Developing & Investigating Methodologies for Researching Connected Learning (DIMRCL)

This week sees the first meeting of a new research network (DIMRCL) based at the LSE and  supported by the MAcArthur Foundation.

This working group brings together a unique set of international researchers, from the UK, Denmark, Finland, Italy and Norway who have been exploring and investigating ways to understand how learners might learn across different sites and locations. These include: learning across institutional frames- between in-, non- and semi- formal locations; learning on- and offline; through and in play; and across a range of cultural and interest driven spaces. The specific objective of the project is to clarify and typologise appropriate and innovative methodologies that have been used to characterise and capture new kinds of ‘connected learning’.

Whilst there is considerable academic and policy and innovation interest in connected learning as ways to harness the energies of learners themselves and to stimulate school reform, it is still a challenge for researchers to describe and know how connected learning takes place. This is significantly because satisfactory or agreed ways to ‘follow’ learners across, and between sites (either physical as in home/school/youth provision/with peers) or virtual (on fora, in gaming, social networks or via mobile technologies) or conceptually (tracing, translating and re-configuring understandings across contexts) is self –evidently complex and difficult. Methodological challenges are simultaneously: practical –  how to track  and physically follow learners; ethical and legal – how to ensure access and trust across social domains; and conceptual – what might constitute evidence of learning?

This working group will enable the sharing of best practice in two directions – firstly, ensuring that the emerging insights from active researchers on digital media learning are incorporated into on-going research (especially important since much of this work is very new and not yet published), and secondly, providing an opportunity for the insights developed within the workshops to be made publicly available for other researchers working on related projects internationally.

Principal Investigators: Sonia Livingstone, Julian Sefton-Green, Kirsten Drotner, Ola Erstad, Kristiina Kumpulainen, Nicoletta Vittadini