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JournalISSN: 1743-9884

Learning, Media and Technology 

Taylor & Francis
About: Learning, Media and Technology is an academic journal published by Taylor & Francis. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Educational technology & Teaching method. It has an ISSN identifier of 1743-9884. Over the lifetime, 638 publications have been published receiving 24566 citations. The journal is also known as: Learning, media and technology.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored how pre-registration engagement with a university Facebook network influenced students' postregistration social networks and found that Facebook was part of the social glue that helped students settle into university life.
Abstract: Whilst recent studies suggest that over 95% of British undergraduate students are regularly using social networking sites, we still know very little about how this phenomenon impacts on the student experience and, in particular, how it influences students’ social integration into university life. This paper explores how pre‐registration engagement with a university Facebook network influences students’ post‐registration social networks. Research was conducted with first year undergraduates at a British university using an online survey. Students reported that they specifically joined Facebook pre‐registration as a means of making new friends at university, as well as keeping in touch with friends and family at home. The survey data also illustrate that once at university, Facebook was part of the ‘social glue’ that helped students settle into university life. However, care must be taken not to over‐privilege Facebook: it is clearly only one aspect of students’ more general social networking practices and ...

1,184 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an in-depth qualitative analysis of the Facebook "wall" activity of 909 undergraduate students in a UK university and find that much of students' education-related use of this social networking application was based around either the post-hoc critiquing of learning experiences and events, the exchange of logistical or factual information about teaching and assessment requirements, instances of supplication and moral support with regards to assessment or learning, or the promotion of oneself as academically incompetent and/or disengaged.
Abstract: Social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace have been subject to much recent debate within the educational community. Whilst growing numbers of educators celebrate the potential of social networking to (re)engage learners with their studies, others fear that such applications compromise and disrupt young people's engagement with ‘traditional’ education provision. With these ongoing debates in mind, the current paper presents an in‐depth qualitative analysis of the Facebook ‘wall’ activity of 909 undergraduate students in a UK university. Analysis of these data shows how much of students' education‐related use of this social networking application was based around either the post‐hoc critiquing of learning experiences and events, the exchange of logistical or factual information about teaching and assessment requirements, instances of supplication and moral support with regards to assessment or learning, or the promotion of oneself as academically incompetent and/or disengaged. With these themes i...

902 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: TPACK (Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge) was developed to respond to two challenges confronting teacher educators.
Abstract: edited by AACTE Committee on Innovation and Technology, New York, Routledge, 2008, 312 pp., $74.95 (paperback), ISBN 0‐8058‐6356‐7 The idea of technological pedagogical content knowledge – or TPCK ...

633 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a critical review and assessment of how TEL is interpreted in recent literature, examining the purpose of technology interventions, the approaches adopted to demonstrate the role of technology in enhancing the learning experience, differing ways in which enhancement is conceived and the use of various forms evidence to substantiate claims about TEL.
Abstract: The term Technology-enhanced learning (TEL) is used to describe the application of information and communication technologies to teaching and learning. Explicit statements about what the term is understood to mean are rare and it is not evident that a shared understanding has been developed in higher education of what constitutes an enhancement of the student learning experience. This article presents a critical review and assessment of how TEL is interpreted in recent literature. It examines the purpose of technology interventions, the approaches adopted to demonstrate the role of technology in enhancing the learning experience, differing ways in which enhancement is conceived and the use of various forms evidence to substantiate claims about TEL. Thematic analysis enabled categories to be developed and relationships explored between the aims of TEL interventions, the evidence presented, and the ways in which enhancement is conceived.

589 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a model theorizing social media as a space for learning with varying attributes of formality and informality is proposed, together with social constructivism and connectivism as theoretical lenses through which to tease out the complexities of learning in various settings.
Abstract: It is argued that social media has the potential to bridge formal and informal learning through participatory digital cultures. Exemplars of sophisticated use by young people support this claim, although the majority of young people adopt the role of consumers rather than full participants. Scholars have suggested the potential of social media for integrating formal and informal learning, yet this work is commonly under-theorized. We propose a model theorizing social media as a space for learning with varying attributes of formality and informality. Through two contrasting case studies, we apply our model together with social constructivism and connectivism as theoretical lenses through which to tease out the complexities of learning in various settings. We conclude that our model could reveal new understandings of social media in education, and outline future research directions.

455 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202343
202263
202156
202031
201935
201837