Transcript
Page 1: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

The ‘f’ word in HE:

reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

Page 2: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

The Facebook 'addict'

Anita Bacs

KU undergraduate

2008-2011

KU postgraduate 2011-

Page 3: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

The ‘reluctant’ Facebook user

Dr Karen Lipsedge

Principal Lecturer in Media and Communication andSchool of Humanities

Limited interest in any kind of technology.

Page 4: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

The ‘professional’ Facebook user

Tony McNeill

Principal Lecturer in Learning Technology

Interest in all sorts of technology – 'school tools' and 'cool tools'.

Page 5: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

The ‘f’ word in HE?

Facebook still centre of moral panics

(e.g. “Facebook generation” riots of August 2011)

Facebook as ‘improper’ or inappropriate in HE

(Hughes 2009; Selwyn 2009)

Page 6: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

‘Disruptive identity performances’

... Facebook was acting as a ready space for

resistance and the contestation of the asymmetrical

power relationship built into the established offline

positions of university, student and lecturer (Bourdieu

and Passeron 1977). (Selwyn 2009: 172)

Page 7: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

‘Identity incongruence’ (1)

... knowledge-related identity incongruence can arise

from incompatibility between identities performed

through personal or everyday knowledge and the

identities associated with knowledge production in

formal learning communities. (Hughes 2009: 301)

Page 8: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

‘Identity incongruence’ (2)

... while social software encourages dissemination of

learner-generated content, it does not necessarily

facilitate the challenging and reconstruction of that

content and the identification with new forms of

knowledge. (Hughes 2009: 301)

Page 9: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Technology domains/spheres (1)

personal/social vernacular self-generated bottom-up

study/work imposed mandated top-down

Page 10: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Adapted from Jones & Lea 2008

Technology domains/spheres (2)

Page 11: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Why Facebook?

Page 12: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Aims of pilot

to support induction and pre-induction

to facilitate the transition to HE

to help Level 4 students become an integral part of the M&CS

online community and develop a cohort identity

to ‘assist where people find offline sociality difficult’ (Miller,

2011:183)

Page 13: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Our Facebook group (1)

Page 14: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Our Facebook group (2)

Page 15: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Our Facebook group (3)

Page 16: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Our Facebook group (4)

Page 17: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Problems?

students’ use of Facebook email facility

making transition to StudySpace (proactive weaning

– one colleague described the Facebook group as “a

great big apron string”)

The group’s popularity!

Page 18: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Evaluation

Positive effect in 3 main areas:

students’ preparedness for induction week and lower levels

of anxiety about joining the University;

social integration/making new friends;

students’ perception of the course and of Kingston

University.

Page 19: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

Surprises?

students desired tutors’ involvement in group;

Facebook was used to establish new contacts;

most students read content rather than contributed;

students used the group flexibly to create communities within communities and for their own purposes beyond the initial pre-induction/induction period.

Page 20: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

3 conclusions

Page 21: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

References (1)

Baran, B. (2010). Facebook as a formal instructional environment. British Journal of Educational Technology, 41(6):146-149

Bassford, M. and Ivins, J. (2009). Encouraging formative peer review via social networking sites. British Journal of Educational Technology, 41(5): 67–69

Ellison, N. B. et al. (2007) “The benefits of Facebook ‘friends’: Social capital and college students’ use of online social network sites”, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 12(4) [Online]. Available at:http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol12/issue4/ellison.html (Accesssed: 05 June 2011).

Greenhow, C. and Robelia, E. (2009). Informal learning and identity formation in online social networks. Learning, Media and Technology, 34(2): 119–140.

Page 22: The ‘f’ word in HE: reflecting on the ‘sexing up’ of undergraduate education with Facebook

The ‘f’ word in HE | Anita Bacs, Karen Lipsedge & Tony McNeill | 6th September 2011

References (2)

Hughes, G. (2009). Social Software: New Opportunities for Challenging Social Inequalities in Learning? Learning, Media and Technology, 34(4): 291-305

Jones, S. and Lea, M.R. (2008). Digital Literacies in the Lives of Undergraduate Students: Exploring Personal and Curricular Spheres of Practice. The Electronic Journal of e-Learning, 6(3): 207-216. Retrieved 5 September, 2011, from http://www.ejel.org/Volume-6/v6-i3/JonesandLea.pdf

Mason, R. and Rennie, F. (2008). The E-learning Handbook: Social Networking for Higher Education: Resources for Higher Education. New York: Routledge.

Miller, D. (2011). Tales From Facebook. Cambridge: Polity.

Selwyn, N. (2009). Faceworking: exploring students’ education-related use of Facebook. Learning, Media and Technology, 34(2): 157–174.


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