Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education

This qualitative ethnographic study examines five American teenagers’ historical and current digitally-mediated multiliteracy practices within digital popular culture. The participants included three male and two female students of a private high school in the Midwestern United States. The study is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fawn Winterwood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI) 2010-02-01
Series:Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
Subjects:
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Online Access:http://dergipark.gov.tr/tojqi/issue/21389/229338?publisher=tojqi
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spelling doaj-47e11548ec4f48cab0d12c0768addeed2021-09-02T11:10:25ZengTurkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI)Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry1309-65912010-02-0112182810.17569/tojqi.96370538Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance EducationFawn WinterwoodThis qualitative ethnographic study examines five American teenagers’ historical and current digitally-mediated multiliteracy practices within digital popular culture. The participants included three male and two female students of a private high school in the Midwestern United States. The study is framed by the notion that literacy is a socially, culturally, and historically situated discursive construct rather than a purely individualized cognitive endeavor. This social constructivist theory of literacy emphasizes the social conditions necessary to navigate the economic, social, and political worlds of the 21st century. The purpose of the study was to explore the students’ multiliteracy practices that they enact through their activities within digital popular culture. Data collection methods included synchronous interviews facilitated by video conferencing tools as well as observation of the participants’ online activities and member checks conducted via email and instant messaging. The analytic strategy employed during this study was informed by Clarke’s (2005) situational analysis method. The study’s findings indicate that literacy practices in which the study participants have engaged through informal learning activities within digital youth culture have had a much greater impact on enabling them to cultivate the multimodal literacies necessary within a postmodern digital era than have their formal educational experienceshttp://dergipark.gov.tr/tojqi/issue/21389/229338?publisher=tojqi-Literacy multiliteracy digital popular culture online digital media youth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fawn Winterwood
spellingShingle Fawn Winterwood
Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
-
Literacy
multiliteracy
digital popular culture
online
digital media
youth
author_facet Fawn Winterwood
author_sort Fawn Winterwood
title Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
title_short Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
title_full Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
title_fullStr Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
title_full_unstemmed Informal Online Learning Practices: Implications for Distance Education
title_sort informal online learning practices: implications for distance education
publisher Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI)
series Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry
issn 1309-6591
publishDate 2010-02-01
description This qualitative ethnographic study examines five American teenagers’ historical and current digitally-mediated multiliteracy practices within digital popular culture. The participants included three male and two female students of a private high school in the Midwestern United States. The study is framed by the notion that literacy is a socially, culturally, and historically situated discursive construct rather than a purely individualized cognitive endeavor. This social constructivist theory of literacy emphasizes the social conditions necessary to navigate the economic, social, and political worlds of the 21st century. The purpose of the study was to explore the students’ multiliteracy practices that they enact through their activities within digital popular culture. Data collection methods included synchronous interviews facilitated by video conferencing tools as well as observation of the participants’ online activities and member checks conducted via email and instant messaging. The analytic strategy employed during this study was informed by Clarke’s (2005) situational analysis method. The study’s findings indicate that literacy practices in which the study participants have engaged through informal learning activities within digital youth culture have had a much greater impact on enabling them to cultivate the multimodal literacies necessary within a postmodern digital era than have their formal educational experiences
topic -
Literacy
multiliteracy
digital popular culture
online
digital media
youth
url http://dergipark.gov.tr/tojqi/issue/21389/229338?publisher=tojqi
work_keys_str_mv AT fawnwinterwood informalonlinelearningpracticesimplicationsfordistanceeducation
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