Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

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Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms. / Pischetola, Magda; Dirckinck-Holmfeld, Lone.

Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020. 2020. (Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pischetola, M & Dirckinck-Holmfeld, L 2020, Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms. in Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020. Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference.

APA

Pischetola, M., & Dirckinck-Holmfeld, L. (2020). Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms. In Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020 Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference

Vancouver

Pischetola M, Dirckinck-Holmfeld L. Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms. In Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020. 2020. (Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference).

Author

Pischetola, Magda ; Dirckinck-Holmfeld, Lone. / Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms. Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020. 2020. (Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{4eaf31599d9043f58f9c3c65f37d03fa,
title = "Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms",
abstract = "Within the field of education, the concept of active learning building on constructivism has emerged as a dominant framework of the past three decades. This perspective is critical to the objectivist idea that knowledge is something static, as an object to be acquired from the external world. Instead, it states that the learner is responsible for the knowledge construction, and therefore shall become autonomous towards this goal. From an epistemological point of view, despite the important shift of assumptions that this viewpoint has brought to education, constructivism still presents some shortcomings in terms of a change of the instructional paradigm. This paper takes a step forward and explores enactivism, as an alternative philosophical and educational worldview. It presents a theoretical discussion of the enactivist perspective and its differences from objectivism and constructivism. Enactivism proposes a more radical alternative to dualistic and objective approach, as it focuses on the intertwined and multiple interactions between mind, body and the environment. The two main perspectives of enactivism, which we grouped into the categories of “embodied cognition” and “situated cognition”, are present in the field of education. The paper relates them to the two core concepts of reflection and intentionality. Drawing on these theoretical considerations, the paper applies the framework of enaction to a fieldwork research in a Danish school discussing how this concept may provide some new lenses to understand the potential of participatory approaches to the implementation of a digital learning platform. The intervention was organised through two workshops. The first workshop use the technique of the future workshop (Jung & M{\"u}ller, 1984), which includes a critique phase and a fantasy phase. The second workshop (14 days later) was a design-workshop.This intervention is an example of how to understand enactive modelling, considering the relations between the participants and the environment as a dynamic and emerging relation of autonomy-dependency,a symbiosis. The analysis shows that the implementation takes place into an ecological living system made up of humans, non - humans, things, and societal entities. For the teachers (and more general the humans) to possibly accept, appropriate, act and re-enact such a learning infrastructure, it is of great importance to establish spaces for reflections, which e.g. a future workshop provides, and to support and facilitate (alternative) enactments of some of the more hidden affordances of the digital learning platform.",
keywords = "Enactivism, Digital platforms, Educational research",
author = "Magda Pischetola and Lone Dirckinck-Holmfeld",
note = "Networked Learning Conference 2020, NLC ; Conference date: 18-05-2020 Through 20-05-2020",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
series = "Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference",
booktitle = "Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Enactivism and Digital Learning Platforms

AU - Pischetola, Magda

AU - Dirckinck-Holmfeld, Lone

N1 - Networked Learning Conference 2020, NLC ; Conference date: 18-05-2020 Through 20-05-2020

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Within the field of education, the concept of active learning building on constructivism has emerged as a dominant framework of the past three decades. This perspective is critical to the objectivist idea that knowledge is something static, as an object to be acquired from the external world. Instead, it states that the learner is responsible for the knowledge construction, and therefore shall become autonomous towards this goal. From an epistemological point of view, despite the important shift of assumptions that this viewpoint has brought to education, constructivism still presents some shortcomings in terms of a change of the instructional paradigm. This paper takes a step forward and explores enactivism, as an alternative philosophical and educational worldview. It presents a theoretical discussion of the enactivist perspective and its differences from objectivism and constructivism. Enactivism proposes a more radical alternative to dualistic and objective approach, as it focuses on the intertwined and multiple interactions between mind, body and the environment. The two main perspectives of enactivism, which we grouped into the categories of “embodied cognition” and “situated cognition”, are present in the field of education. The paper relates them to the two core concepts of reflection and intentionality. Drawing on these theoretical considerations, the paper applies the framework of enaction to a fieldwork research in a Danish school discussing how this concept may provide some new lenses to understand the potential of participatory approaches to the implementation of a digital learning platform. The intervention was organised through two workshops. The first workshop use the technique of the future workshop (Jung & Müller, 1984), which includes a critique phase and a fantasy phase. The second workshop (14 days later) was a design-workshop.This intervention is an example of how to understand enactive modelling, considering the relations between the participants and the environment as a dynamic and emerging relation of autonomy-dependency,a symbiosis. The analysis shows that the implementation takes place into an ecological living system made up of humans, non - humans, things, and societal entities. For the teachers (and more general the humans) to possibly accept, appropriate, act and re-enact such a learning infrastructure, it is of great importance to establish spaces for reflections, which e.g. a future workshop provides, and to support and facilitate (alternative) enactments of some of the more hidden affordances of the digital learning platform.

AB - Within the field of education, the concept of active learning building on constructivism has emerged as a dominant framework of the past three decades. This perspective is critical to the objectivist idea that knowledge is something static, as an object to be acquired from the external world. Instead, it states that the learner is responsible for the knowledge construction, and therefore shall become autonomous towards this goal. From an epistemological point of view, despite the important shift of assumptions that this viewpoint has brought to education, constructivism still presents some shortcomings in terms of a change of the instructional paradigm. This paper takes a step forward and explores enactivism, as an alternative philosophical and educational worldview. It presents a theoretical discussion of the enactivist perspective and its differences from objectivism and constructivism. Enactivism proposes a more radical alternative to dualistic and objective approach, as it focuses on the intertwined and multiple interactions between mind, body and the environment. The two main perspectives of enactivism, which we grouped into the categories of “embodied cognition” and “situated cognition”, are present in the field of education. The paper relates them to the two core concepts of reflection and intentionality. Drawing on these theoretical considerations, the paper applies the framework of enaction to a fieldwork research in a Danish school discussing how this concept may provide some new lenses to understand the potential of participatory approaches to the implementation of a digital learning platform. The intervention was organised through two workshops. The first workshop use the technique of the future workshop (Jung & Müller, 1984), which includes a critique phase and a fantasy phase. The second workshop (14 days later) was a design-workshop.This intervention is an example of how to understand enactive modelling, considering the relations between the participants and the environment as a dynamic and emerging relation of autonomy-dependency,a symbiosis. The analysis shows that the implementation takes place into an ecological living system made up of humans, non - humans, things, and societal entities. For the teachers (and more general the humans) to possibly accept, appropriate, act and re-enact such a learning infrastructure, it is of great importance to establish spaces for reflections, which e.g. a future workshop provides, and to support and facilitate (alternative) enactments of some of the more hidden affordances of the digital learning platform.

KW - Enactivism

KW - Digital platforms

KW - Educational research

M3 - Article in proceedings

T3 - Proceedings of the Networked Learning Conference

BT - Proceedings of Networked Learning Conference 2020

ER -

ID: 318545101