My poster presentation to the USF Graduate Research Symposium on March 22nd on "Multi-Level Factors Influencing Learner Participation":
And me:
March 23, 2019
March 15, 2019
Adult Learners: Common Barriers to Participation and Strategies to Support
Hello again everyone!
This Rise project was part of a research module for my graduate Adult Learner class:
"Adult Learners: Common Barriers to Participation and Strategies to Support"
Enjoy,
Amber
This Rise project was part of a research module for my graduate Adult Learner class:
"Adult Learners: Common Barriers to Participation and Strategies to Support"
Enjoy,
Amber
March 9, 2019
Adobe Rise Presentations for Fall 19 Digital Media & Learning
Hello everyone,
Below are a few presentations I created for my Fall 19 "Digital Media and Learning" graduate course:
Below are a few presentations I created for my Fall 19 "Digital Media and Learning" graduate course:
February 23, 2019
"Strategies for Cognitive Accessibility" at USF Bay-to-Bay Symposium on Diversity and Inclusion
Hello!
Below is a poster presentation entitled “Strategies for Cognitive Accessibility” that I recently created for the USF Bay to Bay Symposium on Diversity and Inclusion. I connect UDL, ARCS+V motivation theory, and our online course assessment rubric standards (Quality Matters); to share strategies to support learners with varying cognitive ability differences. Cognitive ability differences could be memory loss, trauma or brain injury, aging related changes, dyslexia, learning disabilities, adhd, and autism, just to name a few that you can see in the average classroom these days.
Below is a poster presentation entitled “Strategies for Cognitive Accessibility” that I recently created for the USF Bay to Bay Symposium on Diversity and Inclusion. I connect UDL, ARCS+V motivation theory, and our online course assessment rubric standards (Quality Matters); to share strategies to support learners with varying cognitive ability differences. Cognitive ability differences could be memory loss, trauma or brain injury, aging related changes, dyslexia, learning disabilities, adhd, and autism, just to name a few that you can see in the average classroom these days.
February 14, 2019
December 7, 2018
An Un-Complicated Review of It's Complicated by dana boyd
The following is a book review and analysis completed for my graduate Qualitative Methods class... enjoy!
An Un-complicated Review of “It’s Complicated” by dana boyd
This book review could literally take on a hundred different directions of analysis in light of the methods, theories, and self-exploration of ourselves that we have learned this semester. “It’s Complicated” by researcher dana boyd is a novel approach to explain the new digital frontier that our young people are navigating on a daily basis, exploring the meanings of privacy and how young people establish their identities online, and the conflict that this causes with parental anxiety in networked public spaces. This book review will first review dana’s methods to the ethnography, provide brief summary of her main points of the book, and then will explore several qualitative elements including discourse analysis of referring terms and tone.
This book of 213 pages plus extensive notes, bibliography, and appendix; was a relatively easy read and was definitely written for a non-academic audience: for teachers, for parents, and for people working with the youth of today. Her main points are introduced in the preface and introduction content; and then the following eight chapters describe the main points of her research. dana’s main thesis is to “describe and explain the networked lives of teens to the people that worry about them…” (boyd, preface). She defines these new digital spaces as “networked publics” which “are publics both in the spatial sense and in the sense of an imagined community” (boyd, p.9). “Networked publics are publics that are restructured by network technologies” (p.8) giving them the characteristics of being both “(1) the space constructed through networked technologies and (2) the imagined community that emerges as a result of the intersection of people, technology, and practice” (boyd, p.8). This book argues that as real public spaces disappear (like movie theaters or malls or parks) and as young people have busier and geographically-challenged lives that make getting together in person hard, they are seeking these accessible public places in this new digital environment to negotiate identity, find friends, or simply to hang out with others. She readily admits that the tools and apps used will continue to change, but that the needs these youth are meeting in these public spaces will not change and are the same that youth sought to fulfill in non-networked physical publics of the past.
I did not find that dana explicitly outlaid her research strategy nor the exact amount of interviews or interactions she had with youth: this would probably be impossible to account for in the face paced communication that happens online today. She did detail that she “crisscrossed the United States from 2005 to 2012, talking with and observing teems from eighteen states and a wide array of socioeconomic and ethnic communities” (boyd, preface). She goes on to report “166 formal, semi-structured interviews with teens during the period of 2007-2010” in various physical locations (homes, libraries, schools, etc.). It would be interesting to read some of the questions that she provided to the youth and to learn if the anonymity of the internet influenced her answers to be more truthful or less truthful. Were these interviews conducted over a recorded video chat or where they simply snippets of online text chat sessions: we don’t know this through her text and as a qualitative researcher, I would be interested to read some of these raw items. I am also interested in how she located these youth for interviews - did she randomly contact students? Did she contact them through schools? Did she find friends of friends? It’s not completely clear from my reading of the text.
I was surprised by several things as I read the book: topics of addiction and privacy that I had not considered before with regards to youth online. My views were especially challenged by boyd’s assertion that youth are not digital natives: something that I had assumed and used several times over the years when thinking about young people growing up in this technological world. She explores this topic of are youth digital natives in chapter 7. Being that I graduated from high school in 2002, I remember my family getting our first computer in the early 1990s, going from AOL dial up and then learning the new internet technologies of MySpace and Facebook. Thankfully, data was not collected on the scale it is being collected at now, and we did not have to worry about privacy as much in those very early days: we could make mistakes and then delete our posts or our accounts, and it wouldn’t have been recorded anywhere. Everything that we learned was from the same base that our parents were learning from; and our only computer was located in the living room because it was a shared resource - not a device for being constantly publicly connected like the youth of today feel the need to be. Researcher boyd makes references to several of these issues of privacy and identity seeking and cites that young people see privacy differently than we as adults do - and that trying on identities happens for several reasons in the online networked public that can have meaning - or not!
In analyzing the book in a more structural way and less content focus, dana’s tone remains professional yet entirely non-academic. Everything is explained in a way that the average parent or teacher should be able to understand (which can really be a wide range of understandings and literacy ranges). dana is advocating for these youth’s natural and safe exploration of this new digital world, and she wants everyone to be able to read and understand the points she is making. She is upfront with the main point of her book in the preface and in the introduction; she concisely and descriptively builds her points in the eight chapters following, using brief academic findings to support her thinking, but not straying from the simplistic way of describing the situations and youth perspectives regarding identity, privacy, addiction, danger, bullying, inequality, literacy, and how youth are simply searching for a “public of their own” where parents are not constantly looking over their shoulders at every conversation. Her tone is mostly third person as the narrator, separate and largely non-involved in the storyline past the role of the researcher. She maintains an etic perspective, perhaps because she is speaking to the adults of the world in her text.
dana is respectful when quoting the youth and names them all (or pseudonyms them) in her appendix “teen demographics” (boyd, p.215). In her book, she refers to the youth and others with respect and by name (or by pseudonym). I found it interesting to read through the youth characteristics and especially the services that they were active on: facebook, MySpace, Twitter, and others that don’t even exist anymore. When I interact with youth, I am amazed at the new apps they are communicating through and it is always changing: “even though many of the tools and services that I reference throughout this book are now passe, the core activities I discuss… are here to stay” (boyd, p.8). There will always be some new, more visual or more interactive app that the young people will be willing to explore to meet these needs of a “place to hang out and connect with friends” (boyd, p.5) that is “utterly essential to her social life” (boyd, p.5). As I also remember life pre-AOL dial up days, dana recounts that she too “spent my own teen years online, and I was among the first generation of teens who did so” (boyd, p.4), so while her tone remains from an etic perspective, she has definitely experienced for herself firsthand the beginnings of many of the new teen phenomena she tries to explain through her book.
In regards to Marilyn Lichtman’s definition of ethnography in our textbook, dana’s text addresses many of the ‘issues’ of ethnography as she describes her findings:
Issue (Lichtman p.74-75)
|
Example from boyd
|
Doing fieldwork and taking field notes
|
While boyd does not explicitly state that she took field notes nor does she provide any in the appendix, I am making the assumption that she kept some kind of researcher’s notes along her multiple year study.
|
Participant observation
|
Observation is where boyd’s study appears to begin and it is a tool that she continues to use throughout her study to guide her practice, find her interviews, and make generalizations. boyd conducts observations in person and online for her study.
|
Interviewing individuals
|
boyd conducts 166 formal, semi-structured interviews with youth. This implies that she also conducted many informal interviews with youth, but also with adults and perhaps adults within the networked publics space.
|
Gaining access
|
boyd did not detail much about how she gained access to interviews with the youth, nor how she chose the youth that she spoke to.
|
Informed consent
|
boyd would have most certainly had formal consent granted to speak to all the 166 formal interviews conducted. She did not detail how this unfolded in her study, but perhaps there is a more formal academic paper that details her methods.
|
Understanding cultures
|
boyd has done an excellent job understanding the culture of youth in the networked publics despite the anxieties and negative perceptions that an adult would approach this with.
|
Thick descriptions
|
Throughout this book, boyd is connecting concepts in a logical way and providing descriptions of a larger happening that she divides into the main chapter titles.
|
Underlying meanings
|
This aspect did not seem to be addressed openly in the text. It is assumed that the researcher reported honestly and that the youth had no motivations to lie, but this is not verifiable.
|
Reflexive behaviors
|
This issue is also not addressed openly by boyd. She does share her background and her interest in this subject, but does not connect it to her broader analysis.
|
Ethics
|
boyd actively works to protect the youth’s identities while still accurately representing their accounts. While not stated directly in this book, it is assumed that she utilized consent for her interactions. As an advocate for youth rights, it is also assumed that she was respectful and ethical in all her interactions.
|
Writing or producing an ethnography
|
boyd has produced an organized, comprehensive description in an ethnographic format that is intended for a general audience.
|
In conclusion, dana boyd’s ethnographic book “It’s Complicated” is an enjoyable read that will inform the average person about what today’s youth are experiencing online in these new “networked publics.” It advocates for the often misunderstood youth’s perspective and it challenges adults to put their anxieties aside about digital communities and misconceptions about how youth are using these new communication tools. There will always be new mediums, faster ways to communicate from a distance, and new shiny apps with catchy features; but today’s youth need spaces to negotiate their adult identities and safely navigate to adulthood. Through dana’s presented perspectives, we can help support the youth pioneering these new forms of communications while combating the ever present inequalities and negative personalities that are present whether offline or online.
References
boyd, dana (2014). It’s complicated: The social lives of networked teens. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Lichtman, Marilyn (2013). Qualitative research in education: A user’s guide (3rd ed.). Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
Qualitative-Land (A final reflection game board)
Below is my final reflection project for Qualitative Methods graduate level class. Each slide links to the main "game board" and audio was recorded and set on auto-play. The audio is provided in text below each slide (in lieu of hosting the full presentation somewhere).
Hope you like it!
Main Game Board
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Semester end!
Hope you like it!
Main Game Board
Welcome to Qualitative-Land! The game
where you explore the main points that Amber learned in Dr. V’s Qualitative
Research class this past Fall semester. Click on the game tiles numbers 1
through 10 to move through each learning point, and have fun!
Qualitative Research inquiry involves
utilizing several methods that are organic and malleable; these methods allow
for data capture from several rich and sometimes unexpected sources.
“anything can be data” –Dr. V
Many of the research studies that we
explored utilized unexpected sources, such as the college dorm door art in
Nathan’s text; the sound files in the Wailing Women text; and observation of
people and characteristics, as found in many of our texts this semester.
2
Conversation
and human interactions are ripe with data, including conversation (what is
said, and what is not said), body language, positioning, eye contact, breaths,
and other gestures.
Data can be found in big discourse
analysis and little discourse analysis, in word choice, in referring terms
used, and in how speech is reported whether as direct or indirect re-telling.
3
Ethnographic
research is an often used and powerful tool for collecting data and telling the
story of an interaction or phenomenon.
The Princeton Department of Anthropology
defines ethnography as “a research method central to knowing the world from the
standpoint of social relations”… and that it “involves hands-on, on-the-scene
learning.” Researcher Hruska states that her ethnographic procedures “included
prolonged engagement, persistent observation, and triangulation.”
Using ethnography, we also can analyze
and present our own background biases as the researcher, in addition to
exploring all elements of a situation or phenomenon both critically and
holistically.
4
Critical
Discourse Analysis involves both the microanalysis and macroanalysis of conversations; conversation
collected by observation, or by reviewing an interview transcript or recording.
Several frameworks exist to guide discourse analysis, including Toon Van Dyke’s
and Gee’s frameworks. Conversations can be analyzed through narrative analysis,
coding through counting, and thematic coding. Conversation elements such as
multimodals or semiotics can also be analyzed with the text. Very
little is spontaneous in speech and typically people want to look good by how
they present themselves.
5
Reflective
Journaling can be a key tool for any researcher, especially in qualitative
methods where we are making connections, noting differences, and writing down
thoughtfully our activities and ideas about a subject.
Through my journal this semester, I have
been able to build my thoughts from class and apply them to projects or
theories I am cultivating, and fully clarify the perspectives and methods that
I have been learning in class.
6
Coding
is analysis (even before the analysis begins).
Many times while working on my own
thematic coding project and also the two group coding projects, we made several
key decisions of analysis during our coding process that ultimately affected
the data received and then formally analyzed. Choosing a deductive or inductive
structure for your coding is an analysis decision; receiving the coding themes
in project 2 may have limited our themes applied; and sometimes our limited
knowledge of a topic develops as we code, so we then need to go back and revise
our previous coding applications. Many decisions are made during coding!
7
Observation
will make you feel like a secret agent.
My observation assignment really pushed
me out of my comfort zone, but it gave me great confidence at the success of
data collection that me and my partner had through that project. Observation is
a powerful qualitative tool that can produce great amounts of data. Just make
sure you conduct your observations in a public place and stealthy like a secret
agent!
8
Several
perspectives are available for your research outlook and also how you analyze
your data, including the research perspectives of: positivist, post-positivist,
constructivist, modernist, pos-modernist, feminist, critical
theory, and grounded theory.
All theories have their strengths and
weaknesses; and may not be applicable to the current phenomenon you are
researching. Expect to try on several perspectives and frameworks when
analyzing your data and approaching problems of interest.
9
Don’t
forget the essential ‘housekeeping’ to research: IRB approval, consent of
participants/interviewees, confidentiality, privacy, anonymity, and keeping
appropriate relationships.
These important considerations must be
addressed up front and any violations of these policies or ethical issues could
harm someone, end the project, and possibly end your career.
10
Triangulation
is the confirmation of your data and coding themes across resources or across
researchers. Doing so can strengthen your findings and enhance validity of your
study.
Triangulation can be conducted at any
stage of coding or analysis; it can be conducted multiple times throughout a
project; or you can compare what two or more researchers have found in the same
dataset.
Semester end!
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