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Articles

Engagement in structured social space: an investigation of teachers' online peer-to-peer interaction

Pages 119-139 | Received 14 Jul 2015, Accepted 29 Sep 2015, Published online: 10 Nov 2015
 

Abstract

With a growing number of teachers engaging online with their peers, online social spaces are increasingly highlighted as playing a key role in teachers' professional learning and development. However, while academic and professional discourses tend to focus on the benefits and weaknesses of teachers' engagement in online social spaces, little attention has been given to the spaces themselves. Rooted in essentialist or instrumentalist assumptions about technology, these spaces are often conceptualised as neutral contexts, free from values, structures, and agendas that simply facilitate interaction. However, presenting data gathered during a year-long digital ethnography of three such spaces, this paper argues that they are in fact highly complex social environments that contain embedded structures relating to technical design and functionality, dominant discourses, and the agendas of parent organisations. Such structures shape user engagement and have a constructive influence over the ways in which teachers think about their subjects and themselves as professionals. Therefore, it is argued that in order to understand fully the place online social spaces could or should have in teachers' professional lives, the complex online environments in which teachers engage and the relationship between structure and agency must be analysed.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Dr James Robson teaches on the MSc Education (Learning and Technology) and the Masters in Learning and Teaching at Oxford University Department of Education, where he is also Coordinator for the Learning and New Technologies Research Group. His research interests include sociology of educational technology, online professional engagement and development, and digital research methods.

Notes

1. Figures reported online and accessed 12 May 2015.

2. Having made at least one post during the fieldwork period.

3. The majority of users in this study used their real names on their Facebook accounts, partly as they had initially joined Facebook to interact with their friends and being able to be found was important, and partly due to Facebook’s emphasis on users using their real names, deleting accounts in fake names if they are discovered.

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