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Showing 1 to 15 of 85 results Save | Export
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Rachel Leslie; Alice Brown; Ellen Larsen; Melissa Fanshawe – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
Establishing and building rapport is a crucial aspect of research interviews with children and families. With interviews increasingly conducted via online platforms, such as Teams and Zoom, researchers are challenged to reflect on relational aspects, such as building rapport, when using this medium and how approaches may need to be nuanced. This…
Descriptors: Interviews, Computer Mediated Communication, Synchronous Communication, Children
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Gulhan C. Sari; Daniel G. Krutka; Ryan M. Smits – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2024
Social media platforms have transformed how students and educators "share" information about school experiences. In this paper, we translate Leah Plunkett's sharenting concept (a portmanteau of "share" and "parent") to address the phenomenon of "overposting" in education. Overposting (a portmanteau of…
Descriptors: Social Media, Personal Autonomy, Participation, Self Disclosure (Individuals)
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Bates, Agnieszka – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
Growing societal concern about a crisis in the wellbeing of young people has prompted a range of responses from governments and corporations, predicated on an ideal of the resilient, self-reliant individual. Behavioural economists, data scientists and educational technology companies now offer a variety of psychological interventions based on…
Descriptors: Well Being, Psychometrics, Interpersonal Relationship, Social Emotional Learning
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Tijana Milosevic; Anne Collier; James O'Higgins Norman – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2023
This article outlines how dignity theory could be used to better understand bullying behaviors. Dignity is defined here as the inherent worth of every human being and it allows us to trace the motivations behind bullying behaviors to broader social values that are rarely the primary focus of bullying research, as well as prevention and…
Descriptors: Bullying, Antisocial Behavior, Social Values, Cultural Influences
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Carlos Jimenez; Lynn Schofield Clark; Johnny Ramirez – Youth & Society, 2024
Online youth civic engagement programs are often designed to support the cultivation of youth voice, yet working with youth of color who are particularly skeptical of civic life takes a certain form of labor that often remains unexamined in the scholarship of youth civic engagement. Drawing on concepts of invisible, emotional, and relational labor…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Computer Mediated Communication, Ethnography, Longitudinal Studies
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Karen Gravett – Learning, Media and Technology, 2024
The move to digital, and now hybrid, education has defamiliarised teaching practices and unsettled experiences of what it means to be and to engage at university. In this article, I examine what new questions evolving teaching and learning practices provoke with regards rethinking notions of the body, and concepts of presence and absence.…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Computer Mediated Communication, Interpersonal Relationship, Student Participation
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Oksana Caivano; Victoria Talwar – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2023
Gossip is an important part of adolescent development. Although gossip can be used for negative influence, it can also be used for positive relational purposes such as establishing norms and creating intimacy. Discerning the gossip sharer's motives is important for receivers to determine how to react. However, the lack of visual and tonal cues in…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Interpersonal Communication, Adolescents, Motivation
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Tarrant, Anna; Way, Laura; Ladlow, Linzi – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
The COVID-19 crisis has placed unique restrictions on social researchers in terms of how they conduct their research. It has also created opportunities for adaptation and critical reflection on methodological practice. This article considers how the unanticipated use of remote qualitative methods impacted processes of research…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Longitudinal Studies, Research Methodology, Child Rearing
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Mosavarzadeh, Marzieh; Mahlouji, Sholeh; Moussavi, Yasaman; Sarreshtehdari, Elmira – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2022
This paper unfolds the artful and pedagogical potentials of engaging in a simultaneous practice of walking and artmaking in different locations, along bodies of water, and together-apart. Through introducing the term co-living inquiry as a thread between action research and a/r/tography, we suggest how the notion of walking with as both action and…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Natural Resources, Water, Art Education
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Paul E. Bylsma; Riyad A. Shahjahan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
We offer the concept of "proximate ambivalence" to highlight the ambiguity inherent in the social and spatial relations of higher education's digitally-mediated teaching and learning that replaced in-person seminars during the COVID-19 pandemic. By proximate ambivalence, we refer to one's simultaneous proximity and distance in relation…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Proximity, Technology Uses in Education
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Kevin Jenkins – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2024
Drawing parallels to the informal education and structure of do-it-yourself (DIY) maker ethos, this autoethnographic article examines how online community spaces, including social media and social networking platforms, serve trans men as personal learning environments in which to form personal learning networks for the purposes of creating DIY…
Descriptors: Sexual Identity, LGBTQ People, Males, Computer Mediated Communication
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Kahl, Kendra N. – LEARNing Landscapes, 2022
As teachers and students navigated the forced transition to online education, their physical and social interaction became possible only through technology. How did this mediated interaction affect learning outcomes, teacher presence, and their performance, in synchronous classroom spaces? What was lost in the translation of in-person instruction?…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Technology Uses in Education, Virtual Classrooms, Computer Mediated Communication
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Langelotz, Lill; Mahon, Kathleen – Studies in Continuing Education, 2022
Taking a practice perspective, this article explores how built spaces within the university can impact on, and enable, practices of everyday professional learning amongst university educators. The discussion draws on analysis, informed by the theory of practice architectures, of interviews with six academics at a Swedish university. Three main…
Descriptors: Risk, Communities of Practice, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Baughman, Sarah – Journal of Extension, 2019
Extension professionals are increasingly participating in virtual work. Leading these new virtual teams presents challenges to building relationships within the teams, establishing trust, and communicating effectively. As the national project leader of the Military Families Learning Network, I share promising practices developed over 8 years of…
Descriptors: Extension Agents, Teamwork, Computer Mediated Communication, Professional Development
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Schreurs, Bieke; Cornelissen, Frank; De Laat, Maarten – Education Sciences, 2019
In this article we want to understand in more detail how learning networks emerge in online networked learning environments. An adage in Networked Learning theory is that networked learning cannot be designed; it can only be designed for. This adage implicitly carries the idea that networked learning is seen as learning in which information and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Networks, Online Courses
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