Still Thinking…
Archive for August, 2010
Collaborative Learning in Social Networks
Aug 19th
Introduction
I am here in Anguilla reflecting on a number of ‘Social Media and Academic practice’ sessions that I co-presented with Andy Coverdale from the University of Nottingham. As PhD researchers at the School of Education, we felt comfortable enough to extend our knowledge and experience in what we saw as a gap in the doctoral training programme. What we found was that most participants use social media tools like Facebook, but did not see the need or connection of using these social media tools1 as part of their academic researcher identity. These sessions afforded us the opportunity to address transferable skills that could provide the context for academic researchers to develop and maintain their digital academic identity within the online digital landscape. We held these sessions at the Jubilee Graduate Centre, the Arts and Engineering graduate centre and recently presented an overview of what we have been doing at the e-learning conference at the University of Greenwich. This blogging activity is therefore the offspring of this session at the University of Greenwich e-learning conference.
In three separate blogging entries, I will focus on ‘making sense of collaboration in social networks’ while Andy will focus on ‘blogging as a collaborative process’. It is our hope that a joint publication will result from our separate blogging activities. Interestingly, I will seek to maintain an approach that is semi-academic while not losing my naturalistic blogging voice. This blog entry will focus on the notion of collaboration & collaborative learning and in subsequent blog entries I will go on to show how collaborative learning is seen in social networking setting and how this is related to the process of making sense for academic researchers. It is my hope that making these inferences explicit will help in describing how as academic researchers we can make sense of collaboration in the social networking setting.
Collaboration 
Simply put, collaboration is described a process of working with others with a similar goal in mind. Working together however, implies that there are other processes at play which deserve some attention. Roschelle & Teasley (1995) for example, defines collaboration as “…a coordinated, synchronous activity that is the result of a continued attempt to construct and maintain a shared conception of a problem” (Roschelle & Teasley 1995, p.70). Although this definition limits collaboration to synchronous activity, it recognizes collaboration as a process of organised effort that requires negotiation of joint activity. I will like to think that this joint activity can be referred to as the participation that is required to make collaboration possible. But how does participation evolve into collaborative activity within the online setting? This is an important question to address since there might be the inclination to accept social networking as collaboration. Perhaps this is where social networking tools play a role.
Social networking tools & collaboration
The tools of collaboration in social networking are endless and while many tools promote collaboration, using them do not mean collaboration is taking place. It follows therefore that although these technological tools allow individuals to participate easily and it would take more than a comment, rate or tweet to collaborate in social networks. Likewise spending endless hours of commenting, posting, tweeting may not necessarily lead to collaboration. In his book, The Culture of Collaboration, Evan Rosen set out to showcase collaboration as a way of creating value within specified spaces (Rosen 2007), and introduces the Ten Cultural Elements of Collaboration: Trust, Sharing, Goals, Innovation, Environment, Collaborative Chaos, Constructive Confrontation, Communication, Community and Value. He purports that value creation is an integral part for collaboration. While I do not elaborate on these cultural elements, it is important to note how these elements resonate what we identified during our social media presentations as the core elements or values of social media. These are seen in figure 1 below:

Figure 1
It is these values that seem to drive the proliferation of social media and social networking tools and this goes on to upset the traditional approach to learning. But how do researchers make sense of the process that is necessary to make the leap into understanding what it means to work collaboratively when working in current academic setting do not promote these core values. Putting this aside, I now give attention to collaborative learning.
Collaborative learning
Dillenbourg (1999) defines collaborative learning as:
a situation in which particular forms of interaction among people are expected to occur, which would trigger learning mechanisms, but there is no guarantee that the expected interactions will actually occur. Hence, a general concern is to develop ways to increase the probability that some types of interaction occur (Dillenbourg 1999, p.5).
Thus a focus on the ways to increase the probability for interaction assumes that collaborative learning as a social activity that is participative, open and accessible. But within such environments, dialogic exchanges form the basis in which meaning is negotiated. Garrison (1997) for example, explains that within collaborative learning environments critical discourse is valued and encouraged (Garrison 1997) and such emphasis on reflective dialogic exchanges finds support in the works of Freire (2000) & Wells (1999). Therefore taking into account the need for dialogic exchanges within collaborative learning environments, I will like to put forward the following:
Participation + negotiation + critical dialogue +critical reflection = collaborative learning
Dialogic exchanges, comments and postings form the basis of how individuals collaborate within the social networking setting and a number of social media tools mediate the collaborative learning activity. A brief look at a sample of social media tools reveal the sort of social media activities that support the dialogic view.
|
Tool |
Primary Activity |
Secondary Activities |
|
Blogs (WordPress, Blogger) |
Publishing |
Following, Like, commenting, subscribing |
|
Flickr (Images), Youtube (videos), Slideshare (Presentations), Scribd & GoogleDocs (documents) |
Photo, video, presentation and document sharing. |
Commenting, rating, liking, sharing, embedding. |
|
Tweeter |
Micro-blogging |
Retweeting to followers, replying, following, direct message. |
|
Wiki |
Group publishing |
Collaborative editing, commenting |
Table 1 Sample of tools that were highlighted as part of social media sessions.
Conclusion:
While I have just touched the surface on collaborative learning, I have provided the basis for taking the discussion further in subsequent blog entries. I have attempted to make some head way into understanding the processes of collaborative learning that remain largely tacit. The way I see it is that when individuals engage in collaborative learning, they are in fact engaging in a set of critical and reflective dialogic activities in such a way that enables them to negotiate meaning in their context. The negotiation process however remains somewhat of a mystery and needs further exploration to fully understand. This is something that perhaps will unfold in the next blog entry. However, I end with more questions than answers. How do we go about negotiating meaning in social networks? What sort of tools mediate this negotiation process? Questions, do you have any to add to this list?
References
Dillenbourg, P., 1999. What do you mean by collaborative learning. In Collaborative learning: Cognitive and computational approaches. Oxford, UK: Elsvier, pp. 1-19.
Freire, P., 2000. Pedagogy of the oppressed, New York: Continuum International Publishing Group.
Garrison, D.R., 1997. Computer Conferencing: The Post-Industrial Age of Distance Education. Open learning, 12(2), 3-11.
Roschelle, J. & Teasley, S.D., 1995. Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning. In C. O’Malley, ed. C. O’Malley (Ed.). Berlin, pp. 67-97.
Rosen, E., 2007. The Culture of Collaboration 1st ed., Red Ape Publishing.
Wells, C.G., 1999. Dialogic inquiry, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
Writing-in-action: Thinking-in-action
Aug 9th
My approach to writing is much about an approach to thinking on my feet. It may seem a strange but, this is one way I am able to make sense of the PhD research process. Writing therefore became a filtering reflective process – a process to contextualise my thoughts, in trying to situate myself in the practice of academic writing. Before I make headway into the muddy terrain of the writing process, I think it is necessary to provide some basis for my conviction of writing-in-action. What I present here therefore is an abridged justification of how I present the knowledge as it emerges from the research process which consequently led to the way I am formatting my thesis.
My attempt to structure the thesis following the traditional format and configuration was met with much difficulty. In trying to represent an action research research process in writing it became evident that the traditional reporting format for the thesis was not a good fit and prompted the rethinking the legitimacy of the standard format. I felt that such an approach was not going to represent an honest account of the research development. This seemed impractical since the research design was a work in progress- unfinished business and as such, did not fully resonate with the philosophical assumptions of Action Research. I was still in the process of collecting, transcribing and analysing data and this traditional reporting format seemed out of place with the way things were unfolding and I could not see the logic in representing a cyclical iterative process in a strict liner format. I therefore put forward that in order to be true to the process and the development of my academic voice and representation of the interpretations, I need to rethink the configuration of the thesis particularly since writing for me was a process of thinking-in-action. The fact remains that the traditional thesis format is based on a hypothetical deductive reasoning, whereby a literature review is conducted to establish what is already known and then the experiment is designed and reported. However, what I am doing in this research project is more of on the complicated investigative frontier of the research paradigm that takes place in particular sequence that needs to be reported in a way that the historical account is captured in its most truthful account.
While this approach to thesis writing departs from the traditional approach it finds support in the work of Davis (2007) which provides significant support for deviating from the traditional format since it should not be accepted as a format that is universal (Davis 2007). Julia Davis, in citing Richardson (2000) states that the traditional mode of writing discourages academic researchers from writing until they know what they would like to say and such an approach ignores writing as a dynamic and creative process (Davis 2007).
In the end this alternative format affords me a chance to to demonstrate the inter-relationships between the development of the academic voice and the relationship that exists between the overarching research process of planning, acting, and reflecting and how these processes in themselves are meta-processes for integrating the literature and analytical frameworks. Again, while I write this blog my ideas are forming and hope that this gives me added motivation to accept this restructure as something that would allow me to be true to the research context.
References
Davis, J.M., 2007. Rethinking the architecture: An action researcher’s resolution to writing and presenting their thesis. Action Research, 5(2), 181.
Kamler, B. & Thomson, P., 2006. Helping Doctoral Students Write: Pedagogies for Doctoral Supervision 1st ed., Routledge.
Richardson, L. & St. Pierre, E.A., 2005. Writing: A method of inquiry. In N. K. Denzin & Y. S. Lincoln, eds. The Sage Handbook of Qualitative research. London: Sage, pp. 959-978.

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