Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners

This paper draws on an ongoing doctoral study of student engagement with new digital media technologies in a formal schooling environment to demonstrate the importance of 'playfulness' as a learning disposition. The study shows that cognitive 'playfulness' mobilises productive en...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan, Erica McWilliam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2008-10-01
Series:Cultural Science
Online Access:https://culturalscience.org/articles/12
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spelling doaj-31fba97aa7cf44fca93eeb13ab2a48072020-11-24T20:51:04ZengUbiquity PressCultural Science1836-04162008-10-011210.5334/csci.1212Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learnersJennifer Pei-Ling TanErica McWilliamThis paper draws on an ongoing doctoral study of student engagement with new digital media technologies in a formal schooling environment to demonstrate the importance of 'playfulness' as a learning disposition. The study shows that cognitive 'playfulness' mobilises productive engagement with learning innovations in the context of a traditional learning culture. Specifically, the paper discusses findings that emerge from a quantitative study into the level of student engagement with, and usage of, one school’s digital innovation in the form of a new Student Media Centre (SMC). The study analysed how different student learning dispositions influence the extent to which students engage with new digital technologies in the context of their otherwise traditional schooling. What emerges from the study is the interesting finding that 'cognitive playfulness', defined as ‘the learner’s dexterity and agility in terms of intellectual curiosity and imagination/creativity’, is a key factor in predicting students’ valuing of the opportunities that Web 2.0 open-source digital learning affords. In presenting an empirical validation of this finding, the paper contributes new knowledge to the problematic relationship between 'student-led digitally-enhanced learning' and 'formal academic schooling'.https://culturalscience.org/articles/12
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan
Erica McWilliam
spellingShingle Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan
Erica McWilliam
Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
Cultural Science
author_facet Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan
Erica McWilliam
author_sort Jennifer Pei-Ling Tan
title Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
title_short Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
title_full Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
title_fullStr Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive Playfulness, Creative Capacity and Generation ‘C’ learners
title_sort cognitive playfulness, creative capacity and generation ‘c’ learners
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Cultural Science
issn 1836-0416
publishDate 2008-10-01
description This paper draws on an ongoing doctoral study of student engagement with new digital media technologies in a formal schooling environment to demonstrate the importance of 'playfulness' as a learning disposition. The study shows that cognitive 'playfulness' mobilises productive engagement with learning innovations in the context of a traditional learning culture. Specifically, the paper discusses findings that emerge from a quantitative study into the level of student engagement with, and usage of, one school’s digital innovation in the form of a new Student Media Centre (SMC). The study analysed how different student learning dispositions influence the extent to which students engage with new digital technologies in the context of their otherwise traditional schooling. What emerges from the study is the interesting finding that 'cognitive playfulness', defined as ‘the learner’s dexterity and agility in terms of intellectual curiosity and imagination/creativity’, is a key factor in predicting students’ valuing of the opportunities that Web 2.0 open-source digital learning affords. In presenting an empirical validation of this finding, the paper contributes new knowledge to the problematic relationship between 'student-led digitally-enhanced learning' and 'formal academic schooling'.
url https://culturalscience.org/articles/12
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