‘Everything is connected’: Exploring the intersections between life, work, play and education through student use of technology in self-directed learning
Author(s)
Bryant, PeterKeywords
Higher EducationStudent Satisfaction
Learning
Digital Storytelling
Self-Directed learning
Educational Technology
FoR::130203 - Economics, Business and Management Curriculum and Pedagogy
FoR::130306 - Educational Technology and Computing
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http://hdl.handle.net/2123/20941Abstract
How students engage in learning outside the classroom is complex and in part a self-determined activity. Occurring in spaces on and off campus and using technology students themselves bring to their learning or provided for them by the University, self-directed learning has increasingly become a fractured, unsupported and unstructured component of modern higher education. This article draws on the digital stories of 182 students at the London School of Economics and Political Science (UK) to interrogate how students respond and react to the requirements of learning arising from classroom teaching and summative assessment. The stories exposed liminal spaces in which students are constructing learning in unique and some fragile interconnections between life, work, play and learning.Business
Date
2019-08-21Type
Conference paperIdentifier
oai:ses.library.usyd.edu.au:2123/20941Bryant, P (2018). ‘Everything is connected’: Exploring the intersections between life, work, play and education through student use of technology in self-directed learning. In M. Campbell, J. Willems, C. Adachi, D. Blake, I. Doherty, S. Krishnan, S. Macfarlane, L. Ngo, M. O’Donnell, S. Palmer, L. Riddell, I. Story, H. Suri & J. Tai (Eds.), Open Oceans: Learning without borders. Proceedings ASCILITE 2018 Geelong (pp. 73- 81).
http://hdl.handle.net/2123/20941