Decentring of the Traditional University

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activity
activity theory
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Advanced Knowledge Work
Author_Russell Francis
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Cognitive Ecology
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culture
Culture Industry Model
Desktop Environment
digital literacy
Emerging Media Landscape
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Online Special Interest Groups
participatory
participatory media in higher education
Peripheral Devices
Personal Development
projective
Projective Identity
self-directed
Self-directed Learning Activity
Self-making Activities
Social Software Tools
socio-cultural theory
USB Memory Stick
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work

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415681001
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jun 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Decentring of the Traditional University provides a unique perspective on the implications of media change for learning and literacy that allows us to peer into the future of (self) education. Each chapter draws on socio-cultural and activity theory to investigate how resourceful students are breaking away from traditional modes of instruction and educating themselves through engagement with a globally interconnected web-based participatory culture.

The argument is developed with reference to the findings of an ethnographic study that focused on university students’ informal uses of social and participatory media. Each chapter draws attention to the shifting locus of agency for regulating and managing learning and describes an emergent genre of learning activity. For example, Francis explores how students are cultivating and nurturing globally distributed funds of living knowledge that transcend institutional boundaries and describes students learning through serious play in virtually figured worlds that support radically personalised lifelong learning agendas. These stories also highlight the challenges and choices learners confront as they struggle to negotiate the faultlines of media convergence and master the new media literacies required to exploit the full potential of Web 2.0 as a learning resource.

Overall, this compelling argument proposes that we are witnessing a period of historic systemic change in the culture of university learning as an emergent web-based participatory culture starts to disrupt and displace a top-down culture industry model of education that has evolved around the medium of the book. As a result, Francis argues that we need to re-conceive higher education as an identity-project in which students work on their projective identities (or imagined future selves) through engagement with both formal and informal learning activities.

Russell Francis is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Linnaeus Centre for Research on Learning, Interaction and Mediated Communications in Contemporary Society (LinCS), University of Gothenburg, Sweden and a Research Fellow at the Department of Education, University of Oxford, UK.

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