posted on 2011-11-01, 15:59authored byMary Thorpe, Gráinne Conole, Rob Edmunds
Seven courses which develop and assess learning in a practice or work context are the focus for
exploring students’ experience of technology-mediated study practice. Students’ experience of their
work practice context brings an added dimension to the rich mix of factors influencing students’
approaches to study and to technology use. Research methods draw therefore upon activity theory
and social theories of learning that foreground the development of learner identity within practice
communities. At this early stage, interview data is presented drawing on a triangulation of
perspectives from course developers, tutors and students. Interpretations are tentative, but the
importance of students’ work context in relation to positive or negative orientations to technology is
evident. Students’ sense of professional identity may position their experience of technology as
either at the boundary or closer to the core of their practice, and this materially affects their learning
trajectory and their resistance to, or acceptance of, technology as a key element in their course.
History
Citation
Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Networked Learning, 5-6 May 2008, Halkidiki, Greece: Learners' Experience of e-Learning: Research from the UK, pp. 484-491.
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Networked Learning