Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment

This paper deploys notions of emergence, connections, and designs for learning to conceptualize high school students’ interactions when using online social media as a learning environment. It makes links to chaos and complexity theories and to fractal patterns as it reports on a part of the first au...

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Main Author: Gail Casey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athabasca University Press 2011-11-01
Series:International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1011/2021
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spelling doaj-ab11e7f0e9aa48a6ae761ae5fbdf2fd32020-11-25T02:25:50ZengAthabasca University PressInternational Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning1492-38312011-11-01127Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom EnvironmentGail CaseyThis paper deploys notions of emergence, connections, and designs for learning to conceptualize high school students’ interactions when using online social media as a learning environment. It makes links to chaos and complexity theories and to fractal patterns as it reports on a part of the first author’s action research study, conducted while she was a teacher working in an Australian public high school and completing her PhD. The study investigates the use of a Ning online social network as a learning environment shared by seven classes, and it examines students’ reactions and online activity while using a range of social media and Web 2.0 tools.The authors use Graham Nuthall’s (2007) “lens on learning” to explore the social processes and culture of this shared online classroom. The paper uses his extensive body of research and analyses of classroom learning processes to conceptualize and analyze data throughout the action research cycle. It discusses the pedagogical implications that arise from the use of social media and, in so doing, challenges traditional models of teaching and learning.http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1011/2021Social networkingonline learningstudent learningemergencechaos and complexity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gail Casey
spellingShingle Gail Casey
Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
Social networking
online learning
student learning
emergence
chaos and complexity
author_facet Gail Casey
author_sort Gail Casey
title Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
title_short Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
title_full Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
title_fullStr Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
title_full_unstemmed Designing for Learning: Online Social Networks as a Classroom Environment
title_sort designing for learning: online social networks as a classroom environment
publisher Athabasca University Press
series International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
issn 1492-3831
publishDate 2011-11-01
description This paper deploys notions of emergence, connections, and designs for learning to conceptualize high school students’ interactions when using online social media as a learning environment. It makes links to chaos and complexity theories and to fractal patterns as it reports on a part of the first author’s action research study, conducted while she was a teacher working in an Australian public high school and completing her PhD. The study investigates the use of a Ning online social network as a learning environment shared by seven classes, and it examines students’ reactions and online activity while using a range of social media and Web 2.0 tools.The authors use Graham Nuthall’s (2007) “lens on learning” to explore the social processes and culture of this shared online classroom. The paper uses his extensive body of research and analyses of classroom learning processes to conceptualize and analyze data throughout the action research cycle. It discusses the pedagogical implications that arise from the use of social media and, in so doing, challenges traditional models of teaching and learning.
topic Social networking
online learning
student learning
emergence
chaos and complexity
url http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1011/2021
work_keys_str_mv AT gailcasey designingforlearningonlinesocialnetworksasaclassroomenvironment
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