IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Business as Usual or Digital Mechanisms for Change?: What Student DLOs Reveal About Doing Mathematics

Business as Usual or Digital Mechanisms for Change?: What Student DLOs Reveal About Doing Mathematics
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Naomi Alexandra Rosedale (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Rebecca Ngaire Jesson (University of Auckland, New Zealand)and Stuart McNaughton (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Copyright: 2021
Volume: 13
Issue: 2
Pages: 19
Source title: International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning (IJMBL)
Editor(s)-in-Chief: David Parsons (The Mind Lab by Unitec, New Zealand)and Kathryn Mac Callum (University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand)
DOI: 10.4018/IJMBL.2021040102

Purchase

View Business as Usual or Digital Mechanisms for Change?: What Student DLOs Reveal About Doing Mathematics on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

Mathematics classrooms have a long history of what has been termed ‘unidimensional' character: a proclivity for student practice routines and teachers as experts and keepers of knowledge. This study investigates affordances of student-created digital learning objects (SC-DLOs) as transformative, design-for-learning practices in the hands of students. Historical distinctions are drawn between digital learning objects (DLOs) and digital learning artefacts (DLAs) primarily for teacher assessment of student learning. SC-DLOs are conceived as students' design for learning for the peer learning community. Hence, SC-DLOs have additional and different learning potential that aligns with 21st century skill development. A corpus of mathematics SC-DLOs (n=155) were analysed from learner blogs (Year 7-8) in a 1:1 digital initiative in New Zealand. A mixed-methods approach was used to investigate features of students' multimodal design for learning. A framework of implications informs and problematises understandings of transformative digital creation by students in mathematics.

Related Content

W. A. Piyumi Udeshinee, Ola Knutsson, Sirkku Männikkö-Barbutiu. © 2024. 21 pages.
Shatha Mohammed Almalki. © 2024. 19 pages.
Lin Wang, Muhd Khaizer Omar, Noor Syamilah Zakaria, Nurul Nadwa Zulkifli. © 2024. 19 pages.
Daniel Biedermann, Patrick Oliver Schwarz, Jane Yau, Hendrik Drachsler. © 2023. 12 pages.
Almed Hamzah, Sergey Sosnovsky. © 2023. 16 pages.
Qiwei Men, Belinda Gimbert, Dean Cristol. © 2023. 17 pages.
Olga Viberg, Agnes Kukulska-Hulme, Ward Peeters. © 2023. 15 pages.
Body Bottom