Premium
Learning spaces, learning environments and the dis‘placement’ of learning
Author(s) -
Thomas Herbert
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
british journal of educational technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.79
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1467-8535
pISSN - 0007-1013
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8535.2009.00974.x
Subject(s) - experiential learning , avatar , educational technology , space (punctuation) , sociology , active learning (machine learning) , learning sciences , synchronous learning , concept learning , epistemology , aesthetics , psychology , cooperative learning , computer science , human–computer interaction , pedagogy , teaching method , mathematics education , artificial intelligence , art , philosophy , operating system
Traditionally, at least according to popular wisdom, learning took place in venues that were custom‐designed for the purpose. The purpose, given the evidence of the artefacts with which we are confronted, seems to have been the educational equivalent of the production line that so succinctly characterised the industrialisation of society. One consequence of this design logic, however, is that learning is defined as something that is married to a ‘place’. This paper will argue that the conceptual ‘slippage’ that characterises the disappearing differences between ‘learning spaces’ and ‘learning environments’, coupled with the further ‘displacement’ of the learner (turned avatar) in virtual spaces such as Facebook and Second Life, serves to ‘displace’ learning itself. The paper argues further that we have failed to recognise the primacy of ‘physical situatedness’ to our conceptions of learning itself. In short, our difficulty in understanding and articulating the nature of learning is partly brought about by our inability to articulate where learning takes place—in a world characterised by virtual space and electronic selves. If we are to articulate the nature of learning in our age, then we need to articulate the nature of the real and virtual spaces and bodies that we inhabit.