Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-9-2021
Publication Title
Innovations in Education and Teaching International
Volume
58
Issue
5
First page number:
522
Last page number:
532
Abstract
Participation in collaborative learning environments has demonstrated significant learning advantages due to opportunities for group members to contribute to shared problem-solving processes, shared goals, and co-elaboration of knowledge. Furthermore, research has shown that higher levels of social perceptiveness are positively correlated with higher levels of group performance. However, collaboration is not always successful, sometimes exhibiting imbalances of power and status. In this study, positioning theory and interaction analysis were used to investigate (a) interactions in four racially and gender-mixed groups (of three university students each) working with technology and (b) their negotiated positions of power and status. Results showed that racial minority group members experienced a lower status as measured by behavioural indicators and rated participation as more inequitable. Results were exacerbated when minorities were also females. Findings demonstrate the usefulness of positioning theory for examining collaborative interactions and have important implications for future CSCL research in both organisational and classroom settings.
Keywords
Computer supported collaborative learning; Gender; Interaction analysis; Positioning theory; Race; Status; Technology artifact
Disciplines
Community-Based Learning | Educational Sociology
File Format
File Size
235 KB
Rights
IN COPYRIGHT. For more information about this rights statement, please visit http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Repository Citation
Nishiyama, C.,
Nussbaum, M. E.,
Van Winkle, M. S.
(2021).
The Real Me: Shared Technology’s Impact on Status From the Lens of Positioning Theory.
Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 58(5),
522-532.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14703297.2021.1961096