As mobile and connected digital practices reshape social, interpersonal and learning relationships, it is increasingly challenging for teachers and schools to keep pace with rapid change. This paper reports on a professional learning project which set out to support teachers to learn more about how students in their classes used technologies, which technologies they used, what they thought about how they and others used them, and what they used them for. Teachers’ research into students’ digital use acted as a necessary intervention and prior step to developing classroom- and school-level responses to young people’s use of digital technologies. The paper reports on teachers’ findings, their responses to what they learnt and the implications for schools. In parallel, it reports also on the processes of the research and its deliverables as a professional learning enterprise, and the operation and value of this approach as professional learning methodology.
History
Journal
Australian Educational Researcher
Volume
47
Pagination
183-197
Location
Dordrecht, The Netherlands
ISSN
0311-6999
eISSN
2210-5328
Language
English
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2019, The Australian Association for Research in Education, Inc.