학술논문

Connecting the Dots: Theorizing and Mapping Learning Entanglement through Archaeology and Design
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Descriptive
Source
British Journal of Educational Technology. May 2019 50(3):1104-1117.
Subject
Archaeology
Design
Technology Uses in Education
Educational Researchers
Educational Research
Learning Activities
Teaching Methods
Concept Mapping
Language
English
ISSN
0007-1013
Abstract
Designing for digitally enhanced learning has increased in complexity. In response, this paper calls for a reconceptualization of technology--as the reconfiguring of space, place, materials, time and social relations--enrolled and refashioned in emergent learning activity. Such reconceptualization requires analytical tools, methods and processes to map heterogeneous assemblages of people, tools and tasks. Educational researchers and designers are in need of approaches and theories that move beyond deterministic accounts about the utility of individual learning technologies, to connect theory, research and practice. Our research shows that in learning to distinguish between elements that are open to alteration through design and those that are not, educational designers gain deeper insights into the flows of matter, information and humans characteristic of productive networked learning environments. And this, in turn, gives rise to valued qualities of emergent learning activity in alignment with current theories about learning. In this paper, we present a series of methods adapted from archaeology and design, illustrating their power in tracing the complex webs of dependence characteristic of productive learning entanglement, with the aim of supporting future design for learning.