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Cultivating a Personal Learning Network that Leads to Professional Change
Dissertation Proposal
Submitted to Northcentral University
Graduate Faculty of the School of Education
in Partial Fulfillment of the
Requirements for the Degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
by
BENJAMIN STEWART
Prescott Valley, Arizona
July, 2012
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal
Abstract
Professional development stems from what an educator knows and is capable of doing. In the
past, professional development has been rooted in local workshops, conferences, and other iso-
lated learning pursuits that have often left a gap between theory and practice. Today, open infor-
mal dialogues about teaching and learning have been found to have a positive impact on profes-
sional learning that leads to higher student achievement. Improving student achievement in
Mexico is currently a problem in Mexico where students are well behind other countries in terms
of their reading, math, and science scores. To address this issue, researching how informal peda-
gogical dialogues emerge will provide the professional learning framework necessary to yield the
open and ongoing teacher support needed to increase student achievement. A multiple case
study will explore how 21-30 English-as-a-foreign language (EFL) educators from three differ-
ent Mexican universities interact within a personal learning network in terms of ideational, mate-
rial, and social interactions. Utilizing a qualitative research design, data will be collected using
an initial survey, public websites, focus groups, and interviews. A cross-case analysis will be
conducted in order to recognize divergent and convergent patterns between PLNs themselves as
well as between contextual information related to each case. The findings show that…
i
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal
Table of Contents
List of Tables iv
List of Figures v
Chapter 1: Introduction 1
Background2Problem Statement 6Purpose 8Theoretical Framework 10Research Questions14Nature of the Study15Significance 16Definitions 17Summary 21
Chapter 2: Literature Review 23
EFL Teaching Knowledge 25Professional learning community 39The Complexity of Learning 48Actor-network Theory (ANT) 54Personal Learning Network (PLN)59Summary 66
Chapter 3: Research Method 68
Research Method and Design 70Participants 72Materials/Instruments 73Data Collection, Processing, and Analysis 77Methodological Assumptions, Limitations, and Delimitations 87Ethical Assurances 88Summary 91
References 93
Appendix A 106
ii
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal
EFL/ESL Teacher Survey 106Appendix B 116
Informed Consent Form 116Appendix C 118
iii
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal
List of Tables
iv
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal
List of Figures
v
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 1
Chapter 1: Introduction
One of the most effective means of professional development is through informal
dialogues about teaching and learning (Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development, 2011). But professional learning is complex and can depend on how people
socially interact with each other, the materials they use to remain active, and the emerging ideas
that result from social dialogue. Developing pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) as a network
between ideas, material, and people ultimately emerges from a complex process that is highly
specific to the context, situation, and person (Driel & Berry, 2012). Indeed, understanding PCK
can be viewed as an ideational, material, and social network of nodes that is in a constant state of
flux. Through an actor-network theory worldview, network nodes can be viewed as actants
which are any physical or non-physical entities that have an effect on some other actants (Latour
& Harman, 2010). Through semiotics, a holistic view of language, visual signs, and symbols
provides a clearer picture of any given phenomenon (Lawes, 2002).
The purpose of this research is to explore how educators in higher education interpret
personal interactions and related material use to an open and ongoing contribution to one's
professional learning (i.e., changes to one's understandings and behavior). The objective is to
provide an open and sharing professional learning framework that can be adapted across various
disciplines and educational contexts. This study seeks to better understand the distributed nature
of learning, specifically the role of materiality in the workplace (e.g., professional web tools) and
the basic assumptions of what constitutes professional learning (Fenwick, 2009; Fenwick, 2010).
The results of this study will contribute to the scant research currently available regarding how
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 2
facilitative discussions permit open and diverse discourse through the development of means,
ways, and ends (Zhang, Lundeberg, & Eberhardt, 2011).
Chapter 1 begins by providing some background that sets up the problem statement
related to the lack of professional learning support for educators in Mexico who are concerned
with the low scores students currently have in reading, math, and science. After the problem
statement as been presented, the purpose of the study follows leading up to the theoretical
framework for the research and the research questions. The chapter concludes by explaining the
nature of the study and its significance to the current body of literature.
Background
What constitutes a successful educational institution has been well-researched and can be
summed up as follows: educators begin with certain prerequisites (i.e., knowledge, interpersonal
skills, and technical skills) that provide the basis for instructional leaders to design tasks (i.e.,
direct assistance, group development, professional development, curriculum development, and
action research) that set out to unify organizational goals with teacher needs with the sole intent
of improving student achievement (Glickman, Gordon, & Ross-Gordon, 2007). But a more
specific narrative around professional development appeals to more complex and non-linear
attributes of the learning process. For instance, professional development can be termed as
teacher development which Glatthorn (1995) defines as “the professional growth a teacher
achieves as a result of gaining increased experience and examining his or her teaching
systematically” (as cited in Villegas-Reimers, 2003, p. 11). Understanding what constitutes
professional growth (i.e., learning) uncovers the complexity and non-linear aspects of the
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 3
learning process that instructional leaders need when trying to unify institutional goals with
teacher needs.
Understanding the complexity of professional learning is contingent on how teacher
knowledge is defined. The development of pedagogical content knowledge (PCK), for example,
emerges from a complex process that is highly specific to the context, situation, and person
(Driel & Berry, 2012). PCK is that expertise that allows teachers to effectively and efficiently
present subject matter to students (Shulman, 1986). But English language educators who learn
English as an additional language require additional knowledge. Termed language teacher
competence (LTC), this type of knowledge stems from three relational and interdependent
domains: (i) language competence (i.e., the ability to communicate meaning), (ii) pedagogical
competence (i.e., skill sets of one person that prompt learning in another person), and (iii)
language awareness (i.e., knowledge about language or KAL) (Cots & Arnó, 2005). For EFL
educators working in Mexico who have learned English as an additional language, they must
then contend with the following types of knowledge: (a) content knowledge (non-linguistic), (b)
pedagogical knowledge, (c) language proficiency knowledge (i.e., ability to speak and writing in
an additional language), and (d) language awareness (i.e., knowledge of applied linguistics). If
professional learning for native-speaking educators is complex, professional learning for those
educators who teach using an additional language becomes even more complex given the types
of knowledge involved. Given the current state of the educational system in Mexico, gaining a
better understanding of what constitutes professional learning remains crucial.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 4
The reason EFL educators are the focus of a professional learning inquiry is twofold: (a)
understanding how EFL educators learn will also provide a possible model for those
monolingual educators who either do not have concerns with language (between students and
teacher) or who might have concerns with language and wish to know more and (b) bilingual
educators are in a better position than those educators who only speak English or Spanish so that
they might potentially interact with more English and Spanish-speaking communities through
both face-to-face dialogues and public web sites. Also, there is currently little support for
professional development in Mexico, which trails 21 other countries from around the world: just
over 40% of Mexican teachers receive support compared to an average of nearly 70% among
other countries from around the world (Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development, 2011). Due to the lack of support in professional development, little can be done
to improve an educational system that trails behind 48 other countries when comparing student
scores in reading, math, and science (Shepherd, 2010).
To provide additional professional development support to EFL educators in Mexico, a
better understanding of how informal dialogues related to teaching and learning is needed. Of all
the different types of professional development that have been used in the past (e.g., education
conferences and seminars, mentor and peer observation, and professional development
networks), informal dialogues that improve teaching rank the highest in relation to its impact on
student learning (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2011). Therefore,
understanding how informal dialogues emerge remains the objective of this study; one that
appeals to complex, adaptive, nonlinear feedback networks that places leadership not as a top-
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 5
down directive that treats teachers as objects, but rather as an emergent, interactive process
embedded in context and history (Uhl-Bien, 2011). This is a shift towards focusing on people
and away from a more traditional approach that is directed towards practices and programs
where (a) isolated workshops, (b) changing initiatives that fail to create a conducive learning
environment, and (c) implementing summative assessments that simply recapitulate past events
with little-to-no ongoing support are the norm (Reeves, 2010). Focusing on people through
informal dialogues about teaching and learning provides the basis for cultivating a personal
learning network that provides the support educators need to increase professional learning.
In order to research informal dialogues related to teaching and learning, a professional
learning community is contrasted to that of a personal learning network (PLN). A professional
learning community consists of a domain, practice, and community (Wenger, McDermott, Y
Snyder, 2002). There are elements of shared interested, shared set of practices, and joint
membership in a professional learning community that set it apart from a PLN. A PLN in
contrast, is a collection of connected patterns that join (a) concepts, ideas, perspectives, and
beliefs; (b) objects, materials, technologies, and artifacts; and (c) people. PLN can occur
synchronously (i.e., real time), semisynchronously (i.e., nearly real time, such as microblogging),
and asynchronously (i.e., aggregators, videocasts, etc.), and although PLNs can roam beyond
normal geographical areas, they can easily be limited to like-minded discussions (Warlick,
2009). So although this limitation might also apply to professional learning communities, a PLN
offers the greatest potential for diverse dialogues when educators stretch their worldviews to
appreciate a wider range of perspectives. This research will investigate how informal dialogues
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 6
related to teaching and learning emerge in terms of a PLN. The lens from which a PLN will be
presented will be rooted in complexity theory and ANT.
One of the tenets of ANT is the notion of actants. An actant is any physical or non-
physical entity that has an effect on some other actant, which can also be a series of embedded
actors, just as human cells make up a person (i.e., teacher) who makes up a department, which
makes up a school, etc. (Latour & Harman, 2010). Another aspect of ANT is the notion of
semiotics. Semiotics refers to how interpretation is dependent on a holistic view of how
language, visual signs, symbols, etc. collectively provide a clear picture of any given
phenomenon (Lawes, 2002). Thus, a material semiotics approach to this study will set the level
of complexity behind how ideational, material, and social entities relate and form patterns that
contribute to one’s professional learning. The goal of this research is to explore the complexities
and relationships behind the informal dialogues that EFL educators engage in so that such
learning environments can be created in a variety of contexts, across a variety of disciplines. If
this can be achieved, then more opportunities for more open, ongoing professional development
support will result which is currently lacking in Mexico’s educational system.
Problem Statement
The educational system in Mexico currently trails behind 48 other countries in terms of
student scores in reading, math, and science (Shepherd, 2010). Furthermore, educators find little
support for their own professional development in Mexico, which trails 21 other countries from
around the world – just over 40% of Mexican teachers receive support compared to a global
average of nearly 70% (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2011). The
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 7
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) report also suggests that 60-
65% of Mexican teachers have no formal induction and mentoring programs, which is high when
compared to a global average of only18-20%. Of all the different types of professional
development being implemented across schools (e.g., education conferences and seminars,
mentor and peer observation, and professional development network), informal dialogues that
improve teaching rank the highest even though most professional development efforts are limited
to ineffective workshops and conferences (Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development, 2011; Darling-Hammond, 2010).
At present, little research exists relating the distributed nature of learning, specifically the
role of materiality in the workplace (e.g., professional web tools) and the basic assumptions of
what constitutes professional learning (Fenwick, 2009; Fenwick, 2010). By understanding the
role of materiality and the basic assumptions of what constitutes professional learning, designing
a professional learning experience that focuses on the informal dialogues that improve teaching
provides the first step in addressing the relationship between teaching and student achievement.
This multiple case study seeks to explore how ideas, materials, and English-as-a-foreign-
language (EFL) educators in Mexico socially interact with others via primarily online informal
dialogues geared towards improving teaching and learning. EFL educators in Mexico were
chosen in order to provide a model of professional development that is feasible and scalable to an
international narrative that potentially could extend to over 120 English and Spanish-speaking
countries (i.e., more than 19 million people) (NationMaster.com, 2012). Failure to conduct such
a study will lead to a continued lack of support for professional development that currently is
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 8
needed to improve the educational system in Mexico.
Purpose
As a means for providing better professional development support in Mexico, a
qualitative multiple case study seeks to explain how EFL educators interact with ideas, materials,
and with other educators through open, informal dialogues based on how to improve teaching
and learning. Specifically, this study will explain how EFL educators in higher education who
currently teach at three different universities in Mexico conduct open, informal dialogues and
contributions to open educational resources (OERs) within public web sites. The EduQuiki
(2012) wiki will be the initial hosting web site where contributions and forum discussions will
originate. But since participants will be given the option to contribute to the public web site of
their choice, additional web sites may also be used. To obtain information about informal
dialogues about teaching and learning, various data collection strategies will be employed:
electronic artifacts which include contributions and informal dialogues uploaded to the Internet,
user statistics obtained by Wikispaces (e.g., page hits and number of user edits), focus groups,
and pre- and post-interviews. An exploratory study, the purpose is to analyze how participants
connect ideas, opinions, and perspective; materials; and individual educators via a personal
learning network in such a way that fosters informal pedagogical dialogues. And since most of
the informal dialogues will be conducted openly online, a secondary purpose is to understand
what challenges EFL educators face when conversing with others in public web sites.
In order to study how participants conduct informal pedagogical dialogues in public web
sites and to better understand the challenges they face when doing so, three types of online
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 9
textual data will be collected: (a) contributions, (b) informal dialogues, and (c) personal
reflections. Contributions will be based on evidence of educators creating, reusing, remixing,
and redistributing electronic artifacts in the form of open educational resources. Informal
dialogues are those synchronously, semi-synchronously, or asynchronously dialogues that occur
from written forum posts. Personal reflections are those conversations conducted between the
participants and the researcher (i.e., focus groups and interviews). The way in which these three
types of data are to be analyzed will be framed in terms of a PLN.
The purpose for researching informal pedagogical dialogues that set out to reveal a
dynamic PLN bifurcates into two types of pattern recognition. The first type is to seek patterns
between the PLN as a theoretical concept and the individual case study, which for the purposes
of this study, is the individual educator (i.e., unit of analysis). The PLN for this multiple case
study relates to the collective network assemblage of ideas, materials, and other educators within
an open and online social exchange. Another way of looking at a PLN is a set of interrelated
nodes that form a collective network assemblage. The constituents that make up the collective
network assemblage are dependent variables (i.e., ideational, material, and social network nodes)
that form patterns in terms of certain independent variables. The independent variables for this
research are those that relate to the educator’s situation or context: institution, age, experience, as
well as other personal descriptors. Thus, in order to understand the theoretical concept (i.e.,
PLN) one needs to understand the individual case or unit of analysis (Stake, 2006). The second
type of pattern recognition is by conducting a cross analysis between case studies. By taking any
single independent variable (e.g., institution), a comparison between cases among dependent
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 10
variables will show where convergent and divergent patterns exist. During the 10-week data
collection process, a holistic, multiple case study researching informal dialogues will likely
produce discourses around curriculum, assessment, and instruction in terms of educators’
understandings, knowledge, skills, and dispositions. The rationale is to provide insight into what
teachers say and do when encouraged to conduct informal pedagogical dialogues that are rooted
in teaching practice. By understanding the dynamic nature of a PLN as a interrelated nodes that
form a collective network assemblage, further insight into the complexity of professional
learning will lead to better professional development frameworks that seek to improve student
achievement.
Theoretical Framework
The theoretical framework for this multiple case study is based on what constitutes
teacher knowledge, complexity theory, and ANT. Specifically, this study seeks to find out how
informal dialogues among EFL educators in Mexico emerge within a complex and adaptive EFL
teacher knowledge-based network (i.e., one’s understandings, knowledge, skills, and
dispositions). Teacher knowledge can be based on depth of understandings that emerge from a
combination of facets: explaining, interpreting, apply, having perspective, having empathy, and
having self-knowledge (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005). In terms of EFL teachers, language teacher
competence (LTC) emerges from three relational and interdependent domains: (i) language
competence (i.e., the ability to communicate meaning), (ii) pedagogical competence (i.e., skill
sets of one person that prompt learning in another person), and (iii) language awareness (i.e.,
knowledge about language or KAL) (Cots & Arnó, 2005). Because many of the participants
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 11
have learned English as an additional language, Cots and Arnó’s (2005) notion of LTC is
particularly useful since teacher knowledge is not only in terms of knowledge and understanding
of content, but also knowledge related to being an English speaker and writer (i.e., skill-based)
and knowledge about how others acquire the language (i.e., knowledge-based). Understanding
what is meant by teacher knowledge underpins how the learning process can take place.
Shaping what a teacher knows (i.e., understandings, knowledge, skills, and dispositions)
can occur within a professional learning community (PLC). All PLCs share three common
elements: a domain, practice, and community (Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). The
authors stress that a PLN’s domain, practice, and community share a sense of commonality: (a) a
domain with a mission statement or shared common interest; (b) a practice with a shared set of
ideas, tools, information, and language; and (c) a community with the acceptance of group
membership. And although learning can occur within a PLC, the focus of this research is to see
how informal dialogues about teaching and learning emerge whether they occur within a PLC or
not; that is, to focus on the complexity of learning through ANT.
Complexity learning has long been researched in the hard sciences but more recently has
included the social sciences as well. Two key concepts that relate complexity theory to learning
is the idea of feedback loops and sustainability. Feedback loops are usually associated with
teacher and student feedback based on performance evidence, but it is also the nonlinear logic
that entails circular and recursive relationships between human and non-human devices (Kay,
2008). Over time, interacting objects (i.e., human and non-human collective) depend on prior
experiences when making decisions through a process of memory formation (Johnson, 2007).
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 12
The memory formation process is what allows interactions to remain sustainable. Sustainability
of a complex system results from the synergies that exist supporting the claim that the whole is
greater than the sum of its parts (Kayuni, 2010). Through ongoing synergistic systems model,
self-organization and sustainability exist despite a central controller or decision-maker that
dictates how others are to behave. Within the framework of complexity theory, ANT explains
how learning centers around the individual (as opposed to a PLC) through a personal learning
network.
Understanding how ANT relates to a PLN requires defining what is meant by actant.
ANT consists of a network of actants that can be anything that acts or that can be acted upon,
whether human (i.e., social) or non-human (i.e., textual, conceptual, or technical) (Latour, 1997).
The actants then act as ideational, material, and socially-connected nodes within a collective
network. An aggregation of connected nodes (i.e., relational actants) forms a local, variable, and
contingent actor-network method and theory that is derived from material-semiotics (Alexander,
2004). Material-semiotics from an ANT worldview “…describes the enactment of materially
and discursively heterogeneous relations that produce and reshuffle all kinds of actors including
objects, subjects, human beings, machines, animals, ‘nature’, ideas, organizations, inequalities,
scale and sizes, and geographical arrangements” (Law, 2007, p. 2). The author points out that
ANT’s material-semiotics describes the performative nature of human and non-human relations
that lead to some aggregated effect (e.g., object, person, artifact, etc.). Hence, this study
investigates the performative nature of ideas, materials, and people as a collective aggregate that
presents itself as a dynamic effect or PLN. And at the same time, the PLN as a dynamic effect of
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 13
interrelated nodes, will be framed in terms of an individual case. The individual case, or unit of
analysis, for this study is the EFL educator.
As a point of departure, a PLN incorporates complexity theory and ANT’s material
semiotics but goes one step further. Whereas ANT focuses on how social behavior occurs within
a network, a PLN takes on a connectivist approach in finding out how learning occurs within a
network (Bell, 2010; Bell 2011). This research will trace complexity and heterogeneity by
asking participants what they do and how and why they interact the way they do within a PLN;
in doing so, one escapes the tendency to homogenize and unify participants' particular
surroundings (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010). Simply, complexity science provides a “clear,
comprehensive, congruent, cohesive, and consistent explanation of particular aspects of reality”
(Shoup & Clark Studer, 2010, loc. 63). Professional learning from a complexity theory lens is
expressed in terms of recognizing learning patterns that result from self-organization without the
benefit of a central controller (Mitchell, 2009). An inquiry into PLNs is a descriptive journey
into the educator’s learning trajectory in order to better understand the web relations that exist at
cognitive, ideational, social, and material levels. Understanding such a learning trajectory
enables stakeholders to better frame professional learning as the complex set of relations that it
is, and is the precursor for understanding the complexity around improving student achievement
resulting from insight into the complex web relations that make up any reality.
Whereas ANT focuses on how social behavior occurs within a network, a PLN takes on a
connectivist approach in finding out how learning occurs within a network (Bell, 2010; Bell
2011). A PLN is an individual's recollection of ongoing distribution of boundary nodes over time
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 14
(i.e., both human and non-human objects) that directly interact with each other via unidirectional
or bidirectional forms of communication with the intent of fostering both intentional and
incidental ends. For the purposes of this study, a PLN is an aggregation of socio-technical
patterns; that is, patterns between ideas, material objects, and people which are actants in and of
themselves. Hence, in order to provide more professional development support to educators in
Mexico, this research seeks to shed light on how informal dialogues about teaching and learning
intersect with reflective dialogues regarding educators’ awareness of their own dynamic PLN.
This awareness becomes transformative as they interpret the various nodal relationships of their
PLNs – an awareness that reveals itself through the contributions, informal dialogues, and
personal reflections that emerge and adapt over time.
Research Questions
Improving the educational system in Mexico requires providing more professional
development support. Professional development should lead to open, ongoing professional
learning that leads to informal pedagogical dialogues both at the local and global level. But
because there are various reasons as to why teachers from around the world choose not to take
part in professional development (e.g., conflict with work schedule, no suitable professional
development, family responsibilities, too expensive, lack of employer support, and do not have
the pre-requisites), this study will focus on informal dialogues about teaching and learning which
teachers do feel have the greatest impact on their professional learning (OECD, 2011). These
informal pedagogical dialogues then underpin the discourse between EFL educators regarding
how a socio-semiotic and dynamic network adapts to a particular open and online learning
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 15
environment. The following research questions are based on an open and potentially ongoing
professional learning design that provides a model for how professional development can better
support educators who are concerned with improving the Mexican educational system:
1. How do EFL educators in Mexico conduct open and informal pedagogical dialogues that
enrich a personal learning network?
2. How do EFL educators in Mexico confront challenges when openly sharing informal
pedagogical dialogues within a personal learning network?
Nature of the Study
This multiple case study will rely on qualitative data to examine how EFL educators in
Mexico conduct informal dialogues about teaching and learning and how teachers reflect on
challenges related to sharing dialogues openly within their network. Three Mexican universities
will be chosen in order to find 7-10 teachers from each institution (i.e., 21-30 participants in
total) who are willing to participate in the 10-week course. Biweekly focus groups (i.e., Google+
Hangouts), biweekly informant written reflections and public websites will be used in order to
collect all necessary data. EduQuiki (2012) will be the initial web site for the study, but other
public web sites may be used at the discretion of the participants. In addition to the focus
groups, reflections, and public websites, twenty-minute interviews will be conducted for each
participant before and after the data collection period in order to gain further insight into their
perspectives. All data (i.e., recorded interviews and focus groups and written data obtained from
public web sites) will be coded using mainly predetermined codes based on the literature review
(e.g., ideational, material, and social interactions; fractals, etc.) along with additional latent codes
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 16
that may emerge from the data collection process. From the raw codes, analytic memos will be
used in order to reflect and extract categories, themes, and patterns that evolve around the
ideational, material, and social aspects of a PLN. Raw codes (i.e., dependent variables) will also
be linked to participant descriptors (i.e., independent variables) such as institution, education,
and years of experience among others in order to search for any additional converging or
diverging patterns that may exist. Dedoose (2012) will be used to analyze all data.
Significance
The findings of this study will inform teachers and all other educational stakeholders how
to create an educational ecosystem around (a) informal pedagogical dialogues and PLNs and (b)
the challenges EFL educators face when sharing ideas and contributions openly in a public
website. Currently, there is little research related to how the distributed nature of learning,
specifically the role of materiality in the workplace (e.g., professional web tools) and the basic
assumptions of what constitutes professional learning take place (Fenwick, 2009; Fenwick,
2010). Moreover, professional development tends to focus on practices and programs instead of
people; that is, building professional learning around practices and programs tends to lead to
isolated workshops, change initiatives that fail to create a conducive learning environment, and
summative teacher evaluations that simply recapitulate past events with little-to-no ongoing
support (Reeves, 2010). For these reasons, this study sets out to analyze how informal dialogues
and shared, reflective inquiry reveal the distributed nature and complexity of professional
learning in higher education. The distribution of learning will be viewed in terms of a PLN or a
connection of ideas, people, and materials that are interrelated and adaptive over time.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 17
Knowing how EFL educators conduct informal pedagogical dialogues in terms of a
dynamic PLN can offer a more engaging and effective professional development framework. As
EFL educators in Mexico begin getting used to openly sharing and contributing with others
publically, open access learning transforms into a framework for educators to unite local issues
related to teaching and learning to open and informal dialogues. The informal dialogues of
teaching and learning then complement other qualitative and quantitative learning analytics that
collectively provide for a variety of indicators that allow greater perceptiveness into the level of
engagement within a professional development program. A PLN at its core is personal and
underpins one’s entire professional learning experience. “Personalization elevates human
learning to new heights while encouraging everyone involved to seek more” (Bonk, 2009, p.
352). As educators become motivated to seek out learning experiences on their own, a more
sustainable learning experience ensues. As professional learning becomes more sustainable, a
more ubiquitous professional development effect begins to provide the support needed to help
close the gap between where Mexican learners are today and where they need to be in the future.
Definitions
The following are key terms that relate to the context of the study and help provide
perspective in framing the notion of a PLN as a means for one’s own professional learning.
Boundary nodes. Boundary nodes are people, groups, organizations, communities, and
devices the learner directly interacts with (i.e., unidirectional or bidirectional) as part of a PLN).
The term is synonymous with the notion of actants within an actor network (Latour, 2005) and is
limited to those with a direct connection or those defined as having one degree of separation
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 18
from the learner or central node (i.e., individuals and artifacts that a learner directly maintains
contact).
Connectivism. Connectivism is a learning theory that integrates chaos, network,
complexity and self-organization theories, defines learning as residing also outside the individual
and throughout the network itself, and recognizes that the decision-making process requires the
learner to adapt to a context that is in a constant state of flux. The following are eight principles
associated with connectivism as a learning theory: (a) importance of having a diversity of
opinions, (b) connecting specialized boundary nodes, (c) learning residing in non-human
appliances, (d) the capacity to know more is more critical than what is currently known, (e)
cultivating connections is a precursor to facilitate learning, (f) ability to connect between fields,
ideas, and concepts, (g) currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge), (h) decision-making as a
learning process (Siemens, 2005).
Language Understanding Integrated Sense-making Learning Experience (LUISLE).
LUISLE incorporates aspects of the SIOP model with one exception. Instead of merging content
and language objectives, LUISLE merges understandings and language objectives.
Open educational resource (OER). Open Educational Resources are teaching, learning
or research materials that are in the public domain or released with an intellectual property
license that allows for free use, adaptation, and distribution (United Nations..., 2011).
Openness: The notion of openness relates to the underlining condition required in order
to grow a PLN. A PLN must be open in the sense that OERs and OEPs are shared freely,
enabling others to “reuse, revise, remix, and redistribute” (Wiley, 2008) resources and processes.
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Personal learning network (PLN). A PLN is an individual's recollection of ongoing
distribution of boundary nodes over time (i.e., both human and non-human objects) that directly
interact with each other via unidirectional or bidirectional forms of communication with the
intent of fostering both intentional and incidental ends. For the purposes of this study, the term
PLN is used instead of community of practice in that a PLN places more emphasis on socio-
technical relationships of the individual (based on ANT and complexity theory) and is less
concerned with cultural-historical perspective of group practice, which are characteristic of
communities of practice (Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). Analyzing a PLN will embark
on investigating complex changes to a PLN over a mesolevel period of time (i.e., period of
weeks), but will not include group or collective notions of personal identity and socio-cultural
dimensions that can generalize and possibly distort the overall purpose of this research: to shed
light on learning principles that are applicable to anyone regardless of socio-cultural-historical
background.
Quintain. In a multiple case study analysis, a quintain is what bounds various case
studies together; that is, any object, phenomenon or condition under study (Stake, 2006). The
author stresses the importance of addressing a “case-quintain dilemma” (p. 7): researchers should
avoid focusing too much on the individual case while ignoring important details to the quintain
or collective target. But at the same time, understanding the quintain is impossible without
understanding individual cases. A case-quintain dilemma is provoked by a case-quintain
dialectic:
“The Themes originated with people planning to study the Quintain. The
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Findings originated with people studying the Cases. These are two conceptual
orientations, not independent but different. To treat them both as forces for
understanding the Quintain, the Analyst keeps them both alive even as he or she is
writing the Assertions of the final report. The Themes preserve the main research
questions for the overall study. The Findings preserve certain activity (belonging
to Case and Quintain alike) found in the special circumstances of the Cases.
When the Themes and Factors meet, they appear to the Analyst as both
consolidation and extension of understanding” (pp. 39-40).
The notion of a quintain provides the basis for approaching data collection and data
analysis of multiple case studies.
Sheltered Instructional Operation Protocol (SIOP) Model. The SIOP model provides
the basis for making subject-matter more comprehensible to English language learners who are
taking content courses with native-speaking learners. Aspects of the SIOP model include
specific techniques that make input more comprehensible at the planning, implementation, and
assessment stages (Echevarría, Vogt, & Short, 2004). Although the SIOP model was originally
intended on teaching and learning English as a second language (e.g., learning English in the
United States), the notion of comprehensible input has been well researched to include also the
teaching and learning of English as a foreign language (e.g., learning English in Mexico)
(Krashen, 2003). This study does not seek to defend what is “comprehensible”, but rather to use
the SIOP model as a basis for communicating challenges English-as-a-foreign language
educators face in terms of their own teaching and learning.
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Understandings. Understandings are the “moral of the story, or rather, of [the] unit”
(Wiggins and McTighe, 2011, p. 80). When implementing a lesson, the goal is to create an
educative experience where evidence provides successful results in terms how students develop
six different facets: (a) explain, (b) interpret, and (c) apply concepts; (d) show empathy, (e)
perspective, and (f) self-knowledge (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005). The six facets of
understanding then become the basis with which all other performance verbs are labeled. For
example, performance verbs such as describe, teach, and model fall under the facet of
explanation while critique, translate, and judge fall under the facet of interpretation (Wiggins &
McTighe, 2011). A non-hierarchical view of the six facets of understanding is a different
approach to classifying performance verbs compared to Bloom's revised taxonomy. Bloom's
revised taxonomy categorizes understanding as a lower order thinking skill along with additional
performance verbs such as interpreting, summarizing, and explaining (Churches, 2008). Within
the context of this study, LUISLE unites understandings and language objectives in tandem; that
is, understandings and language become means and ends simultaneously.
Summary
The objective of undergoing any professional development pursuit is to view leadership
as a complex, adaptive, nonlinear feedback network that is emergent and consistent of an
interactive process that is embedded in context and history (Uhl-Bien, 2011). This study seeks to
fill the gap in current research by investigating the distributed nature of professional learning
from a material-semiotic perspective and by describing the basic assumptions of what constitutes
professional learning (Fenwick, 2009; Fenwick, 2010). A qualitative multiple case study will
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 22
explore how EFL educators in Mexico conduct open and informal pedagogical dialogues that
enrigh a personal learning network along with any challenges they may face. From an ANT and
complexity theory framework, conceptual, social, and material-based networks will emerge by
collecting various types of data: group discussions, interviews, participant reflections, content
analysis, and pre and post teacher survey related to informal pedagogical dialogues via public
web sites. Providing additional insight into what constitutes professional learning in education
lays the groundwork for further discussion as to how to measure, support, and share alternative
forms of assessing how an educator understandings, increases pedagogical skill sets, and
determines the dispositions needed in order to become an expert learner – a prerequisite for
teaching students too how to become an expert learner.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 23
Chapter 2: Literature Review
The term professional learning community has become ubiquitous to a point that it has
essentially lost its meaning (DuFour, DuFour, & Eaker, 2008). Schools rely on mandate-driven
change and isolated staff development sessions which historically have not worked (Tomlinson,
Brimijoin, & Narvaez, 2008). Little research has been conducted on how interactions between
one's PLN lead to a change in teaching practice from the educator's perspective. Few would
argue against adherence to school mission and vision statements that are measured by how well
students transfer learning through purposeful tasks and a maturation of habits of mind (Wiggins
& McTighe, 2007). But the way in which a teacher interprets a school mission or vision
statement in relation to professional goal setting and solving will ultimately determine how
faculty make decisions that are more people-oriented as opposed to being more program-oriented
(Reeves, 2010). This research sets out to provide an interpretive explanation into how
interactions within a PLN lead to change in teaching practice and how a teacher is driven to
improve within the context of a school mission or vision statement. Instead of a supervisor being
a proponent of directive change around predetermined goals and objects, this study seeks to
facilitate the teacher in achieving personal goals set by the educator, which are aligned with the
overall mission and vision statement of the school.
The search strategy for developing the literature review stemmed from a variety of
strategies and tools, which utilized a two-stage search approach. Besides using scholarly texts
from a personal library, different educational databases were used to search articles, books,
dissertations, and other scholarly texts. Some of the educational databases that were used most
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 24
often were EBSCOhost Education Research Complete (2012), ERIC (2012), Gale Academic
OneFile (2012), ProQuest Education Journals (2012), SAGE Journals Online (2012), Science
Direct (2012), Taylor & Francis Online (2012), Ebrary (2012), ProQuest Dissertations and
Theses (2012), and Northcentral University Dissertations (2012). In addition to the
aforementioned educational databases, Mendeley (2012) papers research catalog was used to find
additional sources pertaining to topics associated with the dissertation thesis. The first stage
when searching topics related to the dissertation thesis yielded Boolean searches that were
conducted based on various keywords and phrases which included but were not limited to the
following: personal learning network, personal learning environment, professional learning
network, professional learning environment, professional development, professional learning,
complexity theory, chaos theory, emergentism, actor-network theory, and material semiotics.
Boolean searches were also used during the second stage of the search strategy, using the
Mendeley desktop (MendeleyResearch, 2011). The Mendeley desktop is a dedicated program
suitable for applying Boolean searches throughout all collected sources imported into the
program (either manually or directly from the browser) and also organizes sources into folders,
tags, keywords, and open online groups which helps facilitate others who wish to comment and
suggest additional sources related to the study.
The purpose of the literature review is to provide the theoretical framework supporting
the notion of a PLN as a means for one’s professional development. The following literature
review begins with the idea of EFL teaching practice being the what behind any professional
development pursuit. Teaching practice in general is presented in terms of understandings,
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 25
knowledge, skill sets, and disposition whereas educators in the EFL professional who are English
language learners themselves might also have additional goals related to improving individual
English proficiency skills as well. The rest of the literature review deals with the how of
professional learning. Complexity theory provides an argument for non-linear learning (i.e.,
gaining understandings, skill sets, and dispositions) that at times is chaotic and emergent but can
show signs of stability, mobility, and dynamic attributes. In addition to complexity theory, the
section on actor-network theory (ANT) underpins learning by justifying how connections across
a network form, decay, or can remain fairly stable over time. One of the key features of ANT is
framing ideas, material, & individuals as a result of prior relationships formed over time, and
how simplifying reality to dichotomies (e.g., teacher/learner, researcher/practitioner,
expert/novice, etc.) can be avoided by viewing the nodes of a PLN not as being fixed but as a
complex adaptable network of socio-material relationships that exhibit a potential to act. This
ontological view of professional learning is the premise for the PLN – a theoretical concept
rooted in the contextual dimensions of each individual language educator as the unit of analysis
for this study. In the final section of the literature review, the PLN becomes the basis for one’s
professional learning which emerges from interacting with other educators, materials, and
conceptualizations in order to recognize complex, emergent, dynamic, and networked patterns.
EFL Teaching Knowledge
Understandings. Any teaching practice is based on understandings. Bloom's revised
taxonomy categorizes an understanding as a lower order thinking skill along with other related
performance verbs such as interpreting, summarizing, and explaining (Churches, 2008). But for
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 26
the purpose of this study, the term has a broader sense. Understandings are the “moral of the
story” or concept, idea, or notion (Wiggins and McTighe, 2011, p. 80). When implementing a
lesson, the goal is to create an educative experience where evidence provides successful results
in terms how students develop six different facets of understanding: the learner can (a) explain,
(b) interpret, and (c) apply concepts and the learner has (d) empathy, (e) perspective, and (f)
self-knowledge (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005). The six facets of understanding then become the
basis with which all other performance verbs are labeled. For example, performance verbs such
as describe, teach, and model fall under the facet of explanation while critique, translate, and
judge fall under the facet of interpretation (Wiggins & McTighe, 2011). A non-hierarchical
view of applying the six facets of understanding avoids the notion that lower critical thinking
skills are a necessary precursor to higher order cognitive development.
The notion of thinking about understandings in term of facets is not new. To help
educators not confuse knowledge with understandings when designing rigorous performance
tasks, five facets were originally introduced as a means for rethinking, reflecting upon,
reconsidering, and revising the meaning of what was learned and what was believed: the learner
can (i) explain and interpret and the learner has (ii) performance know-how, (iii) perspective, (iv)
empathy, and (v) self-knowledge (Wiggins, 1998). But to 'really understand', the now six facets
of understandings (i.e., explain, interpret, apply, perspective, empathy, and self-knowledge)
collectively contribute to the degree students can (i) draw useful inferences, make connections
among facts, and explain their own conclusions in their own words and (ii) “transfer learning to
new situations with appropriate flexibility and fluency” (Wiggins & McTighe, 2011, p. 58). Just
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 27
as the six facets apply to learners in the classroom, so too do they apply to the understandings
faculty are to develop according the school mission and vision statements (Wiggins & McTighe,
2007). This cognitive approach regarding how people learn is applicable to any subject, but in
terms of EFL teaching practice, a further discussion is needed.
In addition to the language teacher being able to form and promote understandings with
learners, language teacher competence (LTC) more specifically articulates what is meant by
declarative knowledge (i.e., understanding or knowing that...) in terms of teaching English as a
foreign language. LTC emerges from three relational and interdependent domains: (i) language
competence (i.e., the ability to communicate meaning), (ii) pedagogical competence (i.e., skill
sets of one person that prompt learning in another person), and (iii) language awareness (i.e.,
knowledge about language or KAL) (Cots & Arnó, 2005). KAL (language and pedagogical
competences will be discussed later) includes in part, topics such as second language acquisition,
psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, and language assessment which incidentally may or may not
be synonymous with the term content knowledge. KAL and content knowledge are synonymous
if the language teacher is giving a course in psycholinguistics; that is, giving an English for
academic purposes class where the subject knowledge is not solely linguistic. But if the
language teacher is giving a general English course, then KAL (e.g., psycholinguistics) and
content knowledge (e.g., English related to real-life themes) diverge. Thus, KAL and content
knowledge become the precursor for developing enduring understandings or the big ideas that
students should retain after the details have been forgotten (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005).
Besides knowing what the desired results are for a particular class (i.e., KAL, content
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knowledge, and understandings), teachers who have an understanding about the different types
of evidence required to assess student achievement, are better equipped to provide the support
needed to improve student achievement. Assessment can be categorized into three areas: (I)
formative assessment or assessment for learning, (ii) summative assessment or measurement of
learning at the classroom level, and (iii) a combination of summative assessments at the program
level (e.g., overall grade point average or GPA) (Yorke, 2010). Assessment can also be
considered as falling along a simple to complex continuum: informal discussions, academic
prompts, quizzes and exams, and performance tasks respectively (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005).
Regardless of the combination of assessments used to measure and promote learning, assessment
design that aligns to curricular aims preclude instructional design and implementation, also
called “assessment-illuminated instruction” (Popham, 2008a, p. 265), or “backward design”
(Wiggins and McTighe, 2005, p. XX).
In the field of teaching EFL, various forms of evidence need to measure and promote
both understandings but also language. Assessing the EFL classroom includes collecting
evidence related to vocabulary use, course content, and various other types of assessments
collected throughout the course (i.e., behavioral assessments that measure language and conduct)
(Echevarria, Vogt, & Short, 2004). More specifically, criterion-referenced tests are used to
compare a student's performance to a standard or criterion (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2007). A
standard often used in language learning is the Common European Framework which influences
how many language coursebooks are designed and also provides extensive descriptors that
provide the criteria for rubrics used for more qualitative-based assessment instruments (Council
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 29
of Europe, 2011). Similarly, measuring understandings can result from having a rubric
containing the six facets of understanding as a standard of performance that aligns to curricular
goals (Wiggins and McTighe, 2011).
Assessment for learning (i.e., formative assessment) complements summative assessment
in a various ways. “Formative assessment is a planned process in which assessment-elicited
evidence of students' status is used by teachers to adjust their ongoing instructional procedures or
by students to adjust their current learning tactics (Popham, 2008b, p. 6). This joint commitment
between teacher and learner is an active and intentional process that continuously and
systematically gathers evidence of learning with the express goal of improving student
achievement (Moss & Brookhart, 2009). Eportfolios and performance-based assessments, for
instance, offer additional examples of formative assessments that lend themselves to a more
authentic learning context that assesses not only the end product but the process as well
(Kubiszyn & Borich, 2007). Thus assessing of learning and assessing for learning complement
each other by providing the evidence necessary (i.e., qualitative and quantitative data) to make
more accurate inferences on student achievement. Once assessments that align to desired results
(i.e., curricular aims) have been determined, educators then move to the next step: planning the
learning sequence.
An approach to planning a learning progression that is conducive to higher academic
achievement emerges from a myriad of factors. English language teachers need to believe in the
students, know the subject matter, help students form connections with the subject and other
aspects of the students' lives, promote academic language, promote interaction with both content
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and students, and articulate the importance of how students are ultimately responsible for their
own learning (Waldron, n.d., as cited in Rothenberg & Fisher, 2007). Together, these aspects
emerge through differentiating instruction; that is, teachers reflect on how content, processes,
and products can be differentiated based on the students readiness, interests, and learning
preferences through the implementation of meaningful tasks, flexible grouping techniques, and
ongoing assessment and adjustment (Tomlinson, 1999). Landrum & McDuffiep (2010)
performed a literature review related to differentiated instruction, learning preferences and
learning styles and concluded that each are have an educational benefit if based on a type of
“individualized” instruction that is
a) planned in a way that builds on what individual students currently know and can do
and targets meaningful goals regarding what they need to learn next; and (b)
accommodations and modifications to teaching and testing routines are made in order to
provide students with full and meaningful access to the content they need to learn (p. 9).
Thus, the level of individualization and differentiation that occurs throughout the learning
sequence will depend on the particular role the teacher plays.
At any given moment, a teacher will assume different roles. The role a teacher assumes
will depend on the type of action the student is to perform. If the learning goal is acquisition,
then the learner might be asked to define, identify, memorize, recall, select or apprehend where
the teacher takes more of a didactic role; if the learning goal is meaning, then the learner might
be asked to analyze, critique, interpret, synthesize, or compare and contrast where the teacher
takes more of a facilitative role; and if the learning goal is transfer, then the learner might be
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 31
asked to create, design, solve, or troubleshoot where the teacher takes more of a coaching role
(Wiggins & McTighe, 2011). By comparison, a teacher could mediate between students,
teachers or experts, parents, administrators, and community leaders; inspired students and
authentic learning environments; content and skill development delivery (i.e., face to face or
online); and assessment as advancing learning and the creative process (Mehisto, Marsh, &
Frigols, 2008). Although the roles teachers assume are many, they are necessary in creating an
learning ecosystem that allows the language learner specifically to combine the learning of an
additional language with advancing one's critical thinking skills.
Educators may approach the transformation of language learners to become better critical
thinkers from a variety of directions. Bloom's revised taxonomy ranks performance verbs from
lower order thinking skills to higher order thinking skills as follows: remembering,
understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating (Churches, 2008). Another
approach assumes a non-hierarchical list of verbs that serve as a guide when promoting higher
order thinking skills: appreciating, assigning, associating, classifying, combining, committing,
comparing, condensing, converting, defining, describing, designating, discriminating, extending,
identifying cause and effect, imaging, linking, observing, predicting, reconciling, role-playing,
separating, selecting, triggering, utilizing, and verifying (Mehisto, Marsh, & Frigols, 2008). A
more practical and humanistic approach is to use the term understandings to mean any
performance verb that falls under one of the six facets: explain, interpret, apply, perspective,
empathy, and self-knowledge (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005). That is, the degree to which a
learner understands, is the degree to which a learner can perform actions verb that fall under as
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 32
many of the six facets as possible. Promoting understandings among language learners rejects
the notion that certain verbs automatically be performed first, as in the case of Bloom's revised
taxonomy. When learning understandings and language together, both understandings and
language become means and ends: the language learner becomes a more critical thinker through
the use of an additional language and the language learner improves language skills through the
practice of being a more critical thinker.
Bringing together understandings and language learning requires counterbalanced
instruction. Skehan (1998) originally proposed the idea of counterbalanced instruction in order
to push learners who were either form-oriented or meaning-oriented in the opposite direction (as
cited in Lyster, 2007). Counterbalancing form and meaning shifted to counterbalancing content
and language within language immersion programs avoiding the tendency to overemphasize one
at the expense of the other (Lyster, 2008). At the same time, the SIOP model, which emerged
from the Specially Designed Academic Instruction in English (SDAIE) in the United States,
provided a way to operationalize how sheltered instruction makes content more comprehensible
to the English language learner through careful planning, implementing, and reviewing
classroom procedures (Echevarria, Vogt, & Short, 2004). In Europe, the Content and Language
Integrated Learning in Bilingual and Multilingual Education (CLIL) approach set out to
triangulate content, language, and learning skills (Mehisto, Marsh, & Frigols, 2008). But since
all understandings require some degree of both enabling knowledge and subskills that center
around content, the act of counterbalancing language changes from content to understandings.
Skills. The skills of becoming a better teacher are vast. One pedagogical approach is to
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 33
ask, What can I do as an educator that will lead to more effective instruction? An educator can
(i) establish and communicate learning goals, track progress, and celebrate success, (ii) help
students interact and practice with new understandings, knowledge, and skills, (iii) help students
generate and test hypotheses about new knowledge, (iv) engage students throughout the lesson
by establishing and maintaining effective relationships, (v) establish and maintain classroom
rules and procedures, (vi) communicate high expectations for all students, and (vii) develop
effective lessons organized into a cohesive unit (Marzano, 2007). Another approach is to
promote teacher leaders regardless of title or position. A teacher leader is one who has the
willingness to (i) mentor and coach others, (ii) communicate with all teachers regardless of
personal affiliation or preference, (iii) grow by bringing new ideas to the classroom and school,
(iv) become a more competent communicate of one's ideas, (v) engage in creative and problem-
based issues that address higher student achievement, and (vi) share with others and to take risks
in front of peers (McEwan, 2003). Indeed, the skills needed to become a better teacher require a
joining of pedagogical skill sets with leadership skills such that the learning community within a
school encapsulates all educational stakeholders (i.e., students, teachers, parents, administrators,
and community leaders). But harnessing one's skills, whether pedagogical or based on
leadership, involves some degree of materiality or material use (e.g., educational technology and
ICTs).
Educational technology provides the means for teachers to become better communicators
as well as providing the skill sets needed to promote learning in another person. The
International Society for Technology in Education (2011) has developed a list of standards and
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 34
performance indicators that set out to engage students and improve learning, enrich professional
practice, and to provide positive models for students, colleagues, and the community. The
technology standards teachers should facilitate and inspire student learning and creativity, design
and develop digital-age learning experiences and assessments, model digital-age work and
learning, promote and model digital citizenship and responsibility, and engage in professional
growth and leadership. Also, there is a unification between instructional design (e.g.,
behaviorism, cognitivism, and social constructivism), educational media (e.g., film, television,
online video, and social media), and educational computing (e.g., computers, internet, and
mobile devices) such that a single term, educational technology, begins to show how future
trends emerge (Newby, Stepich, Lehman, & Russell, 2010). Some of the trends include more use
of electronic books and mobile technologies, augmented reality and game-based learning, and
gestured-based computing and learning analytics (Johnson, Smith, Willis, Levine, & Haywood,
2011). But the prevalence of educational technology does not go far enough to closing the gap
between affordances and actual higher student achievement.
In a survey of current literature, Neubauer, Hug, Hamon, & Stewart (2011) posit that the
ubiquity of current technologies has done little to facilitate collaboration and student-centered
learning in schools to the degree that strategies are needed in order to leverage Web 2.0 tools in
order to help students prepare for the challenges of globalization, automation, and complexity
(Neubauer, Hug, Hamon, & Stewart, 2011). Facilitating learning can occur through a variety of
possible methodologies: tutorials, hypermedia, drills, simulations, games, tools and open-ended
learning environments, tests, and web-based learning (Alassi & Trollip, 2001). These
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 35
methodologies are of little use if teachers are not provided with a set of technological tools and
the instructional designs and procedures needed to explain how the technological tools may be
used (Zhang, 2010). The author proposes dealing with challenges using a complex system
perspective that involves a principle-based approach instead of a procedure-based approach; one
that requires the educator, or “grassroots innovator” to reflect across the macro- and micro-level
(p. 240). So the skills required to use ICTs under proper contexts, pedagogical skills that engage
learners efficiently and effectively, and leadership skills that promote the leadership skills of
others collectively apply to all teachers, but leave out communicative skills that are especially
relevant to non-native speaking language teachers.
Educators of any subject rely on the ability to communicate meaning, but non-native
speaking language teachers especially rely on language competence as it can strongly influence
one’s identity. Language competence as part of an LTC (i.e., along with pedagogical
competence and language awareness) is particularly a contentious issue when it comes to the
individual native or non-native speaker educator in relation to a particular social setting (Davies,
2011). The native and non-native dichotomy has led to a more detailed description of language
identity not only in terms of language proficiency but also in terms of how the speaker perceives
individual language proficiency and how others view the speaker's proficiency: these more detail
descriptions include bilingual speakers, English as a first language speaker, second-generation
English speaker, English-dominant, L1[native language]-dominant, and English-variety speaker
(Faez, 2011). Regardless as to how one classifies language identity – oftentimes dichotomously
referencing teachers as native or non-native speaker – sensitivities in linguistic problems learners
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 36
encounter should be recognized and dealt with when learning an additional language (Rao,
2010). The author coded and categorized qualitative data taken from an open-ended
questionnaire and interviews and revealed that “…language teaching is an art, a science, and a
skill that requires complex pedagogical preparation and practice” (p. 66). For this reason, EFL
teaching practice and to a lesser degree teaching practice in general become interdependent
associations of skill sets that include language competence, technology, leadership, and
pedagogy: skills that are associated with a teacher’s understanding of curriculum, assessment,
and instruction.
Dispositions. The teaching practice in the area of EFL, like in other subject areas,
require not only that teachers have understandings and knowledge of the subject and the
appropriate skills sets already mentioned, but also the disposition to engage and learn with
others. Indeed, “dispositions are the engine of performance in teaching, linking inner values and
commitments with action in the context of practice” (Carroll, 2012, p. 38). The notion of linking
inner values and commitments with action were revealed after conducting a case study of a
teacher candidate taking a teaching practicum class over the course of 10 weeks. The study
shows that certain performances of understanding that the teacher candidate can implement in
class (e.g., learners making connections, implications, and relationships) can provide “a critical
tool for assessing the trajectory of learning dispositions for ambitious teachers” (pp. 60-61). The
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Educators (NCATE) and many state departments
of education in the United States have adopted a philosophy that no longer is it enough that
teacher candidates have knowledge and skills in a certain area, but now must also possess the
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 37
appropriate disposition for the profession (Duplass & Cruz, 2010). The appropriate disposition
then links with the knowledge and skills that lay the foundation to becoming a teacher leader –
an expectation that extends to all teachers from the novice to the expert (Bond, 2011). Thus,
teacher educational programs have incorporated a four-step process for measuring dispositions
among teacher candidates: (i) clearly define what is meant by dispositions, (ii) determine how
this process can be operationalized, (iii) determine the the types of assessments needed to
evaluate dispositions, and (iv) collect and analyze data on these assessments and use it to revise
program's focus and assessment of dispositions (Shiveley & Misco, 2010).
Defining dispositions can vary. The NCATE defines dispositions as follows:
Professional attitudes, values, and beliefs demonstrated through both verbal and
non-verbal behaviors as educators interact with students, families, colleagues, and
communities. These positive behaviors support student learning and development.
NCATE expects institutions to assess professional dispositions based on
observable behaviors in educational settings. The two professional dispositions
that NCATE expects institutions to assess are fairness and the belief that all
students can learn. Based on their mission and conceptual framework,
professional education units can identify, define, and operationalize additional
professional dispositions (The National Council..., 2012).
Another way of looking at dispositions is to categorize them as anything that isn't considered
knowledge and not labeled as skills so that to mark someone as an “effective educator” would
result from an amalgamation of all three (Wasicsko, Callahan, & Wirtz, 2004). The authors
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 38
reached this conclusion by surveying the literature and by asking four fundamental questions: a)
What is meant by dispositions? b) How will the definition be used in the conceptual framework?
c) How will dispositions be assessed? and d) What can be done to get commitment and buy-in
from faculty and administration? (pp. 2-6). To take the notion of dispositions one step further,
educators can develop certain habits of mind; that is, “the dispositions that are skillfully and
mindfully employed by characteristically successful people when confronted with problems, the
solutions to which are not immediately apparent” (Costa, 2008). Having the right habits of mind,
more than the proper knowledge and skill, becomes a precursor for interacting within a personal
learning network, or support system that one relies on as a learning educator – an issue to be
addressed in more detail later.
Once a definition of dispositions has been established, stakeholders then determine which
dispositions are needed in order to be successful and how those dispositions will be measured as
in the following: professionalism, open-mindedness, ability to listen, a belief that all students can
learn, reflection, temperance, self control, and patience to name a few (Shiveley & Misco, 2010).
The belief that all students can learn and the willingness to collaborate with all stakeholders, for
instance, underpins how making public promises or collective commitments with all stakeholders
contributes to the success of one of the most successful high schools in the United States: Adlai
Stevenson High School in Lincolnshire, Illinois (DuFour, DuFour, & Eaker, 2008). Being held
accountable to different stakeholders provides the basis for operationalizing dispositions through
transparent and public dialogue.
Effective educators with the proper dispositions are held accountable to the degree that
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teaching behavior can be assessed. Knowing what constitutes evidence for developing
dispositions provides the basis for operationalizing performances of understanding (Carroll,
2012). Several of the six facets of understandings mentioned earlier also lay the groundwork for
providing the appropriate evidence for assessing dispositions, such as empathy, perspective, and
self-knowledge. Moreover, two competing approaches of assessing dispositions in education
include quantitative measures, reductionism, and cause-and-effect relationships that link to
standards on the one hand; and a more qualitative, descriptive, interpretive, and discursive
approach on the other (Diez, 2006).
Teaching practice is an amalgamation of understandings (which includes enabling
knowledge), skill sets, and dispositions. These three dimensions to teaching are interdependent
and emerge and develop over time. When assessing teaching practice through ongoing
professional development, one of the biggest challenges is to provide an unbiased judgment that
leads to unreliable interpretations of an educator's conduct regarding what one knows; what one
can do; and what attitudes, beliefs, ideals, ideas, and experiences one has (Duplass & Cruz,
2010). What follows is an explanation as to how community change occurs within a professional
learning environment.
Professional learning community
Domain. From a community of practice perspective (CoP), professional learning occurs
as a result of a shared domain of interest (Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). Without it, a
CoP cannot exist since “it gives the members of the community a common ground to work with
and provides a sense of identity thereby giving purpose to and generating value for the CoP's
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members and stakeholders” (May, 2009). This can lead to an organization legitimizing a well-
developed domain whereas marginalizing CoP members with an ill-conceived domain (Wenger,
McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). The process then to develop a valuable domain is much like an
individual working with a group of individuals towards a type of community purpose statement
that is contingent on its relevance to the mission and vision statements and values of the
organization.
In education, schools develop a learning-related plan in the form of a mission statement
(Wiggins & McTighe, 2007). More broadly, a professional learning community (e.g., a school)
rests on four interrelated pillars: (i) mission – Why do we exist? (ii) vision – What do we hope to
become? (iii) values – What commitments must we make to create the school or district that will
improve our ability to fulfill our purpose? (iv) and goals – What goals will we use to monitor our
progress? (DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008). In terms of a CoP, legitimizing a domain equates to
acknowledging alignment to these four pillars of a professional learning community. Just as
domains are legitimized based on how they align to the four pillars, individual learning goals are
legitimized within a CoP domain.
Learning-related planning not only occurs at the group and organizational level, but also
at the individual level. One approach in planning for professional learning is to start with the
ends (e.g., mission and vision statements) and follow up with ways and means. The Goals and
Roles Evaluation Model (GREM) takes such an approach by dividing up performance
assessment into two categories: development phase and implementation phase (Stronge, 1997).
Under GREM, the development phase consists of determining the mission of the school,
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translate the mission into individual responsibilities, and determine the type of performance
indicator that each individual is to carry out. The implementation phase includes collecting data
from the individual's performance, compare the performance to some benchmark, and promote
change that seeks to improve the program through professional development. A linear approach
to professional learning such as GREM provides a common dilemma in professional
development between personal development and organizational learning (Scales, Pickering,
Senior, Headley, Garner, & Boulton, 2011).
Another approach to professional learning is to base it in action research and action
learning. Part of a teacher's job when not teaching is to be a continuous learner by keeping
abreast of current research on teaching and learning, enhancing professional skills, and engaging
in action research at the school and district levels (Wiggins & McTighe, 2007). But a more
personalized approach to professional development avoids domains or preplanning at the
organizational level altogether. Action learning, for example, branches away from action
research in that the former focuses on learning through action while the latter is based on a
research method grounded in practice (McGill & Beaty, 2002). Although the term action
learning can vary, it is usually associated with having the following key features: (i) sets of
about six people, (ii) action on real tasks or problems at work, (iii) tasks or problems are
individual rather than collective, (iv) questioning as the main way to help participants proceed
with their tasks or problems, and (v) facilitators are used (Pedler, Burgoyne, & Brook, 2005).
Hence, action learning requires a purposeful pursuit in addressing the existential questions What
do I stand for? and What am I trying to do? (Pedler & Burgoyne, 2008), two questions that
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underpin understanding how teachers create a personal learning network that leads to personal
change.
Practice. A domain based on intentionality, or goal setting, provides the basis for
establishing a set of practices that reside somewhere between the individual and the community.
The term practice can be thought of as a “set of frameworks, ideas, tools, information, styles,
language, stories, and documents that community members share” (Wenger, McDermott, &
Snyder, 2002). But practice is not only contingent on sharing ideas, tools, and information
within a community or group (i.e., a collective), but also occurs at the individual level through
action learning. And although action learning lacks the empirical and experimental evidence
needed to qualify it as a rigorous research standard, Leonard and Marquardt (2010) presented a
meta-analysis by synthesizing 21 quantitative and qualitative studies related to action learning
and found that action learning can promote transformative learning experiences for the individual
which converged with similar findings from Kueht (2009) as well. The notion of practice then,
presents an assortment of dichotomies: community members versus non-community members,
intentional learning versus incidental learning, the individual versus the community, and
quantitative versus qualitative research designs used to collect information about the
effectiveness of practice. These same dichotomies along with others will fade when learning
through practice is viewed through an Actor-Network Theory (ANT) framework which will be
discussed later.
Another aspect of practice which emerges through the sharing of experiences with others
is the idea of reflection. One of the key features to action learning is that it is based on tasks or
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problems at work, but this does little to distinguish between problem solving and problem
setting. Practitioners (e.g., educators) who think about doing something while they are doing it
are reflecting in action (Schon, 1983). According to Schon, reflecting in action avoids the idea
that goals, ends, and objectives are presented as fixed or isolated cases that need resolving; that
is, to reflect in action is to learn how to problem set as the practitioner continues to reevaluate
(i.e., problem set repeatedly) as the context changes over time (1983). As practitioners share
experiences with others, they reflect on action (i.e., after the fact) which provides the means for
discovering how one's knowing-in-action might have contributed to some unexpected outcome
(Schon, 1987). Consequently, practitioners reflect not by framing personal experiences around a
predetermined problem that is generalizable to a particular group, community, or organization,
but rather they reflect on more local problems that emerge through one's own tacit knowledge.
Community. Professional learning through practice can occur within a community.
Associating the practice with community accomplishes two things: (i) “it yields a more tractable
characterization of the concept of practice – in particular, by distinguishing it from less tractable
terms like culture, activity, or structure” and (ii) “it defines a special type of community – a
community of practice” (Wenger, 1999, p. 72). Wenger goes on to add that a community of
practice (CoP) can be viewed as a unit whereby communal membership is contingent on mutual
engagement (1999). Moreover, community practice results from securing commitments and
establishing partnerships that encumber a set of cognitive, analytic, and sorting skills
(Hardcastle, Powers, & Wenocur, 2011). Hence, the relationship between practice and
community depends on the scope of a domain of shared interests that align to a particular set of
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goals within an organization, a practice that is based on common knowledge needs, and the
amount of assistance individuals receive in finding the benefit of networking and sharing
knowledge with others (Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). But when considering how
professional learn in the workshop (e.g., educators within a school organization), placing less
emphasis on practice yields to a slightly different perspective.
A community can be framed in a variety of ways, in part, under the assumption that a
community consists of individuals networking and sharing ideas with others. A community can
also be stated in terms of a gesellschaft or gemeinschaft, which are German for society and
community respectively. According to Serviovanni (1999), gemeinschaft is essential to building
community within schools because it promotes a we identity that families provide; it fosters a
shared space or locale for individuals to interact; and it bonds people together via a common
goal, shared set of values, and a shared conception of being (See Table 1).
Table 1 Gesellschaft (society) Gemeinschaft (community)
Identity Focuses on I Focuses on we
Personal
Relationships
Contrived Bonding
Goals Contractual Common
Society Secular Sacred
Unity Separated in spite of uniting
factors
United in spite of separating
factors
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Communities also embody a “civic virtue- the willingness of people to sacrifice their self-
interest on behalf of the common good” (Serviovanni, 2005). In a professional learning context,
a professional learning community (PLC) then achieves the following: (i) has a shared purpose,
clear direction, collective commitments, and goals; (ii) focuses on learning based on a
collaborative culture; (iii) pursues a collective inquiry into best practice and current reality; (iv)
embraces the notion of learning by doing; (v) has a commitment to continuous improvement; and
(vi) is oriented to results (DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008). Whether termed as a CoP or a PLC,
professional learning emerges from having a certain level of commonality among a group of
people: some degree of mutual engagement (i.e., reciprocity), goals, values or collective
commitments, purpose, direction, and a degree of common or best practices. But accounting for
professional learning with a particular domain, practice, and community is limited without an
understanding of how learning emerges.
Professional development stems from a learning ecology. Current technological
advances have given rise to different professional learning trajectories which have extended
beyond time and space constraints of the past (Day & Sachs, 2004). New affordances result as
learning trajectories become more “collaborative, developmental, collective, inquiry-based,
personalized, varied, supportive, contextualized, proactive, and andragogical” (Días-Maggioli,
2004, pp. 5-6). The reason learning trajectories are more supportive, for example, is because
educators have more opportunities to interact via live communication (i.e., synchronous
communication) and offline forms of communication (i.e., asynchronous forms of
communication). As a result, the learning ecosystem expands beyond the educational
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organization to the degree that learning trajectories become more inherently adaptable to their
surroundings; as a result, personal interactions are more likely to shift from being congenial, as
found in most conventional schools, to collegial, something that is lacking in today’s schools
(Glickman, Gordon, & Ross-Gordon, 2007). But an adaptable learning trajectory within a
community-based educational organization is unlikely to occur without understanding the role of
leadership.
In order for leadership and learning to coexist within an educational organization, a shift
in culture needs to occur. Value-added dimensions to leadership, for instance, create a shift from
planning to purposing; from giving directions to enabling teachers and the school; from
providing a monitoring system to building an accountability system; from extrinsic motivation to
intrinsic motivation; and from congeniality to collegiality (Serviovanni, 2005). From a
professional development standpoint, this shift in culture might be from external training
(workshops and course) to job-embedded learning; from presentations to entire faculties to team-
based action research; from learning individually through courses and workshops to learning
collectively by working together; and from short-term exposure to multiple concepts and
practices to sustained commitment to limited, more focused initiatives (DuFour, DuFour, Eaker,
2008). This shift in culture is contingent on how teacher leaders are granted leadership roles as
an entitlement which seeks to place those who have the ability and will to act in the forefront of
the decision-making process (Serviovanni, 2005). Independent of position or title, educators
begin to distribute leadership responsibilities in order to add value to the learning and sharing
process that leads to such a cultural shift.
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To further articulate the dichotomous shift in cultural leadership, differences can be
drawn between human rationality and assessing individuals’ assumptions. The expectation that
human behavior is a zero-sum game assumes a model I theory that supports the notion that
individuals are objective, level-headed, and intolerable of publically testing one’s assumptions –
see Table 1 (Argyris & Schon, 1974).
Table 2 Model I Model II
Competition Win/lose Maximize valid information
Rationality Individuals are rational Maximize free & informed
choice
Publically testing assumptions
Intolerably risky Maximize internal commitment to decisions made
Argyris and Schon add that organizations work more effectively if leaders adhere more to a
Model II theory, one that maximizes valid information, free and informed choice, and internal
commitment to decisions made by practitioners (1974). Similarly, the same dichotomy can be
viewed as being a “Clockwork I” and “Clockwork II” theory whereas the former works by
regulating the master wheel and master pin of a clockwork organization (top-down) and the latter
requires the “cultural cement” of norms, values, belief, and purposes of the people to assure
coherence between the cogs, gears, and pins that all spin independently of each other
(Serviovanni, 2005, pp. 33-34). Finally, professional learning within an organization can be
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viewed as being a tight and loose leadership style, somewhere between an autocratic approach
and a laissez-faire approach – giving educators, for example, the freedom to be autonomous and
creative but within a systematic framework committed to nondiscretionary priorities and
parameters (DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, 2008).
Professional development has been viewed as having a domain through a set of common
practices within a network of people who share ideas and experiences with others. Common
characteristic have emerged that suggest ideally that groups of people share a common mission,
goals, or purpose (i.e., intentionality) via research-based practices and principles, sometimes
referred to as best practices, all within a single unit referred to as a community albeit one that can
also interact with other communities. From this point on, the term professional development will
be referred to as professional learning as it pertains mainly to how a network community evolves
around a particular individual (i.e., educator). Shifting the unit of analysis from a community or
set of practices to the individual requires a framework based on complexity theory and actor-
network theory, not to debunk the notion that learning occurs in a CoP or PLC, but to argue that
such a shift is required for the sake of learning efficacy.
The Complexity of Learning
Feedback loops. Complexity Science is “the study of the phenomena which emerge
from a collection of interacting objects” (Johnson, 2007, pp. 3-4). One of the key features of a
complex system is the notion of feedback loops. Interacting objects, such as teachers and
supervisors, have traditionally viewed feedback as teacher observations and assessment (i.e.,
teacher evaluations) which have embraced various underlying assumptions: (i) observation and
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 49
assessment lead to personal reflection for the purpose of improving student achievement, (ii)
observation and assessment can benefit both teacher and supervisor (or any involved), and (iii)
when teachers see improvement, they are more likely to continue such improvement (Sparks &
Loucks-Horsley (2007). In a professional learning community, feedback might occur in top-
down and bottom-up approaches between administrators and supervisors and teachers such that a
balance between these two approaches is ideal for organizational learning. But feedback loops
entail a broader notion than just observation and assessment between teachers and supervisors.
Feedback loops cover any cause and effect relationship.
Feedback loops entail circular and recursive relationships between cause and effect
through nonlinear logic (Kay, 2008). Since interacting objects are human, decision-making and
subsequent actions are based on feedback loops that depend on prior experiences that lead to
memory formation (Johnson, 2007). As memory formation builds over time, these recursive
relationships render a synergistic effect; that is, when faced with the nonlinearity of professional
learning, the whole becomes more than the sum of its parts which is a key tenet to complex
systems (Strogatz, 2003). The author goes on to say that whole systems can only be evaluated
holistically and not an aggregation of evaluating individual parts. What sets feedback loops
apart from a linear perspective is that the latter adheres to a reductionist stance which results
from direct cause-and-effect relationships; hence, the aggregation of the parts is exactly
equivalent to the whole. But feedback loops tend to take on different meanings depending on the
context.
Since feedback loops are situational, not all feedback loops yield equivalent change
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events. From an organizational standpoint, the tendency is to frame feedback loops as having
little effect on the individual whereas feedback spirals, for example, are seen as being more
recursive (Costa & Kallick, 1995). A feedback spiral is an ongoing dialectical process where an
original theory-based concept is applied in practice, reviewed, and subsequently reapplied in a
forthcoming event (Blindenbacher & Raoul Nashat, 2010). But because complex systems are
made up of humans, recursiveness becomes an inherent aspect of feedback loops that do not
result from direct cause-and-effect relationships, as already mentioned. Moreover, feedback
loops can be expressed as generating a change in another person – a positive feedback loop – or
expressed as not evoking any change in another person – a negative feedback loop (Uhl-Bien &
Marion, 2008). The complex nature of feedback loops then, creates a generative, dynamic
system that emerges from experience. Besides feedback loops, another attribute of complex
systems is one of sustainability.
Sustainability. The degree that a complex system is sustainable depends on its non-linear
structure. Like complexity theory, chaos theory relates to wholes and the relationships between
constituent agents, contrasting the often reductionist concerns of mainstream science with the
essence of the ‘ultimate particle’ (Mason, 2008b). The butterfly effect has been the signature of
chaos since the 1979 paper by Lorenz called, Predictability: Does the Flap of a Butterfly’s
Wings in Brazil Set Off a Tornado in Texas? (Strogatz, 2003). Strogatz goes on to define a
chaotic system as one with small disturbances which grow exponentially fast, rendering long-
term prediction impossible. DeWaard, et al. (2011) researched a massive open online course
(MOOC) in relation to complexity theory by collecting descriptive data from public online
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spaces and then performing a content analysis. They found that a MOOC is exemplar of an open
and adaptive, complex system which provides a possible solution for new educational
environments that fit the “Knowledge Age” of adult learning today (p. 112). But since a chaotic
system appears to be random, yet is deterministic, the sustainability of a system will depend on
how change transpires over time. To provide greater insight into the dynamics of a non-linear
system within an educational context, for example, a deeper understanding of how chaotic and
complexity systems converge and diverge follows.
A complex system lies somewhere between a linear and chaotic system. As previously
mentioned, a linear system is one that is reductive, and is an aggregation of constituent elements
that equal the whole. At the other end of the continuum, a chaotic system is one that appears
random but is actually deterministic. Like chaotic systems, complexity is the study of systems of
interconnected components whose behavior cannot be explained solely by the properties of their
parts but from the behavior that arises from their interconnectedness (English, 2011). They are
both nonlinear and are synergistic in that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. One key
attribute to a complex system is the synergies that exist as in the case with Kayuni (2010) who
researched a community secondary school policy that managed to persevere despite apparent
overwhelming challenges. Through a chaotic and complex framework, the author distinguished
complex systems from chaotic systems by explaining that the former self-organize and are
dynamic in how they order and structure themselves throughout the growing process whereas the
latter continuously transform into more complex systems which undergo irreversible changes.
Thus, the author goes on to explain how most innovation occurs “on the edge of chaos” –
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somewhere between chaos and complexity – where most creativity and innovation occur; in the
case of Community Day Secondary Schools, new policies followed a period of poor quality and
lack of relevance in education, yet innovation did occur in the form of developing a new teacher
service commission, greater communication across schools who adapt the new policy, and an
increase in public awareness and participation within the education sector (p. 9). Change that
transmits through professional learning systems then can benefit from self-organization and
sustainability, and can demonstrate progress within the network, even though over outcomes
might be to the contrary. Self-organization and sustainability suggest an absence of a central
controller which is an essential constituent of non-linear behavior that creates embedded patterns
of sustainability, or fractals (Johnson, 2007).
Fractals are common in both chaotic and complex systems and help to bolster
sustainability throughout the system. Many natural phenomena that exist today are fractals
which are repeated patterns at
various scales such as maps,
mountains, snowflakes, and even
languages (Mandelbrot, 1977).
In Image 1, for instance, the tree
illustrates a fractal structure in
that the entire tree consists of
small trees, which are made up
of smaller trees, and so on (Dooley, 2008). In social organizations, a “fractal time ecology” can
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 53
exist where day-to-day leadership patterns connect with similar patterns observed over the course
of weeks, months, and years (Dooley & Lichtenstein, 2008). According to Smitherman (2005),
a fractal-like pattern of dynamic relations is also present within the classroom, where social
media can be used to increase social interaction with less temporal and special constraints (as
cited in Casey & Evans, 2011). However, she goes on to describe behavior in a nonlinear system
as not only being chaotic, but also fixed and periodic. In terms of fractals and their relevance to
a learning organization then, is to realize that just because human behavior may appear to be
random, inconsistent, and haphazard, does not necessarily mean that there are simpler behavioral
patterns that scale not only over time but hierarchically as well. If simpler behavioral patterns
scale, sustainability in the sense of a multidimensional learning ecology is more likely to occur
(Pavlovich, 2009).
A nonlinear dynamic perspective provides a framework for understanding the complexity
of an educational organization that places professional development at the fore. In additional to
deterministic chaos - complex patterns that result in apparent randomness – nonlinear social
behaviors can also be described as being stable but necessarily repetitive or what Lorenz (1993)
refers to as “complex attractors” (as cited in Marion, 2008, loc. 578). For example, continued
technical support for educators lead to a consistent pattern of greater risk taking and
experimentation with online social tools. Although nonrepetitive behavior exist, there is a
tendency for teachers to try web tools if provided adequate support. Over time, individuals
decide whether or not to begin experimenting with new web tools (given ongoing technological
support) by choosing one complex attractor over another. When certain conditions result in a
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 54
person choosing one attractor over another, a third tenet of nonlinear dynamic systems emerges
termed bifurcation (Goldstein, 2008). Deterministic chaos, complex attractors, and bifurcations
collectively create a nonlinear dynamic system that provides the framework for professional
learning to occur.
Within an educational system, nonlinear dynamics describe professional learning
throughout one’s career in terms of how adapting to one’s surroundings over time and making
choices that seem small if considered in isolation actually add up exponentially over time as in
the case of the butterfly effect explained earlier (Bloch, 2005). As the practitioner engages in a
unique learning trajectory, embedded patterns of behavior may occur statically, periodically, and
chaotically. The embedded interactional patterns that depend more on personal connections than
on one’s race or social background offer insight into relationships between the individual and the
group (Christakis & Fowler, 2009). This relationship equates to how the individual influences
others and how others influence the individual. The actor-network theory (ANT) supports how
complex interactions between humans and nonhumans in that it is not considered a single or
coherent theoretical domain, but one that is developing diversely in response to current
challenges (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010).
Actor-network Theory (ANT)
Translation. ANT provides a more appropriate framework for how people learn and
practice in the field of education. ANT embraces four central ideas: (a) the world is made up of
actors and actants, (b) no object is inherently reducible or irreducible to any other, (c) actants
link to one another by way of translation, and (d) actants are not inherently strong or weak
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 55
(Harmon, 2009). Of the prior four central ideas, the final one (i.e., that actants are not inherently
strong or weak) leads to an additional set of notions relevant to professional learning: actants are
a result of their concreteness; people and objects are what they are; and there is little need for
dichotomous notions (i.e., labeling) such as novice and master teacher, those who lead versus
those who are led, and theory versus practice (Harmon, 2009; Gomart & Hennion, 2004).
Namely, distinctions between theory and practice, those who lead and those who are lead, and
other dichotomies often found in the field of education do not exist from an ANT perspective.
For this reason, professional learning brings people and objects together through a process of
knowing, or an enactment that results from connections with other people and things (Fenwich &
Edwards, 2010).
Translation, as a central tenet to ANT, elucidates why terms such as professional
development and training yield to the more descriptive term, professional learning. Translation
can be defined as an ontological frame with regard to how entities change over time (Fenwick &
Edwards, 2010). From an ANT perspective, describing the notion of society, for instance, does
not consist simply of ties or connections that link humans and nonhumans, but instead is a result
of translation: the momentary associations between humans and nonhumans that are
characterized by the way it gathers together into new shapes (Latour, 2005). An ontological
approach to the process of learning is minimized when terms like trained teachers or
professional development seminars suggest that individuals move from being less to being more
or nothing to something. Moreover, translation is complex in that ongoing interactions act as
either positive or negative feedback loops that lead to emergent network change (Johnson, 2007).
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Transformational change that occurs at the individual level can also entice change in others (and
vice a versa) through what is referred to as “herd behavior” (Strogatz, 2003, p. 265). Thus,
change and the relationship between social practice and professional learning remain connected
entities within a networked-system.
Actors (i.e., actants) are networks and vice versa to the degree that actors (i.e., networks)
are not inherently strong or inherently simple nor complex, but can be examined in terms of how
traces of associations remain after some educational performance (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010).
But instead of viewing sociology or social practice as being contextual or even embedded with
cultural norms, sociology - or social practice more specifically – can also be viewed as being
traces of associations (Latour, 2005). Tracing associations not only form agencies but also form
ideas, identities, rules, routines, policies, instruments, and reforms as well (Fenwick & Edwards,
2010). Thus, the practice of teaching and learning results by recognizing how associations or
alliance formation grow and perish over time, and how these associations relate to humans,
materials (e.g., ICTs), and concepts.
Understanding how to improve EFL teacher practice stems from understanding how
people learn. From an ANT perspective, people and objects are linked through relational
materiality. Relational materiality is the notion that all entities (i.e., individuals and objects) are
produced through relations and that entities are performative in that they are produced in, by,
and through such relations (Law & Hassard, 1999). Thus, professional learning emerges by
having the educator recall how relations form and to learn how the performative value of the
network transforms the individual (e.g., through a change in teaching practice). Individual
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transformation, or professional learning, becomes the recollection of how relations form through
a nondiscrete and dynamic network. Individuals, groups, and objects that make up the individual
nodes of a dynamic network are seen as being in a continual state of flux, where agency (i.e., the
actant) and structure (i.e., the network) intertwine through heterogeneous assemblages (Law &
Hassard, 1999). Thus, improving professional learning emerges through continue support in
how educators recall how past, current, and future assemblages (i.e., events) take shape (Fenwich
& Edwards, 2010). In doing so, supervisors begin to transform teachers to instructional leaders –
a notion that relates more to will and ability than to position, role, or title.
Material semiotics. One of the tenets to ANT is that everything comprises of actors. An
actor is anything that has an effect on other things; therefore an actor can be of any size, real or
unreal (i.e., all actors are in essence real), physical or non-physical, and an actor contains other
actors ad infinitum (Latour & Harman, 2010). The idea of an actor embedded within another
actor and so on, is much like to notion of fractals mentioned earlier (e.g., a tree within a tree,
within a tree etc.). An actor might be an abstract concept, idea, or belief or something more
concrete like a pencil, computer, or some other physical object. The interrelationship between
actors, as in a network, becomes the unit of semiotic analysis.
Semiotics takes a different approach to data collection and analysis than typical
qualitative research designs. For instance, instead of an inside-out approach, semiotics takes an
outside-in approach (Lawes, 2002). Lawes compares these two approaches by explaining how a
group of people might interpret a box of chocolate cookies (i.e., biscuits) and how the
interpretation does not simply come from a single person’s interpretation, but rather a whole
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hosts of communicative signs and symbols, referred to as culture (e.g., language, visual signs,
music, etc.). Hence, the unit of analysis stems from the connection, relationship, and interaction
among a set of actors and not just the individual. The notion of semiotics underpins the
complexity of actors; even though they may show signs of stability, they exist as an effect of an
irreducible relationship of actors.
Since actors can be conceptual, biological, social, and material, the way in which signs
and symbols relate can be viewed as material semiotics. An actor-network’s material semiotics
is not a theory in the same way that sociology asks the question why, but rather is more of a
methodology which asks the question how (Law, 2007). As such, the term material semiotics
becomes a more accurate term than actor-network theory in how natural, social, and technical
objects become enacted within a web, how they associate and exercise force, and how they
persist, decline, and mutate over time (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010). Because network actors are
an effect of complex distributions of constituent actors interacting with each other, no two actors
are ever exactly the same and are constantly adapting throughout each node of the network.
Since actors can cease to exist or become obsolete, understanding a network equates to
understanding it in relation to its durability and mobility.
Various forms of semiotic durability and mobility impart different effects on the
interdependency of constituent actors or on the actor itself. Material durability refers to the
length of time an object (i.e., actor) will last, and strategic durability refers to the sustainability of
processes or activity patterns within the actor-network over time (Law, 2007). Law posits that a
thought or speech act, for example, is much less durable than an idea transferred to text; and
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relational patterns among human and nonhuman actors typically remain purposeful as long as
ongoing discourse is maintained. Moreover, the overall durability of an actor network depends
on the stability of an object in a different space (i.e., different set of constituent actors), also
referred to as an “immutable mobile” (Jones & Latour, 2005, p. 16). Semiotic durability and
mobility then, refer to how people, thoughts, and artifacts persist, grow, and decay over time
(i.e., temporal) and through different spaces or environments (i.e., spatial). Understanding the
interdependent, temporal, and spatial nature of actors across a network underpins the notion of a
personal learning network.
Personal Learning Network (PLN)
The different facets of a PLN. The current shift in how people learn has created a
dependency on information and communication technologies (ICTs) to the degree that growing a
PLN has become an imperative for educators who want to stay connected to the changing world
that we are charged with introducing to our students (Warlick, 2009). A personalized network of
people and materials has value when directed towards professional development events which
are based on teacher responsibilities, are ongoing, and are tailored towards the educator in terms
of years of service and personal preference (Bauer, 2010). From an ANT perspective, network
learning constitutes connecting people, materials, and conceptualizations from forming
associations or connections that make up a PLN.
A PLN takes a holistic approach in associating and defining constituent parts. An
attempt to distinguish between network types tend to create terms such as professional learning
environment (PLE), professional learning network (PfLN), and PLN, each with its own particular
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meaning. For instance, PLEs tend to focus on blogs, wikis, and other ICTs as creating
affordances for learners to be in more control of what and when they learn (Al-Zoube, 2009).
PLEs then are framed as predicating PLNs that are focused more on personal relationships to
exist that ultimately leads to more specific PfLNs, or networks of collaborating professionals and
experts via professional organizations (Ivanova, 2009). If a network is defined as a collection of
nodes (i.e., a collection of actors), then an ANT PLN is any particular aggregation of socio-
conceptual, biological, and technical nodes that make up a particular individual at a particular
point in time. Hence, an individual may appear to be immutable and inevitable, but in essence is
the effect of complex sets of previous dynamic events and negotiations within networks. The
black-box metaphor is often used when discussing ANT as a way to address the tendency of
examining the interworking of the box (i.e., network) and instead study the discourses,
controversies, and relationships that shaped its role (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010). This is
precisely the approach taken when discussing PLNs – not as fixed structures that are examined in
isolation, but rather as fluid socio-material networks that are an effect of prior nodal
relationships. From an ANT mindscape and for the purpose of this study, a PLN is any
relationship or association of actors that links individuals, material, and conceptualizations.
A key tenet to a complex PLN is that of communicative flow. Communicative flow (i.e.,
relational ties) is either unidirectional as when a lecturer disperses information out to a group of
students, or bidirectional which is a more discursive event between nodes, individuals, or actors
(Wasserman & Faust, 2008). Most people communicate directly with friends, a friend of a
friend, or a friend of a friend of a friend – also referred to as communicating up to three degrees
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of separation (Christakis & Fowler, 2009). This small-world effect demonstrates how directly
(i.e., a friend) and indirectly (e.g., friend of a friend) one can outwardly effect the network and
how the network can directly and indirectly influence the individual. Knowing how and when
connections form help lead to a particular type of complex network formation that lends itself to
how individuals learn in a sociotechnical environment; that is, how connections do not randomly
connect but rather are scale-free (Crook, 2009; Barabási, 2003). In effect, the small-world
phenomenon is a unifying feature of diverse networks found both in nature and in technology
(Strogatz, 2003). But understanding the true complexity of a PLN embodies not only the
direction of the relational tie (i.e., unidirectional or bidirectional) but also the strength of the
relational tie itself.
Network connections that make up a PLN can vary. The ties educators form with others
can be referred to as either strong or weak (Granovetter, 1973). The author terms strong ties as
those friends or colleagues who are in close contact – i.e., within one degree of separation – and
those who share a strong bond whereas weak ties are friends of friends (or friend of a friend of a
friend) that one may know but have little contact with. To leverage a PLN around ongoing
professional learning requires a holistic understanding of strong and weak ties that connect with
nodes – which are networks themselves - that provide the greatest potential for learning. The
potentiality of learning or agency then is not inherent within the actor or node, but rather in the
associations that relate to the actor or node (Fenwick & Edwards, 2010). Recognizing
directional ties that exist between network nodes provides insight into network topologies that
exist in social interactions.
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Choosing
the network
nodes that best
make up a PLN
is not a random
event. If
educators formed a random PLN, it would be illustrated as a normal distribution, or bell-shaped
curve whereby the number of colleagues an educator interacted with would be virtually the same
in number, or at least fairly close to the mean (Barabási, 2003). But networks are not random but
are scale-free and assume a Pareto distribution where a small number of entities typically have
the largest percentage of influence (e.g., small number of computer brands accounting for most
of the computers sold, a small number of employees or owners accounting for the largest
percentage of income earned, etc.) (Barabási, 2003; Buchanan, 2002). In education, educators
do not choose with whom they will interact simply by chance, but rather form purposeful
relationships based on personal needs, interests, and learning preferences. Thus, a PLN has less
to do with the number of constituent nodes and more to do with how scale-free, material
semiotics associate with purposeful and dynamic, and relationships. Simply, an educator pursues
a scale-free PLN in terms of connectivity (See Image 1).
The idea that some nodes have more connections than others can be explained in terms of
a “scale-free network” (Strogatz, 2003; Barabási, 2003; Barabási & Albert, 1999). The Pareto
distribution or power law distribution is ubiquitous in terms of how nature and material interact:
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language, demography, commerce, information and computer sciences, geology, physics and
astronomy (Newman, 2006). Newman specifically lists the number of citations of papers as one
example of a power law distribution in that much of the literature that is cited is linked back to a
relatively few number of authors. To understand the literature then is to understand to trace the
associations (i.e., deeper citations) that lead up to one particular source, for example an article
from a journal. Similarly, reflecting on one’s own perspective is to trace the associations that
lead to a particular conceptualization or behavior. A growing PLN bifurcates critical awareness
into the prevailing and precarious interactions of the moment with a dynamic view of nodal
relationships that change and adapt over time. Since the educator is the central node of the PLN,
this two-pronged approach to critical awareness becomes the basis of growing into a more
reflective practitioner.
The way in which an educator reflects on thoughts and experiences will depend on one
articulates the dynamics of a PLN. The development of a PLN is the effect of how an individual
forms directional ties that emerge from a nonreductivist phenomenon (Christakis & Fowler,
2009). Interactions that lead to strong and weak ties emerge through a scale free network, or a
collection of nodes that are not connected to any one dominant entity or node within a network
(Strogatz, 2003). Instead, clusters of subnetworks referred to as being “ego-centered” consists of
a focal actor (i.e., ego) with “alters” or ties that link other to the ego (Wasserman & Faust, 2008,
p. 42). Another way to refer to clusters is in terms of “hubs” and “connectors” (Barabási, 2003,
pp. 55-64). For the purpose of this study, hubs (e.g., a link between a large number of nodes),
nodes, (e.g., any entity the educator connects with), connectors (e.g., a single node with a large
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 64
number of connecting nodes), and connections (e.g., the directional flow of information that
exists between any two nodes) will be used to articulate the dynamics of cultivating a PLN. The
cultivation of a PLN drives professional learning and the change process.
Professional learning. An essential aspect of ongoing professional learning is one of
sustainability; that is, the way in which educators become interdependent in such a way that both
formal and informal learning emerges free from coercion. In a small-world network topology,
chaotic and random networks are at opposite ends of a continuum where a small-world network
resides somewhere in between (Pieris & Fusina, 2009; Watts & Strogatz, 1998). A small-world
network includes the following two features: (a) a low average path length between network
nodes (e.g., individuals can easily connect with others via a small number of intermediaries) and
(b) a “high transitivity (most of a person's friends are friends with one another)” (Christakis &
Fowler, 2009). The notion of high transitivity can also be expressed in terms of a strength in
ties, or a “combination of the amount of time, the emotional intensity, the intimacy (mutual
confiding), and the reciprocal services which characterizes the tie” (Granovetter, 1973).
Professional development, or more accurately, professional learning can be viewed in terms of
coaching educators in how recognizing and adapting between network nodes become beneficial
to both the individual and the network.
Creating opportunities to network is synonymous with professional learning. A network
is based on connections and contagion or the spreading of an emotion or idea across a network,
and can be ephemeral or lifelong, casual or intense, or personal or anonymous (Christakis &
Fowler, 2009). Additionally, complex and network learning stems from the following principles:
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 65
(a) learning occurs when there is diversity of opinion,
(b) learning happens when connections are made with other individuals and with non-
human devices such as technology,
(c) one's learning potential is more important than what one knows right now, (d)
facilitative learning emerges through the cultivation of one's PLN,
(e) recognizing patterns and tendencies is a required skill for the future,
(f) learning activities require up-to-date and relevant content,
(g) the act of making a decision is vital,
(h) planning on what to learn requires perspective, and
(i) any supported truisms should be confined to particular context; that is, based on time
and space (Siemens, 2005).
ANT relates to connective principles by not distinguishing between human and non-human
objects as static entities in-and-of themselves (Law, 2007). As a result, professional learning in
the field of education is the coaching of educators to come to recognize the potentialities that
exist between people, materials, and conceptualizations by realizing dynamic, network patterns
as an effect of prior experiences.
A learning network may also be viewed in terms of an ecological unit whereby the
individual learner adapts to the network and the network takes shape because of the individual
(Educause…, 2011). Within this context, a PLN ensues from an ongoing aggregation and
pruning of boundary nodes (i.e., human, non-human, and conceptual) which have the following
characteristics as they relate to material semiotics: (a) semiotic and materialistic rationality (a
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 66
change in one node effects a change in another), (b) heterogeneity (a respect for diversity), (c)
precarious process deriving from a temporal orientation (synchronous and asynchronous
intentional and incidental learning), and (d) spatial considerations (online communities, face-to-
face meetings, etc.) (Law, 2007). In terms of professional learning among educators, educative
experiences become based on how a change from one individual influences a change in someone
or something else, and vice versa. This notion thus becomes the basis for seeing the value in
educators sharing ideas and experiences, caring that someone else might benefit from their
sharing, and daring to take risks both as a life-long learner and teacher.
Sharing, caring, and daring carry different meanings depending on the theoretical
viewpoint one subscribes to. In a community of practice (CoP ), there is a need for
understanding the role of the overall structure [i.e., the community or practice as the unit of
analysis] in how it promotes a more intentionally systematic benefit regarding how knowledge is
to be managed (Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002). Another theoretical perspective assumes
the activity itself provides the means for culturally embedded tools to mediate between the
person and the outcome, and that certain rules mediate between the person and the community
(Rizzo, 2003). But from an ANT perspective, and more specifically a connectivist perspective,
the individual learner becomes the unit of analysis in that the socio-technical and conceptual
elements of a PLN originate from the individual learner's perspective in terms of how the
network effects a change in teaching practice and how the individual learn effects change to the
PLN.
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Summary
Understanding how educators pursue professional learning vis-à-vis interaction within a
PLN and any necessary artifacts is complex. Professional learning from an ANT framework
holds that (a) the world is made up of actors and actants, (b) no object is inherently reducible or
irreducible to any other, (c) actants link to one another by way of translation, and (d) actants are
not inherently strong or weak (Harmon, 2009). Not categorizing actants (i.e., people or objects)
as inherently strong or weak allows for a more open and transparent learning affordances devoid
of social or positional hierarchy or any preconceived conceptions of how materials (e.g., web
tools) are to be used. Thus, through complexity science, the emergent properties of phenomena
are examined as a result of interactions over time (Johnson, 2007). Specifically, informal
dialogues related to teaching and learning have the greatest participation levels among teachers
and highest level of impact when compared to other types of professional development (e.g.,
workshops, conferences, etc.) (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
2011). This study seeks to provide a model for creating greater professional development
support to educators in Mexico by providing broader affordances for educators to carry out
informal dialogues related to teaching and learning within a complex PLN. It seeks to fill the
gap in current research in understanding the distributed nature of learning, specifically the role of
materiality in the workplace and the basic assumptions of what constitutes professional learning
(Fenwick, 2009; Fenwick, 2010). By gaining further insight into the complexities of informal
dialogues as a means for professional learning, great support for professional development effort
will help improve the current state of the educational system in Mexico.
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Chapter 3: Research Method
As a means for providing better professional development support in Mexico, a
qualitative multiple case study seeks to explain how EFL educators interact with ideas, materials,
and with other educators through open, informal dialogues based on how to improve teaching
and learning. Specifically, this study will explain how EFL educators in higher education who
currently teach at three different universities in Mexico conduct open, informal dialogues and
contributions to OERs within public web sites. The follow research questions will drive the data
collection, analysis, and reporting processes: (a) How do EFL educators in Mexico conduct open
and informal pedagogical dialogues that enrich a personal learning network? and (b) How do
EFL educators in Mexico confront challenges when openly sharing informal pedagogical
dialogues within a personal learning network?
The Mexican educational system lags behind other countries in terms of student scores in
reading, math, and science (Shepherd, 2010). Moreover, professional development typically
focuses on practices and programs instead of supporting people in the end leading to isolated
workshops, change initiatives that fail to create a conducive learning environment, and
summative assessments that simply recapitulate past events with little-to-no ongoing support
(Reeves, 2010). Any professional development endeavor that seeks to address these problems
should scale; that is, it should offer the greatest potential for educators to grow in terms of
interacting with others by way of a PLN. For this study, 21-30 EFL educators will be recruited
from three different local universities, which will require that each participant be teaching at
least one course in English. A face-to-face orientation and subsequent online survey will provide
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 69
the basis for selecting the participants of the study. The two main criteria for choosing the
participants will be their willingness to participate online and their technological readiness
levels. A content analysis will be conducted on all online contributions and any communication
discourse that results from online forum discussions (e.g., EduQuiki Wiki, personal blogs, etc.)
and personal reflections and interviews. Personal reflections, interviews, and focus groups will
be conducted in order to obtain deeper perspective in how participants frame their personal
learning network as a connected network of ideas, materials, and people.
When assessing an individual’s PLN as a construct, qualitative data should be credible,
transferable, dependable, and confirmable (Trochim & Donnelly, 2008). In order for data to be
credible, the researcher will take on a participant observer role in assuring that the reporting
accurately reflects the participants’ perspectives. This will be done by triangulating types of data
already mentioned in order to achieve deeper understandings of the PLN as a socio-technical
network. In terms of transferability, the cross-case analysis along with the research method itself
is meant to be scalable and adaptable to many different educational contexts. Making sure
qualitative data are dependable depends on the extent that a changing context is continuously
being considered as part of the analysis and in the final reporting. Finally, as data is being
collected, all evidence will remain openly online so to maintain a clear audit trail for those who
wish to compare fieldwork with the reporting and those who wish to duplicate the research
method for future studies, also referred to as confirmability. For all private information obtained
for the study, an informed consent form (see Appendix B) will be used so to maintain a level of
ethics and integrity in full accordance to institutional review board standards.
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What follows is a detailed description of the overall research method and design used to
research informal pedagogical dialogues that link to PLNs, followed by a description of the
participants and instruments used to collect the data. The process in which data was collected is
explained as well as the type of analysis used to better understand the complexity of PLN
formation. To conclude, methodological assumptions, limitations, and delimitations will be
explained, which will conclude with a section on ethical assurances with regard to the entire
research method design.
Research Method and Design
This multiple case study will employ a qualitative research design. A qualitative research
design allows participants to share interpretations through an inductive, emergent, and holistic
approach (Creswell, 2009). Qualitative methods focus primarily on what people say and what
people do that will enable researchers to understand the meaning of a particular phenomenon,
event, or activity (Gillham, 2010). A qualitative approach also allows for a greater wealth of
detailed descriptive data on a smaller number of case studies in comparison to quantitative
approaches (Patton, 2002). And from an ANT perspective, qualitative data provides a rich,
descriptive narrative in understanding the related attributes between network nodes (McCormick,
Fox, Carmichael, and Procter, 2011). Although frequencies and numeric data may be used in
this study, all data that serve as dependent variables (i.e., relationships between
conceptualizations, materials, and people) will originate from qualitative sources (e.g., content
analysis from electronic artifacts, forum posts, and personal discussions). Participant descriptors
that serve as independent variables will be a mix of qualitative and quantitative data: institution,
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 71
years of teaching experience, among others.
Although this study is rooted in a qualitative research design, it does embrace a
multimethod research approach. When conducting a content analysis study, qualitative data can
also be expressed quantitatively by developing frequencies of topics and themes. Quantitative
data that has originated from qualitative data is considered a qualitative research design based on
a “methods” (as opposed to a “methodology”) definition (Creswell & Clark, 2007, p. 12). But
since participant descriptors obtained in this research (i.e., independent variables which are
quantitative data) will be obtained from a survey applied at the start of the data collection
process, a multimethod research (as opposed to a mixed methods design) thus describes the most
appropriate research method design for this study (Morse, 2003).
A multiple case study as a qualitative research design will be used in order to study the
following: (a) understand how EFL educators in Mexico conduct open and informal pedagogical
dialogues that enrich a personal learning network and (b) understand how EFL educators in
Mexico confront challenges when openly sharing informal pedagogical dialogues within a
personal learning network. The theoretical concept that binds the individual cases together is the
PLN. Defining a theoretical concept is necessary when doing multiple case studies in order to
avoid losing sight of what is being researched; that is, to best understand the conceptualization,
one needs to understand the context or case study from which the proposition is based (Stake,
2006). Thus, the unit of analysis, or individual case, will be the EFL educator and the
proposition will be the PLN. To preserve the integrity of the case study, special care will be
taken when collecting and analyzing data at the smallest unit of analysis or the EFL educator
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 72
(Patton, 2002). To this end, reification of a PLN will stem from researching what educators say
and do with regard to ideational, material, and social interactions. This avoids researching
conceptualizations in the abstract and instead adheres to a more concrete description of topics
related to the participants' real-life experiences (Yin, 2009). By researching informal
pedagogical dialogues among EFL educators, the intent is to draw connections between what
educators say and do in terms of an emergent and dynamic PLN.
How interaction patterns and related materials correspond with each other can be voiced
in terms of associations. Instead of relying on direct, one-to-one associations generated by
statistical generalizations (i.e., sampling groups and inferential statistics), analytical
generalizations will be conducted at the PLN (i.e., construct) level as a means for recognizing
patterns related to theoretical concepts (Yin, 2009). Researching how informal pedagogical
dialogues enrich a PLN thus, requires an understanding of how EFL educators choose
conceptualizations related to teaching and learning (e.g., knowledge, skills, dispositions,
curriculum, assessment, and instruction); how EFL educators use and reflect on material objects;
and how EFL educators socially interact with others.
Participants
The participants for this study include 7-10 EFL educators who teach adults from three
different institutions (i.e., public or private universities, English institutes, etc.) located in
Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes, Mexico (21-30 educators in total). An online survey (Stewart,
2012b) will be administered to all research candidates from each of the three universities in order
to select the 7-10 EFL educators most likely to participant and conclude the study. The
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participants who are likely to be chosen will be based on their willingness to openly share
personal teaching and learning experiences with other colleagues by openly interacting through
online web sites and their level of technological readiness levels. Participants are not required to
have a certain level of technological prowess, but they must have some experience with
technology and the willingness to use technology throughout the study. The participants for the
study must have at the time of the study at least one class with adult English language learners
(i.e., 18 years of age or higher) teaching general English, academic English, or English for
specific purposes classes.
Since all activities will be open, and since all educators from each of the three institutions
will be invited to participate in the study (along with educators from outside the three
institutions), it is possible to have participants of the study interact with educators who are not
part of the study. Although the interviews, focus groups, and personal reflections will be limited
to the participants of the study, the content analysis could include educators that are not part of
the chose participants of the study. Opening up the research design for this study speaks to the
scalability and potentiality of actants to interact within a professional learning environment that
is grounded in complexity theory and ANT.
Materials/Instruments
The initial online survey (See Appendix A) sets out to determine how EFL educators use
and feel about technology in the language classroom (Stewart, 2012b). It also determines how
willing EFL educators are to share teaching and learning experiences openly with other
colleagues. The survey also includes content related to the SIOP model such as planning for
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 74
understandings and linguistic objectives, implementing certain strategies that make input more
comprehensible, and adhering to a variety of forms of assessment when evaluating the learner.
The materials used to collect data for this study (e.g., surveys, ICTs, and OERs) serve as
mediators in how they circulate throughout the personal learning network in ways that transform,
distort, and modify the meaning or interpretation they are to conduct (Fenwick and Edwards,
2010). The survey is designed to establish the descriptors of the participants that will be used to
draw patterns around ideational, material, and social elements of one’s PLN.
In addition to the online survey, the EduQuiki wiki (2012) will be the hosting web site for
participants to make contributions and to conduct informal discussions in the form of forum
posts. EduQuiki will also house web links to related topics concerning curriculum, assessment,
instruction, and topics related to applied linguistics (i.e., teaching and learning an additional
language). The website is meant to provide a starting point for educators to share with others,
but participants are free to choose the web sites they desire, as long as the web sites are open to
the public. If participants already interact using other technologies or websites, EduQuiki would
then only be used to collect private communication related to personal reflections. Personal
reflections will be obtained through the e-mail messaging service provided by Wikispaces (i.e.,
EduQuiki). Since public websites are not limited to EduQuiki, data collection instruments used
to conduct a content analysis may include any public web site.
Public and private sharing around ideas and experiences will be expressed in terms of a
language and understanding integrated sense-making learning experience (LUISLE) (see
Appendix C). This instrument is meant to serve as the primary mediator allowing participants to
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collaborate with each other through the development of teaching, learning, or research materials
that are being published with an intellectual property license that allows for free use, adaptation,
and distribution; that is, open educational resources or OERs (United Nations..., 2011). Since the
common thread among all participants of this study is that they teach English language learners,
LUISLE is partly based on the SIOP model which is designed to make content more
comprehensible to the English language learner (Echevarria, Vogt, & Short, 2004). The notion
of comprehensible content emerges from the Comprehensible Input Hypothesis that stresses the
importance of making receptive skills, like reading for example, more beneficial to the language
learner (Krashen, 2003).
The SIOP model then, includes three aspects to teaching practice: planning,
implementing, and assessment. Within each of the three aspects, various techniques are utilized
for making content more comprehensible for the English language learner. For example, in the
planning stages, teachers plan for both content and language objectives. During the
implementing stage, linking new knowledge with prior knowledge (i.e., scaffolding) helps
language learners to connect new concepts with old. The assessment phase might include
formative approaches that unite instruction and informal feedback loops in order for teachers and
students to consider future learning sequences and tactics respectively that best provide learners
to achieve lesson objectives. For the purpose of this study, the SIOP model offers a basis for
establishing key items to an initial online survey and LUISLE. In doing so, a common lexicon
that is generally accepted by the language teaching profession may be used. The purpose for
adapting the SIOP model is to provide context with which EFL educators may converse, and is
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 76
not to find evidence that supports the effectiveness nor the ineffectiveness of the SIOP model in
particular as there are no current studies that provide such claims (What Words Clearinghouse,
2009).
Although many of the specific techniques that make up the SIOP model also apply to
LUISLE, there are some key differences. First, instead of counterbalancing content with
linguistic objectives as in the SIOP model, LUISLE counterbalances understandings with
linguistic objectives. Counterbalancing in this sense means that understandings and language
serve both as means and ends simultaneously. The term understandings allows for a level of
authenticity when teaching English language learners as there is typically a moral to a particular
lesson; that is, the goal is not just to improve language but also to complete a performance task
that affords learners to explain, interpret, apply, gain perspective, empathy, and self-knowledge
(Wiggins and McTighe, 2005; Wiggins and McTighe, 2011). Second, the LUISLE and the SIOP
model address assessment as a formative learning progression that incorporates a variety of
traditional and alternative forms of assessment: informal discussions, academic prompts, quizzes
and tests, and performance tasks (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005; Popham, 2008b). Finally,
LUISLE includes a section where participants can reflect on any aspect of the planning,
implementation, and assessment stages whether it be reflection on action or reflection in action
(Schon, 1983). The reflective nature of this study is well integrated throughout.
All of the materials and instruments used in this study are designed to promote a network
approach in developing into a more reflective practitioner. The online survey, initial interview,
contributions and informal dialogues openly being published to EduQuiki will collectively frame
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subsequent reflections and vice versa. All personal reflections will be emailed via the email
service offered by Wikispaces. Personal reflections will remain private to the degree participants
choose not to discuss them as part of any contributions or informal discussions that later are
published publically online.
Regarding the integrity of the LUISLE and the online survey , a qualitative item analysis
will be conducted by an expert in qualitative research and applied linguistics to help assure that
content and writing conventions are structured such that the research questions and instruments
are properly aligned (Kubiszyn & Borich, 2007). Moreover, many technologies may be added or
be discontinued throughout the research period as participants make decisions in how they
choose to interact with both human and non-human devices. Since participants will be
encouraged to share openly, the validity and reliability of the instruments will also be public
knowledge.
Data Collection, Processing, and Analysis
The data will be collected over a 10-week timeframe. In order to recruit the participants
for the study, an online survey and initial interview will be applied. The online survey (Stewart,
2012b) will be administered at the beginning of the data collection process in order to determine
the best candidates who are most likely to complete the study. The online survey will also
establish independent variables for each participant (e.g., institution, age, education, and English
proficiency level), which will complement other forms of data collection such as focus groups,
interviews, personal reflections, and information obtained from public websites. Determining
independent variables provides necessary case-study information that helps better understand the
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theoretical construct under investigation (i.e., an EFL educator’s PLN). In addition to the
survey, an initial interview will also help determine whether a candidate will likely conclude the
study. The interview is meant to not only determine the commitment and comfort level of the
EFL educator using technology, but will also be used to clarity any information obtained from
the survey. A final interview at the end of the study will be used to compare information
gathered from the initial survey and interview.
Once participants have been chosen for the study, they will begin by taking an orientation
that allows them to become familiar with the EduQuiki wiki website as well as accessing
LUISLE (i.e., an open educational resource). Once the one-week orientation session has been
completed, each participant will be asked to upload one LUISLE by Wednesday of each week
during the 10-week data collection process. The participants will then be asked to make at least
two substantive discussion posts to two separate LUISLEs (i.e., one post to each LUISLE)
previously designed by other EFL educators. Substantive posts are those between 150-250
words and can either be presented as initial questions or observations related to LUISLE content
or they may be responses to a colleague’s post. The responses can be from LUISLEs designed
during the current week or they may be related to LUISLEs designed from prior weeks.
Participants will be free to choose with whom and how often they are to interact with other EFL
educators through contributions to LUISLEs (e.g., creating, adapting, or redistributing OERs),
online discussion posts, and any related face-to-face dialogues that happen to transpire. LUISLE
contributions and discussion posts will be documented using open, public web sites while face-
to-face interactions will emerge via recorded discussions. Although each participant will be
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encouraged to participant as often as they would like, the estimated time to upload their weekly
LUISLE and minimum two weekly responses should not take the participant more the 30
minutes per week.
In addition to contributions made to LUISLEs and online discussion posts, personal
reflections will be submitted via emailed. A content analysis will be conducted on all LUISLE
contributions, discussion posts, and personal reflections that are with the exception of personal
reflections, uploaded to open, public websites. Information from personal written reflections
will be introduced into subsequent focus group discussions and interviews as needed to generate
more informal pedagogical dialogues. The initial web site where informal pedagogical
dialogues, LUISLE contributions, and personal reflections will be uploaded will be EduQuiki
(2012). In the case of personal reflections, the EduQuiki email system will be used. Since
EduQuiki is an open wiki, it is possible that non-participants – those educators who are
interacting with participants but are not the participants chosen to take part in the study – may
join EduQuiki, contribute to LUISLEs, and post comments to LUISLEs just as participants of the
study are asked to do. Participants who contribute to EduQuiki and post discussions as
comments to LUISLE are actually contributing to an Open Educational Resource (OER). This
research design is to provide participants opportunities to interact with OERs and with other EFL
educators in ways that generate diverse informal pedagogical dialogues as a basis for open,
ongoing professional learning. Hence, for those participants who choose to make contributions
to public websites outside of EduQuiki, a Twitter hashtag will be used to aggregate participant
contributions across the Internet.
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Since participants will be given a choice as to which public web sites they can use,
various forms of online spaces are possible. The approached used for this study will be
considered a qualitative bricolage which allows for whatever resources are available for doing
the best possible job (Patton, 2002). Accordingly, online spaces may include other wikis, blogs,
and Moodle platforms among others that are free and open to the public. Essentially, materials
are any web tool EFL educators use as part of a dynamic PLN. Support will be provided as
needed, but EFL educators will be encouraged to use the tools and web sites that they feel most
comfortable using. Since EFL educators will be encouraged to share their experiences openly,
using the web tools of their choice, an audit trail will be inherent throughout the data collection
process, which will yield opportunities to evaluate first-hand the data used to conduct the study
should one decide to replicate it or wish to evaluate its credibility.
As participants of the study contribute to LUISLEs using the websites and web tools of
their choice as well as carry out informal pedagogical dialogues around LUISLEs, biweekly
videoconferencing sessions will be scheduled with each respective group of EFL educators from
each of the three institutions via Google+ Hangouts (2012). Each videoconference will last
approximately one hour. Discussions from virtual conferencing sessions will be recorded and
published online and will link to prior discussions and contributions made by participants and
non-participants in an effort to triangulate information from various sources: survey,
contributions, discussions, and focus groups. For the purpose of this study, non-participants will
only be included in the study to the degree that participants interact with them throughout the
data collection process. Both participants and non-participants will be informed that what they
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 81
contribute in EduQuiki and other public websites online may or may not be used for research
purposes. A module on ethics (EduQuiki: Module 1…, 2012) covers ethical considerations and
disclosure related to the study.
Content analysis. Content analysis will be based on all qualitative data that has been
converted to text: (a) contributions made to LUISLE (i.e., creating and remixing OERs), (b)
comments related LUISLEs made by other EFL educators, (c) interviews, and (d) focus groups.
A collaborative social research approach will rely on collected data, which will be reflexively
used as feedback to craft action and will be used as information to understand the context and
theoretical concept behind each case study (Berg, 2006). The author suggests a standard set of
analytic activities for collecting and analyzing data that are appropriate for this study:
Data are collected and converted into text.
Open codes and coding frames (i.e., axial coding) are analytically developed and
affixed to analytical memos.
Materials are sorted by categories, identifying similar phrases, patterns,
relationships, and commonalities or disparities.
Sorted materials are examined to isolate meaningful patterns and processes.
Identified patterns are considered in light of previous research and theories, and a
small set of generalizations are established.
Specifically, directed content analysis will be used to analyze qualitative data. Under a directed
content analysis approach, codes are defined before and during data analysis based on theory or
prior research (Hsieh & Shannon, 2005). For this study, coding will be categorized as types of
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 82
interactions (i.e., ideational, material, and social), types of communication (i..e, synchronous,
asynchronous, and semisynchronous), and delivery (i.e., face to face and online). Within these
codes more specific codes that relate to each other will provide further details. For example,
online delivery will be further divided into forum discussions and LUISLE contributions.
Further examples of predetermined codes that link to theoretical concepts related to this study
include teacher pedagogical knowledge, teacher dispositions, and concepts related to complexity
and actor network theory.
In addition to using a pre-established coding system as a directed content approach,
analytical memos will be used to reflect on the research process as it unfolds in terms of what has
been learned, any emerging insights, and any future actions that are necessary (Ely, 1991). In
order to analyze data, a multilevel coding system will be used to identify theoretical
conceptualizations. Specifically, open, selective (i.e., for category development), and axial
coding systems will be used to patterns from the bottom up: raw data to category development
to thematic development to theoretical concepts (Corbin & Strauss, 2008; Hahn, 2008). An open
coding system will be used to gather direct quotes and general ideas when quotes become too
wordy which will be taken from public online data (content analysis), from discussion groups
conducted via live conferencing and any face-to-face meetings and participant reflections.
The final step in analyzing the data collected from the multiple case study is to carry out
a cross-case analysis in order to resolve the dilemma between the cases (i.e., individual educators
or schools) and the collective target (i.e., PLNs) – or what Stake (2006) refers to as a quintain.
The author suggests that a “case-quintain dilemma” exists when doing a case study that can be
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 83
summed up as follows:
The Themes originated with people planning to study the Quintain. The Findings
originated with people studying the Cases. These are two conceptual orientations,
not independent but different. To treat them both as forces for understanding the
Quintain, the Analyst keeps them both alive even as he or she is writing the
Assertions of the final report. The Themes preserve the main research questions
for the overall study. The Findings preserve certain activity (belonging to Case
and Quintain alike) found in the special circumstances of the Cases. When the
Themes and Factors meet, they appear to the Analyst as both consolidation and
extension of understanding (pp. 39-40).
To resolve the case-quintain dilemma, theoretically based coding schemes (i.e., a directed
content analysis) will allow for understanding the PLN as a theoretical concept in terms of the
individual case study (i.e., unit of analysis). Since a directed content analysis also allows for
defining codes during the data analysis, some themes may emerge due to the complexity and
chaotic dimensions of professional learning. The data analysis then allows patterns to emerge
between the PLN and the case study and between cases.
In order to look for patterns between the PLN and the case study, the most significant
change (MSC) technique will be used to provide context as participants discuss any emergent
features of their PLN (Davies & Dart, 2005). The MSC technique will be used to orient the 10
online biweekly discussions and will help guide online LUISLE comments as well. The
overarching question underpinning the MSC technique (via participant reflections, group
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discussions, and online contributions and comments) is as follows: Looking back over the last
one-to-two weeks, what do you think was the most significant change in your personal learning
network that contributed to your own professional learning? Additionally, more specific
questions related to the aforementioned question will be linked to LUISLEs as well as ongoing
discussions carried out prior by the participants.
The MSC technique will be used to connect themes around the educator's PLN and any
transformations that occur over the research period with regard to ideas and practical experiences
educators might have had (Davies & Dart, 2005). As change stories (CS) begin to unveil over
time, asynchronous (e.g., wiki contributions, threaded posts, and personal written reflections),
synchronous (e.g., group discussions and interviews), and semisynchronous (e.g., Twitter,
Google+, etc.) forms of communication will develop around questions that relate to PLN
dynamics. In order for a CS to be considered significant, three separate but interrelated concepts
must be present: (a) the degree to which network patterns and relationships are recognizable, (b)
the degree of intentional and incidental change within a PLN that exists, and (c) the perceived
impact a PLN has on one’s teaching practice. The second type of change to one’s PLN relates to
network principles: (a) an increase or growth in the number of direct, network nodes (i.e.,
actants), (b) a pruning or reduction of network nodes, and (c) a change in how information flows
between two connected nodes (i.e., unidirectional, bidirectional, or the value of information flow
itself). Dedoose (2012) will be used to assign weight to those network nodes (i.e., actants) that
serve as constituents to the CSs found to be most significant.
The MSC technique also allows for a basis for developing a hermeneutic circle
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 85
throughout the data collection process. In order to understand the interpretive influences that
lead to a dynamic PLN, a hermeneutic circle will be implemented in order to draw out
experiences and interpretations from the participants of the study. The hermeneutic circle links
parts to the whole and the whole to its parts, and includes layering interpretation bound to
specific temporal and spatial constraints or contexts (Patton, 2002). It also acts as a way of
working out or accounting for the strangeness of an utterance, text, or action in relationship to
the utterance, text, or action as a whole; in doing so, the historical perspective of the interpreter
[i.e., the researcher] is less likely to distort the actual meaning of the utterance, text, or action
(Schwandt, 2007). The hermeneutic phenomenological analysis was chosen over a
phenomenological analysis because the former seeks to find meaning as people are constructed
by the world while at the same time are constructing the world based on individual backgrounds
and experiences – the latter simply attempts to unfold meaning as they are lived in everyday
experience (Laverty, 2003). As teachers interact with LUISLE, other wikis, blogs, forums, and
weekly focus groups, the researcher becomes fundamental to the unfolding of the hermeneutic.
To promote the hermeneutic circle, a facilitative process will foster questions, topics, and
materials that encourage informal pedagogical dialogues that connect certain actions, ideas, and
material (i.e., parts) to the PLN (i.e., the whole) and vice versa.
The role of participant observer. As the researcher, I will promote “...an awareness of
the discourses within which both the research and the researcher are embedded as well as to the
ways in which the contexts of the research refer back, reflexively, to prior experiences and
knowledge constructs”, also referred to as “reflexivity” (Mills, Durepos, & Wiebe, 2010). By
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 86
promoting reflexivity, I will guide participants through a dual reflective awareness of (a)
becoming (i.e., partaking in a connective experience in terms of interacting within a PLN) and
(b) understanding my influence as one of several nodes that might impact how participants
ultimately make decisions regarding how they choose to interact within their PLN. Reflexivity is
a valid approach to addressing this duality referred to as a double hermeneutic which is an
iterative dialectic that moves between the subject and the object as well as between research
design and interpretation of data (Mills, Durepos, & Wiebe, 2010). To avoid the paradox of
“endless reflexivity”, I will provide guidance to each educator as needed by offering choices and
will refrain from making biased suggestions or decisions as to whom they should interact, the
related materials participants involved (i.e., means), and the topics they choose to discuss (i.e.,
ways). I will remain as outsider to the extent that participants will be principally responsible for
making decisions as to the means and ways of interacting via their PLN.
My role as researcher will be revealed throughout the research period as a result of an
interpretive process of reflexive inquiry. The process of reflexive inquiry will evolve around
three main questions: (a) What do I know?, (b) What do the participants of the study know?, and
(c) What does my audience of my final interpretation know? (Patton, 2002). That is, the level of
public sharing of ideas and experiences along with any challenges participants face will be
categorized in terms of the role I play as the researcher and what I bring to the interactive
process, what the participants of the study know and their reaction to my participation and the
participation of the other participants, and what is ultimately revealed when reporting the
findings. Through transparent communication throughout the research design, the objective is to
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 87
make the reflexive inquiry as open and engaging as possible to the degree that there is little
difference between what the participants know, what I know as the researcher, and what finally
ends up being reported. The process of knowing myself as the researcher and the participants
will evolve as the study concludes and the interpretation of the findings unfolds. The focus of
this research is to embark on a transparent journey of open interactions that transpire over time.
My involvement will purposely avoid directives which could cause some educators (who are
used to being directed) to discontinue the study, and instead promote risk-taking experiences in
making their own learning as open and transparent as possible.
Methodological Assumptions, Limitations, and Delimitations
This study will be based on the following assumptions:
1. Participants will be under no obligation to answer any particular way or conduct behavior
according to any institutional mandate. It will be assumed that participants will offer
honest discussions about how they feel and how they choose to interact with others given
the fact that each participant will sign a consent form and anonymity will be respected on
any private information shared.
2. Upon prior verification from school coordinators and supervisors, it will be assumed that
any information obtained openly or as a result of the study will not have a negative
impact on any current or future teacher evaluations involving the participants of the
study, respective administrators, and respective institutions.
3. It will be assumed that participants will understand their right to withdraw from the study
from the moment that study begins until the findings are officially published.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 88
Since this is a multiple case study on the complexity of PLNs, it is impossible to shed
light on every possible network node that extends outward various degrees from each participant
(e.g., a colleague of a colleague of a colleague, etc.). To overcome this limitation, only the most
salient aspects of an EFL educator’s PLN will be explored; that is networked nodes that relate
directly to the participle will be included in the study. Another possible limitation is that
participants might feel disconnected from the process since most of the data collection will be
done on the Internet. To address this limitation, orientation sessions will be conducted face to
face as well as published online in the form of live conferences and videos so that participants
receive the guidance and support they need.
Although the objective of this multiple case study is to reach saturation, it is limited to
teachers who teach English language learners at three different universities in the city of
Aguascalientes in the country of Mexico. The study is not inferential to any particular
population but a descriptive look at differences and more importantly similarities in how English
language and possibly professionals in general learn. This study is also limited to English
language teachers who have some degree of Internet connectivity and some degree of comfort
level when it comes to using technology. This study will be less relevant to those English
language teaching professionals who totally disregard technology or do not have the skill sets to
do the most basic functions.
Ethical Assurances
When conducting a qualitative research, the researcher has the personal obligation to
respect the rights, needs, values, and desires of the participants (Creswell, 2009). Because this
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 89
qualitative study requires teachers to share ideas and experiences openly online, ethical issues
become especially important since teachers are often ridiculed by colleagues for showing
initiative and imagination, trying out new methods, and trying different curricular arrangements
(Bagin, Gallagher, & Moore, 2008). To assure proper safeguards are in place to deal with such
ethical issues, an ethical issue checklist will be used (Patton, 2002):
1) The participants will understand the purpose of the study; that is, they will be asked to share
ideas and experiences with other educators openly online by completing an informed context
form.
2) The study will provide an opportunity for the educator to meet and collaborate with other
colleagues with similar and different perspectives. There is a potential benefit for building a
collegial relationship that could extend beyond the scope of the research. Perhaps additional
incentives could be worked out with the help of respective coordinators and supervisors.
3) Risk assessment will be carefully considered.
a) The basics of open authoring will be explained, specifically how Creative Commons
License works in terms of copying, modifying, distributing, and mixing open educational
resources, and how to handle copyright material (Fair Use and the TEACH Act).
b) A proper netiquette policy will make explicit the way participants are to remain respect
for each other in light of different perspectives and opinions.
4) Confidentiality will be maintained throughout the study.
a) Approval will be obtained from the Institutional Review Board at Northcentral University
before data is to be collected.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 90
b) Participants will be assured that all private information will be used only for the purposes
of the study for a period of no longer than one year, at which time all information will be
destroyed or deleted entirely.
c) Anonymity will be respected with regard to any data that is not shared publically.
d) Participants will understand that all anonymity is lost when posting information to an
open website. Even if information can be removed from the website, which may be
possible in some cases, participants will understand that completely eliminating
publically posted information may be impossible.
e) The participants will understand when information can and cannot be removed from a
particular website. When information removal is possible, participants will have the
option of doing so at any time at their discretion. If information is removed before the
publishing date of the dissertation, that does not automatically exclude it from the study.
Special care will be taken in working with participants as to what will be published and
what will remain on the Internet.
f) In the case of a public website, participants will understand that information will be
maintained as long as the website itself remains open, which likely will extend well
beyond the date findings will be published.
g) Either the participant's real name or the participant’s EduQuiki login name will be used
when publishing the findings related to any information shared openly online.
Pseudonyms will be used to generalize private reflections in a way that respects the
confidentiality of the participant.
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h) Participant concerns, interests, and requests will be considered when reporting data.
i) All ethical issues pertaining to this study will be openly published online.
In addition to the above list, the Belmont Report, which is text designed to protect human
subjects against unethical research practices, will be the basis for maintaining ethical research
standards based on three principles: respect for persons, beneficence, and justice (Belmont
Report, 1979). With regard to respect for persons, participants of the study will be treated as
autonomous individuals who are capable and have the right to make their own decisions
regarding their own personal goals, the materials they decide to use, and the way in which they
choose to interact with others. For the purpose of this study, beneficence relates to maximizing
the participant’s potential for further cooperation with other educators by treating each
participant as daring, sharing, and caring individuals by respecting the terms of the informed
consent form as well as adhering to the itemized list above will minimize risk. Finally, those
who benefit most from the research should be equally distributed among all participants in that
the research should not set out to put some participants at a disadvantage. To maintain justice,
data collection and reporting will emerge from participatory dialogues between researcher and
participants so that not only are participants and respective institutions not being exploited but
that the research also serves some common good.
Summary
This section discusses the research method used to investigate (a) how EFL educators in
Mexico conduct open and informal pedagogical dialogues that enrich a PLN, and (b) how EFL
educators in Mexico confront challenges when openly sharing informal pedagogical dialogues
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 92
within a PLN. Researching informal pedagogical dialogues through a multiple case study
research design is intended to understand the dynamic nature of a PLN as a theoretical concept
along with gaining insight into the context that surrounds the particular case study (i.e., the unit
of analysis). Considering 7-10 English language educators from three different universities in
Mexico, data will be collected in order to search for emerging patterns that form and influence
informal pedagogical dialogues in terms of a PLN. Personal reflections, focus groups, online
discourse through contributions and comments, interviews, and an initial survey will provide the
means for collecting and analyzing MSC stories related to their PLNs. Due to the complexity of
networks, assumptions, limitations, and delimitations were also presented. Finally, since most of
the data collection process will involve open, online discussions, special ethical concerns will be
required to assure that participants understand how the information will be used in the study and
to the degree of what they share will remain confidential and their autonomy maintained.
StewartbDIS9322E_Dissertation Proposal 93
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Appendix A
EFL/ESL Teacher Survey
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 2 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 3 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 4 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 5 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 6 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 7 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 8 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 9 of 10)
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EFL/ESL Teacher Survey (page 10 of 10)
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Appendix B
Informed Consent Form
Purpose: You are invited to participate in a research study that is being conducted for a
dissertation at Northcentral University in Prescott, Arizona.
The purpose of this study is to examine the link ( if any) between an ongoing development of a
personal learning network (PLN) and the pursuit of one’s own professional development. There
is no deception in this study as I am interested in obtaining a qualitative information with regard
to current teaching practices in terms of behaviors, relationships, activities, and actions.
Participation Requirements: EFL/ESL educators will be asked to participate in a variety of
online and face-to-face sessions this semester about current teaching practices, behaviors,
attitudes, and actions that relate to teaching English to students of other languages. The only
requirement is that you are contractually obligated to teach at least one EFL course at the
Panamericana University, Aguascalientes campus during the August – December of 2011
semester.
Research Personnel: The following person is involved in this research project and may be
contacted at any time: Benjamin Stewart, 449.910.7400 ext. 305; email: [email protected].
Potential Risk and Discomfort: There is no known risk in this study and there will be no
repercussions due to individual or group opinions with respect to individual or group evaluations.
In other words, you will not be penalized in any way (e.g., teacher evaluation, future contractual
opportunities, etc.) for sharing particular viewpoints or experiences throughout the period the
study is to be conducted. You reserve the right to withdraw from this study at any time and in
doing so will also not affect your teacher evaluation in any way.
Potential Benefit: Although there are not direct benefits (i.e., incentives of any kind) for
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participating in this study, the participatory nature of the study is meant to assist each educator in
terms of becoming a better practitioner. The potential benefit is intersubjective and will depend
on each participant who chooses to participate in this study.
Anonymity/Confidentiality: The data collected from non-public websites (i.e., surveys,
personal reflections, etc.) for the purpose of this study are confidential. All data are coded such
that your name is not associated with them. In addition, the coded data are available only to the
researcher associated with this project, and the researcher will not share whether an educator is
participating in the study or not.
Right to Withdraw: You have the right to withdraw from the study at any time without penalty.
I would be happy to answer any questions that may arise about the study.
Please direct your questions or comments to: [email protected]
Signatures:
I have read the above description of pursuing professional development in terms of developing a
personal learning network and understand the conditions of my participation. My electronic
signature indicates that I agree to participate in this study.
*Type your name here:
Please indicate your consent with your electronic signature by checking "I agree" and typing your full name below.Thank youI agree
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Appendix C
Language & Understanding Integrated Sense-making Learning Experience (LUISLE)
Date: ________ Level: ______ Unit/theme: ______ Standards: _________
Understanding(s):
____________________________________________________________________________
Language Objective(s):
____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
Key Vocabulary Supplementary Materials
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LUISLE Features
Preparation Scaffolding Grouping Options _Adaptation of Content _Modeling _Whole class_Links to Background _Guided practice _Small groups_Links to Past Learning _Independent practice _Partners_Strategies incorporated _Comprehensible input _Independent
Integration of Process Application Assessment_ Reading _Hands-on _Informal Discussions_Writing _Meaningful _Academic Prompts_Speaking _Linked to objectives _Test/Quiz_Listening _Promotes engagement _Performance task
Learning progression:
Reflective change:
Consider how your lesson plan addresses an educational challenge with regard to preparation,
scaffolding, grouping configurations, etc.) and how this challenge is associated with a change in
behavior, opinions, and/or attitude that took place today/this week/this month?
How did (or could) your personal learning network contribute to this change in behavior, beliefs,
and/or attitude?