242 research outputs found
Visual grammar in practice: negotiating the arrangement of speech bubbles in storyboards
It is generally acknowledged that we live in an increasingly visual culture, populated with a variety of visual objects. Researchers have recently started to investigate the underlying regularities, the "visual grammar," according to which these objects are assembled. While most existing studies base their analysis on products (such as advertisements, movies or pages from newspapers), this paper studies the processes through which such products are assembled, thereby investigating visual grammar in practice. The particular objects analyzed are storyboards that were produced by secondary school pupils using a new computerized storyboarding tool as part of their engagement with Shakespeare's Macbeth. The paper focuses on situations in which pupils explicitly discuss and negotiate the placement of speech bubbles, thereby revealing aspects of the "meaning-effects" of such placements
From traditional blackboards to interactive whiteboards: a pilot study to inform system design
Interactive whiteboards are a new technology that has gradually found its way into
classrooms. The aim of this study is to explore the potential of interactive
whiteboards for the teaching and learning of mathematics. From field observations,
videorecordings and interviews with a teacher this research develops a description of
the teacher’s use of a traditional board, and discusses how the teacher perceives the
potential of an interactive whiteboard
News interviews: Clayman and Heritage’s ‘The News Interview'
News interviews: Clayman and Heritage’s ‘The News Interview
Unpacking tasks: the fusion of new technology with instructional work
This paper discusses how a new technology (designed to help pupils with learning about Shakespeare's Macbeth) is introduced and integrated into existing classroom practices. It reports on the ways through which teachers and pupils figure out how to use the software as part of their classroom work. Since teaching and learning in classrooms are achieved in and through educational tasks (what teachers instruct pupils to do) the analysis explicates some notable features of a particular task (storyboarding one scene from the play). It is shown that both 'setting the task' and 'following the task' have to be locally and practically accomplished and that tasks can operate as a sense-making device for pupils' activities. Furthermore, what the task 'is', is not entirely established through the teacher's initial formulation, but progressively clarified through pupils' subsequent work, and in turn ratified by the teacher
Interactive whiteboards in mathematics education: possibilities and dangers
Interactive whiteboards are a new technology for ‘traditional’ teaching in the whole
class. Although they have been installed in educational settings, the emphasis of research has been
on their use in office settings. Preliminary findings from a pilot study of a mathematics teacher's
use of a ‘traditional’ blackboard suggest that interactive whiteboards should not only be seen as a
presentational device for the teacher, but as an interactive and communicative device to enhance
the communication with and among students. In this paper, interactive whiteboards are placed
within the wider context of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) as a tool for
Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL). The potential of interactive whiteboard is
explored from the perspective of Requirements Engineering, a branch of computer science that
aims to determine what properties a system should have in order to succeed. Drawing on this field,
four steps for the design of technology in educational settings are specified and illustrated
Making rounds: the routine work of the teacher during collaborative learning with computers
This paper provides a detailed analysis of the work of the teacher during collaborative-learning activities. Whilst the importance of the teacher for the success of collaborative learning has frequently been recognized in the CSCL literature, there is nevertheless a curious absence of detailed studies that describe how the teacher intervenes in pupils' collaborative-learning activities, which may be a reflection of the ambivalent status of teachers within a field that has tried to transfer authority from teachers to pupils. Through a close analysis of different types of teacher interventions into pupils working in pairs with a storyboarding tool, this paper argues, firstly, that concerns of classroom management and pedagogy are typically intertwined and, secondly, that although there may be tensions between the perspectives of teachers and pupils these do not take the form of antagonistic struggles. The paper concludes that it may be time to renew our interest in the work of teachers in the analysis of collaborative-learning activities
Mathematical relativism: logic, grammar, and arithmetic in cultural comparison
Cultural relativism is supposed to be a bold and provocative thesis. In this paper we
challenge the idea that it is an empirical thesis, i.e., one that is supported through
anthropological and historical examples. We focus on mathematical relativism, the
view that a mathematics from another culture or time might be so radically divergent
from our mathematics that ‘theirs’ would stand in direct conflict with ‘ours’ (and in
that sense constitute an alternative mathematics).
We question in what sense the examples given to support the general thesis are
relativistic about mathematics and argue that on close inspection they are not, and
certainly not in any radical sense. We do not contest the fact that there can be great
mathematical diversity between cultures, but wonder whether it makes sense to talk of
‘the same’ mathematical forms in heterogeneous mathematical environments. Finally,
while relativists see the later Wittgenstein as providing support for their own thesis,
we claim that Wittgenstein argues against both realism and relativism
Closing seminars and lectures: The work that lecturers and students do
Based on an analysis of naturally occurring interactions between lecturers and students, this article investigates how university lectures and seminars are brought to a close through the collaborative work of lecturers and students. The analysis focuses on: firstly, the resources that lecturers and students have to accomplish this (which do not just include speech, but also embodied conduct, as well as references to clock time and lesson phases); secondly, the active
role that students play, who may engage in closing activities in ways that attempt to preserve the classroom order (e.g., by packing up silently while continuing to demonstrably listen) or in ways that are disruptive of it (e.g., by packing up noisily); thirdly, the occasional subversive role that students may adopt, who may attempt to initiate closings in order to cut
the lecture or seminar short (e.g., by suggesting to the lecturer that he or she is going over time or by engaging in ‘premature’ closing activities)
Mathematical equations as Durkheimian social facts?
Mathematical equations as Durkheimian social facts
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