2 research outputs found
Framing in educational practices. Learning activity, digital technology and the logic of situated action
An overarching ambition of this thesis is to study the in situ practices that
emerge when technology becomes part of educational activities and, in
addition, to examine what students’ definition of such activities will be. By
analysing students’ concrete uses of digital technology in regular classroom
practices, the study intends to demystify how digital technology codetermines
activities in educational settings. A background of this interest is
that there are many different claims in the literature and in the public debate
regarding what learning will be like when such tools are used. Accordingly,
the use of digital technologies is in this thesis studied from the perspective of
student activities and rationalities. Analytically, this is done within a
sociocultural perspective and, in addition, with the help of the conceptual
distinctions of frame analysis. Empirical material have been collected via
video recordings of secondary school students’ engaging in solving word
problems in mathematics presented by means of educational software. The
analyses aim at scrutinizing what the presence of educational software in
mathematics implies for the students’ learning practices in situations when
they encounter some kind of difficulty in their problem solving. The results,
presented in three studies, show that for long periods of time the students’
interaction involved not only the contents but also different functionalities and
design qualities of the digital technology. The findings in this study thus point
to the need to question the alleged benefits that surround the implementation
of digital technologies. According to the empirical findings in the three
studies presented in this thesis, along with knowledge from previous research,
digital technology cannot be said to improve learning in any linear sense.
Instead, educational activities involving the use of digital technologies imply
a different way of learning with new possibilities and new problems; a
different pedagogical situation and a different relation between the students
and the contents