• Title of article

    Improvable objects and attached dialogue: new literacy practices employed by learners to build knowledge together in asynchronous settings

  • Author/Authors

    Rebecca Ferguson، نويسنده , , Denise Whitelock and Karen Littleton، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    21
  • From page
    103
  • To page
    123
  • Abstract
    Asynchronous online dialogue offers advantages to learners, but has appeared to involve only limited use of new literacy practices. To investigate this, a multimodal approach was applied to asynchronous dialogue. The study analysed the online discussions of small groups of university students as they developed collaboratively authored documents. Sociocultural discourse analysis of the dialogue was combined with visual analysis of its structural elements. The groups were found to employ new literacies that supported the joint construction of knowledge. The documents on which they worked together functioned as ʹimprovable objectsʹ and the development of these was associated with engagement in ʹattached dialogueʹ. By investigating a wider range of conference dialogue than has previously been explored, it was found that engaging in attached dialogue associated with collaborative authorship of improvable objects prompts groups of online learners to share knowledge, challenge ideas, justify opinions, evaluate evidence and consider options
  • Keywords
    visual analysis , Asynchronous dialogue , Collaboration , Exploratory talk , Improvable objects , Online learning , pedagogy , Sociocultural discourse analysis
  • Journal title
    Digital Culture & Education
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Digital Culture & Education
  • Record number

    677234