Session Information
16 SES 03 B, ICT in Adult Education
Paper Session
Contribution
This project has created a highly innovative three-dimensional (3D) virtual community called 'InterLife Island', and an associated communications infrastructure that is accessible though mobile technologies. Inter-Life Island is a place where young people can 'reconfigure' their life experiences and challenges in ways that help them to gain new perspectives, and explore new solutions to these challenges through a range of activities including visual and expressive arts. The island provides tools, resources, contexts and networks of support that extend the possibilities available to young people in the 'real world', in an attempt to push the boundaries of what Technology Enhanced Learning (TEL) might achieve in the cognitive, social and affective domains. The project is adopting Activity Theory as an overarching framework, in order to assist us in understanding the complex factors that influence the nature of interaction on the InterLife Island environment.
The project is specifically designed to research skills development by young people who are working together on InterLife Island in order to enhance their management of life transitions. This paper reports on five major objectives/questions of the project:
(i) Creating Inter-Life: an integrated educational environment of web-based and mobile technologies, that will support the development of a virtual working space for young people and their teachers (and other professionals where required) who
are engaged in activities to develop transition skills.
(ii) Developing a coherent set of educational, problem-based activities, within context-based 'scenarios', suitable for use in Inter-Life.
(iii) How participants act and develop socially in Inter-Life, while engaged in the designed creative 'scenarios',
(iv) How the opportunities to 'personalise' their involvement interact with these experiences, to effect engagement.
(v) How Inter-Life experiences contribute to Identity Formation and Self Image
The central aim of this research is to develop an integrated cultural ‘context’ of web-based and mobile technologies, called ‘Inter-Life’, and investigate how these can be used, together with a suite of ‘Transition Tools’, to support young people, individually, and in groups, through their key life transitions. Participants are connected to Inter-Life through their PC, mobile phone, or device, with asynchronous and real-time connections. Inter-Life is based in Second Life (Second Life, 2007), a commercial virtual reality environment. In this context, using the transition tools, we are investigating how the level of experiential and cultural ‘assets’ of individual and groups can be enhanced, and their ability to manage transitions, both individually and collaboratively, can be improved. This investigation focuses on how participants act and develop in Inter-Life, while engaged in two designed ‘scenarios’, and how the skills and understandings acquired (learning outcomes) ‘map’ onto their later ‘real world’ experiences of transition (Allan and Lewis, 2006).
Method
Expected Outcomes
References
Ahier, J. & Moore, R., 1999. Post-16 Education, Semi-dependent Youth and the Privatisation of Inter-age Transfers: re-theorising youth transition. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 20, 515-530. Allan, B. & Lewis, D., 2006. The impact of membership of a virtual learning community on individual learning careers and professional identity. British Journal Of Educational Technology, 37, 841-852. Beck, U., 1992. Risk Society: towards a new modernity London: Sage. Biesta, G., 2007. Bridging the gap between educational research and educational practice: The need for critical distance. Educational Research and Evaluation, 13, 295 - 301. De Laat, M.F. & Lally, V., 2003. Complexity, theory and praxis: Researching collaborative learning and tutoring processes in a networked learning community. Instructional Science, 31, 7-39. De Laat, M., Lally, V., Simons, R.-J. & Wenger, E., 2006. A Selective Analysis of Empirical Findings in Networked Learning Research in Higher Education: Questing for coherence. Educational Research Review, 1, 99-111. Furlong, J. & Cartmel, F., 1997. Young People and Social Change Buckingham, UK: Open University Press. Micari, M., Light, G., Calkins, S. & Streitwieser, B., 2007. Assessment Beyond Performance: Phenomenography in Educational Evaluation. American Journal of Evaluation, 28, 458-476. Sfard, A. & Prusak, A., 2005. Telling Identities: In Search of an Analytic Tool for Investigating Learning as a Culturally Shaped Activity. Educational Researcher, 34, 14-22.
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