Connected Youth, Connected Classrooms

In this newly published article in the special issue on smartphones in classrooms, the QUINT researchers study how recent and rapid increase in students' use of smartphones in classrooms affects organisation of participation and how it is carried out in teaching and learning situations, particularly in relation to plenary teaching in whole-class interaction.

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Abstract

The aim of this article is to study how recent and rapid increase in students' use of smartphones in classrooms affects how participation is organized and carried out in teaching and learning situations, particularly in relation to plenary teaching in whole-class interaction. Smartphones are new artifacts in the classroom that afford changed possibilities for participation in social interaction. This raises questions about to what extent well-established and well-known patterns of classroom participation are still valid, in particular with respect to the fundamental turn-taking organization of plenary teaching. The empirical data consists of video recordings from multiple sources during 158 h of lessons in Swedish and Finnish upper secondary classrooms. Selected interactions involving smartphone use during plenary teaching were transcribed and represented with regard to multimodal aspects of both face-to-face and screenbased interactions. Analysis was carried out using conversation analysis (CA), drawing on the concept participation framework. The main conclusion of the article is that student smartphone use significantly alters participation patterns in whole-class interaction, but in different ways from the students' respective teachers' perspective. However, student phone use is not oriented to as interactionally problematic, or as threatening the basic participation organization of the dominance of IRE-patterns during plenary teaching.

Full information

Fritjof Sahlström, Marie Tanner, and Verneri Valasmo "Connected youth, connected classrooms. Smartphone use and student and teacher participation during plenary teaching", Special Issue Learning, Culture and Social InteractionVolume 21, 2019.

DOI: 10.1016/j.lcsi.2019.03.008

Open Access

Postprint version (link to the institutional archive)

Published Nov. 5, 2019 12:12 PM - Last modified Sep. 17, 2021 12:34 PM