Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university

This is a narrative inquiry in which I asked six master's level students at a University in the North of England to reflect on their experience of using social media as the learning platform for part of a taught module. I was motivated by the growing ubiquity of such approaches in higher educat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Reynolds, Cheryl
Other Authors: Avis, James
Published: University of Huddersfield 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.754549
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-754549
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7545492019-02-05T03:28:13ZDigital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK universityReynolds, CherylAvis, James2018This is a narrative inquiry in which I asked six master's level students at a University in the North of England to reflect on their experience of using social media as the learning platform for part of a taught module. I was motivated by the growing ubiquity of such approaches in higher education and by the need to develop rational, just and sustainable online pedagogies that are alert to both the opportunities and threats of this shift in medium. My research questions, framed from a Bourdieusian perspective were: - To what extent is symbolic violence evident within a social learning network for master's level students at a UK University? - What forms does such symbolic violence take and how are these forms affected by the medium? - What kinds of dispositions, abilities and assets constitute and confer capital in this setting? In answering these questions, I trace symbolic violence in the online exchanges between participants and in the consequences of those exchanges. I develop an index of digital capital to describe the dispositions, abilities and assets that they needed to profit from learning in this way, along with a notion of digital hiatus to describe what happened when they lacked such capital. At the same time, I acknowledge the positive impacts of this approach on some of the participants. I locate this research within the literature on social media use for education and more specifically within the subset of that literature that uses Bourdieu's ideas to explore digital inequality. I also locate it within the institutional context of a post-1992 UK university, the national policy context and the economic context for the growing use of technology in Education. I conclude by reviewing the benefits and limitations of the methodology and theoretical frameworks adopted and by considering the potential uses of my index of digital capital, identifying how this might be explored in future studies.H Social Sciences (General)University of Huddersfieldhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.754549http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/id/eprint/34603/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Reynolds, Cheryl
Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
description This is a narrative inquiry in which I asked six master's level students at a University in the North of England to reflect on their experience of using social media as the learning platform for part of a taught module. I was motivated by the growing ubiquity of such approaches in higher education and by the need to develop rational, just and sustainable online pedagogies that are alert to both the opportunities and threats of this shift in medium. My research questions, framed from a Bourdieusian perspective were: - To what extent is symbolic violence evident within a social learning network for master's level students at a UK University? - What forms does such symbolic violence take and how are these forms affected by the medium? - What kinds of dispositions, abilities and assets constitute and confer capital in this setting? In answering these questions, I trace symbolic violence in the online exchanges between participants and in the consequences of those exchanges. I develop an index of digital capital to describe the dispositions, abilities and assets that they needed to profit from learning in this way, along with a notion of digital hiatus to describe what happened when they lacked such capital. At the same time, I acknowledge the positive impacts of this approach on some of the participants. I locate this research within the literature on social media use for education and more specifically within the subset of that literature that uses Bourdieu's ideas to explore digital inequality. I also locate it within the institutional context of a post-1992 UK university, the national policy context and the economic context for the growing use of technology in Education. I conclude by reviewing the benefits and limitations of the methodology and theoretical frameworks adopted and by considering the potential uses of my index of digital capital, identifying how this might be explored in future studies.
author2 Avis, James
author_facet Avis, James
Reynolds, Cheryl
author Reynolds, Cheryl
author_sort Reynolds, Cheryl
title Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
title_short Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
title_full Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
title_fullStr Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
title_full_unstemmed Digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a UK university
title_sort digital hiatus : symbolic violence in an online social learning network for master's level students at a uk university
publisher University of Huddersfield
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.754549
work_keys_str_mv AT reynoldscheryl digitalhiatussymbolicviolenceinanonlinesociallearningnetworkformasterslevelstudentsataukuniversity
_version_ 1718973754346831872