Abstract

The use of video analysis in Design-Based Research (DBR) seems to be promising, because the quality of video data matches the reality of educational fields. Educational fields are multidimensional and complex. And more than other types of data, video may capture, for example, the simultaneity of verbal and non-verbal interactions. This seems to be valuable in the quest for new insights and better designs of educational interventions. However, to date there has been limited use of video data in researching their design. This paper aims at reflecting how the benefits of video-based analysis may be utilised in DBR. Experiences with the collection and analysis of video data in a project to design self-organised learning (SOL) at a vocational school in Germany will be used as a case study to illustrate the type of findings that may feed into the DBR process. In this case, the project school had already introduced a sophisticated SOL model but was experiencing various implementation difficulties. Resolving issues like this requires insights into how exactly a concept is realised and what happens in the field. Therefore, video data on classroom interactions was gathered and sub-sequently analysed using the documentary method. This led to the reconstruction of two different types of orientation that were guiding the students when they dealt with their self-organised learning environment. In a subversive orientation, students playfully infiltrate the formal learning space with peer activities. In a confirming orientation, students stick to both, the (informal) rules of the (formal) learning arrangement and of the peer environment, thus expressing respect for the boundary between these two worlds. These findings have been used to redesign the SOL intervention.

Highlights

  • As Design-Based Research (DBR) in educational fields relies on an understanding of how interventions work on the ground in order to improve design and to contribute to theory development, it includes the collection and analysis of empirical data

  • Most DBR projects have relied on data sources such as protocols on interventions and meetings, on work results produced while testing pilots, on observation sheets, transcripts of interviews with teachers and learners, and on questionnaire-based responses of participants

  • This is in spite of the potential benefits of video analysis, which are rooted in the multimodal nature of video data that allows for a study of interactions that are happening simultaneously

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Summary

Introduction

As Design-Based Research (DBR) in educational fields relies on an understanding of how interventions work on the ground in order to improve design and to contribute to theory development, it includes the collection and analysis of empirical data. G. Brahm, 2017, 9) This is in spite of the potential benefits of video analysis, which are rooted in the multimodal nature of video data that allows for a study of interactions that are happening simultaneously. In terms of features such as complexity and volume of data, videos are very different from other sources such as text-based protocols or self-reported information acquired by questionnaires This is to say, what makes videos rich and meaningful, is what makes them difficult to analyse, because one has to deal with large amounts of data (cf Erikson, 2006; de Freitas, 2016). Qualitative-reconstructive analysis may be one of the ways to overcome these difficulties To put this in context, alternative approaches to working with video data in educational research are introduced in the following subsection

Forms of video analysis in educational research
Video-based teaching quality research
Educational videography
Video analysis in Design-Based Research
Development of the self-organised learning design at the pilot school
Collection and analysis of video data on classroom interactions
Findings
Subversive and confirming types of orientation
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