Abstract

Student engagement is significantly related to both retention and learning outcomes. Hence, teachers need to consider how their practices affect student engagement. Applying design-based research (DBR), the purpose of this study was to approach influencers of student engagement and explore how teachers and researchers collaboratively could develop learning activities with learning technologies (LTs) to facilitate this. The intervention included an online assessment application, a virtual learning environment (VLE) and an additional tablet for the teacher. The teacher constantly carried the tablet around and used it to access the students’ shared workspace. The intervention was implemented in two classes in an upper secondary school. The study focuses on teachers’ experience and instruction. Three observations of the implementation of learning design and intervention evaluations were analysed. The results indicate that the teachers and researchers could design learning activities that facilitate student engagement. Engagement was facilitated as hindrances to engagement were identified and approached. The suggested solutions shaped the design of the learning activity and included LTs which provided insights into the students’ learning processes and thereby increased the teacher’s ability to scaffold learning and provide timely feedback. The LTs used opened up for additional ways for students to engage with the content, peers and contributions which motivated students to direct their energy toward task. When conditions for learning changed as a result of implementing LTs, both student interaction and teacher practices were affected. However, it was not observed that the teacher would sustain the design without support. This emphasises the need for educational goals and visions to be consistent and communicated to practitioners; otherwise, teachers will not have the guidance needed to advance or evaluate their professional development.

Highlights

  • Teacher-researcher collaboration to facilitate engagement The design-based research (DBR) project had as its aim to collaboratively work with teachers to increase engagement

  • Concerning the second research question – how student engagement was facilitated during the intervention – our results show that the interactions shifted from being student–content orientated to student–peer and student– teacher oriented

  • virtual learning environment (VLE) are not typically associated with student engagement, our results indicated that the tool could function to other technologies with more novelty or ‘wow’ factor if the aim is underpinned by facilitating engagement through supporting interaction and participation

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Summary

Introduction

This is partly due to the adoption of technologies in teaching and learning (Kirschner, 2015; Laurillard, 2012). Critique has been raised concerning educational institutions’ slow uptake of technologies, on the one hand (e.g. Johnson, Smith, Willis, Levine, & Haywood, 2011), and how the tools are used on the other (Laurillard, 2012; Håkansson-Lindqvist, 2015). Apart from concluding that teaching remains traditional, even when LTs are implemented (Gudmundsdóttir, Dalaaker, Egeberg, Hatlevik, & Tømte, 2014), it has been pointed out that the strategies needed to engage students when using LTs may not be the same as those used in classrooms without technologies (Weitze Laerke, 2016)

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