students’ design of their learning processes. When teacher students tell us how they work with assignments, they at the same time explain how their knowledge is designed through social and textual practices. Reflections on these practices are relevant to developing their awareness of didactic design in their future profession as teachers.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/2042753014567245
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source ERIC; SAGE
subjects Access to Education
Assignments
Computer Mediated Communication
Educational Resources
Electronic Learning
Electronic Libraries
Focus Groups
Foreign Countries
Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Relationship
Interviews
Investigations
Literacy
Mass Media Use
Norway
Preservice Teacher Education
Research Projects
Social Networks
Student Teacher Attitudes
Student Teachers
Teacher Education Programs
Teamwork
title Digital collaboration inside and outside educational systems
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