Abstract

Mediated lifeworlds and a diversity of physical, geographical, technological, cultural, and social mobilities involve new challenges for education and learning in a digital age. In recent years, a variety of corresponding conceptualizations and methods has been developed in educational research and practice. One the one hand, we find technologically or culturally abridged concepts and reductionist approaches, more or less dealing with one category or dimension of the topic. On the other hand, there are ambitious approaches dealing with the enormous complexities of the issues concerned. The latter frequently refer to ecological or mobilities frameworks. Moreover, among the many ‹turns› that have been claimed after the linguistic turn, especially the ecological turn and the mobilities turn play an important role in the context of theorizing mobile learning and education. For one thing, a new mobilities paradigm has been proposed, then again various ecological approaches have been promoted, among them media ecology, information ecology, knowledge ecology, socio-cultural ecology, communicative ecology, political ecology, and ecologies of affect. In addition, there are different understandings of ecology, for example, as environment, social movement, moral norm, or network theory. The paper reflects on potentials and limitations of mobilities and ecologies as theoretical frameworks in the context of mobile learning.

Highlights

  • Medialisierte Lebenswelten und die Vielgestaltigkeit physischer, geografischer, technologischer, kultureller und sozialer Mobilitäten stellen neue Herausforderungen für Bildung und Lernen im digitalen Zeitalter dar

  • The reference to a fourth industrial revolution, which was linked by the German Federal Government to the code ‹4.0› in connection with the development of a high-tech strategy, aims at a profound change in production, business and value-added processes and at the creation of highly complex, networked structures in which autonomous people and machines as well as digital technologies and cyberphysical systems (CPS) interact in a result-oriented and profitable manner

  • We refer to all socio-cultural dynamics of change and transformation that somehow have to do with the spread and increasing use of digital technologies as ‹digitization›, significant dynamics at the interfaces of media, cultural, social and technological developments are not adequately brought into focus

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Summary

Ecologies and the Ecological Turn

As regards the matter, dealing with communication systems as environments is as old as dealing with cave paintings (cf. Krippendorf 1994). Similar like other theoretical concepts of ecologies of media, information, or knowledge, their concept of a socio-cultural ecology aims at bridging divides of humanities and natural sciences in media and educational studies It is based on a «triangle model of socio-cultural development with the three nodes of societal and technological structures of the mobile complex, user agency and the cultural practices of media use and learning» (ibd., 5). It can be connected with both, theoretical work and educational practices, and it can be fruitfully harnessed for bridging different ecological spheres like practices of media acquisition and (mobile) learning in formal and informal contexts (cf Rummler 2014)

Mobilities and the Mobility Turn
Discussion
Challenges for Researching Mobile Learning
Conclusion
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