TY - JOUR
T1 - Lessons from personal photography
T2 - the digital disruption of selectivity and reflection
AU - Fawns, Tim
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Association for Educational Communications and Technology.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Recent technological, cultural and economic factors have shifted the balance between recalling and reconstructing internalised information and accessing externalised information. While digital artefacts constitute an enormous and valuable set of resources, human engagement and reflection are important to the meaningful synthesis and application of knowledge in specific contexts. This is particularly clear in the case of personal photography, where recordings of life events are used to cue not just the facts and details of what happened, but associated subjective, sensory and emotional memory. This article draws on research into personal photography to highlight contrasting drivers of engagement and detachment with digital media, and applies these to students’ use of digital media within education. The posing of complex, situated problems that require the use of technology to construct creative, collaborative, multimodal projects is suggested as a way of cultivating social obligation and encouraging selectivity, engagement and reflection with digital media.
AB - Recent technological, cultural and economic factors have shifted the balance between recalling and reconstructing internalised information and accessing externalised information. While digital artefacts constitute an enormous and valuable set of resources, human engagement and reflection are important to the meaningful synthesis and application of knowledge in specific contexts. This is particularly clear in the case of personal photography, where recordings of life events are used to cue not just the facts and details of what happened, but associated subjective, sensory and emotional memory. This article draws on research into personal photography to highlight contrasting drivers of engagement and detachment with digital media, and applies these to students’ use of digital media within education. The posing of complex, situated problems that require the use of technology to construct creative, collaborative, multimodal projects is suggested as a way of cultivating social obligation and encouraging selectivity, engagement and reflection with digital media.
KW - Digital media
KW - Distributed cognition
KW - Memory
KW - Multimodal assessment
KW - Photography
KW - Reflection
KW - Selectivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84940900148&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11528-014-0820-z
DO - 10.1007/s11528-014-0820-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84940900148
SN - 8756-3894
VL - 59
SP - 50
EP - 55
JO - TechTrends
JF - TechTrends
IS - 1
ER -