At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts

This article reflects the methodological challenges presented in the research process, where the principle of 'following the field’ means that the researcher must also follow students engaged in online activities in their own homes. The ethnographic studies are a part of a PhD project on “NETed...

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Main Author: Anita Lyngsø
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lillehammer University College 2015-11-01
Series:Seminar.net
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2362
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spelling doaj-05039a93618b4e509e08595be84061b42020-11-24T23:25:32ZengLillehammer University CollegeSeminar.net1504-48312015-11-011112362At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline ContextsAnita Lyngsø0Department of Media, Cognition and Communication University of Copenhagen & Health Department VIA University CollegeThis article reflects the methodological challenges presented in the research process, where the principle of 'following the field’ means that the researcher must also follow students engaged in online activities in their own homes. The ethnographic studies are a part of a PhD project on “NETeducation,” a full-scale development project in nursing education (Lyngsø, 2014). With a focus on online professional education as the starting point, the process of research will follow the shifting learning process, through phases in the virtual classroom and in the students’ own homes. Research in online contexts demands a rethinking of the traditional ethnographic approach (Hammersley, 2006; Hine, 2005), sharpening the focus on the online and offline contexts, and the shifting between them (Webster, da Silva, 2013). The methodological reflections in the first part of this article can relate to this division due to the “netstudents” activities in studying online at home. On the other hand, the dichotomy between online and offline contexts is found to be inadequate, during the observations conducted. In light of some preliminary findings, the challenges of observing online and offline activities almost simultaneously are considered, despite a dearth of literature existing on this subject.https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2362methodologyethnographyreflexivityonline learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anita Lyngsø
spellingShingle Anita Lyngsø
At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
Seminar.net
methodology
ethnography
reflexivity
online learning
author_facet Anita Lyngsø
author_sort Anita Lyngsø
title At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
title_short At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
title_full At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
title_fullStr At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
title_full_unstemmed At Home with Students – Observing Online and Offline Contexts
title_sort at home with students – observing online and offline contexts
publisher Lillehammer University College
series Seminar.net
issn 1504-4831
publishDate 2015-11-01
description This article reflects the methodological challenges presented in the research process, where the principle of 'following the field’ means that the researcher must also follow students engaged in online activities in their own homes. The ethnographic studies are a part of a PhD project on “NETeducation,” a full-scale development project in nursing education (Lyngsø, 2014). With a focus on online professional education as the starting point, the process of research will follow the shifting learning process, through phases in the virtual classroom and in the students’ own homes. Research in online contexts demands a rethinking of the traditional ethnographic approach (Hammersley, 2006; Hine, 2005), sharpening the focus on the online and offline contexts, and the shifting between them (Webster, da Silva, 2013). The methodological reflections in the first part of this article can relate to this division due to the “netstudents” activities in studying online at home. On the other hand, the dichotomy between online and offline contexts is found to be inadequate, during the observations conducted. In light of some preliminary findings, the challenges of observing online and offline activities almost simultaneously are considered, despite a dearth of literature existing on this subject.
topic methodology
ethnography
reflexivity
online learning
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/seminar/article/view/2362
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