(Re/dis)assembling learning practices online with fluid objects and spaces
Author(s)
Thompson, Terrie LynnContributor(s)
EducationKeywords
work-learningonline communities
actor network theory
Web2.0
self-employed workers
adult education
online learning
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Show full item recordAbstract
Actor Network Theory (ANT) is used to explore how work-learning is enacted in informal online communities and illustrates how researchers might use sociomaterial approaches to uncover complexities, uncertainties, and specificities of work-learning practices. Participants in this study were self-employed workers. The relational and material aspects of work-learning, along with notions of the workspace of the self-employed as hybrid, distributed, and shifting, are considered. This study then examines the work that web-technologies, such as postings, do as they are entangled in an array of networks. Far from being singular objects unified in function, form, or effect, the posting provides multiple entry points for exploring online work-learning practices. The informal learning enacted in this study was the effect of multiple networks and attempts to stabilize fluidity. Different associations with knowledge and novel ways of knowing were also enacted, although there are contradictions between Web2.0 rhetoric and the practices of these self-employed workers. Findings suggest that practitioners and researchers should not be too quick to paint work-learning practices in online communities, or even the notion of online community, with a broad brush.Date
2015-08-12Type
Journal ArticleIdentifier
oai:dspace.stir.ac.uk:1893/18615http://hdl.handle.net/1893/18615
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0158037X.2011.613377
000310313900002