[Siguse-l] 2nd CFP - Studying the Users of Digital Education Technologies
Mick Khoo
mjkhoo at ucar.edu
Fri Feb 23 16:41:47 EST 2007
SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS [with apologies for cross-posting]
THE NEW REVIEW OF HYPERMEDIA AND MULTIMEDIA, SPECIAL ISSUE
"STUDYING THE USERS OF DIGITAL EDUCATION TECHNOLOGIES: THEORIES,
METHODS AND ANALYTICAL APPROACHES"
Guest editor: Michael Khoo, National Science Digital Library,
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado,
United States
mjkhoo at ucar.edu
Submission deadline: 16 May 2007
Acceptance notification: 2 July 2007
Final manuscripts due: 20 August 2007
Digital technologies are increasingly integral components of
educational settings, serving for instance as repositories, as
scaffolds to enhance face-to-face pedagogy, and as distance-learning
tools. How might we understand the impact of these technologies on
knowledge and learning, and what lessons might be learnt from their
use, that could be applied to future technologies? Addressing these
research questions requires recognition of the highly complex
character of digital education technologies: they vary in size from
handheld PDAs to large distributed digital library projects; they are
used in a range of formal and informal educational settings ranging
from schools and universities to hospitals, clinics, museums and art
galleries; and they serve learners of all ages. How may researchers
approach this heterogeneity and work towards useful research outcomes?
This special issue of NRHM addresses issues associated with the
qualitative understanding of the use of digital educational
technologies in real-life contexts (with a focus on digital
libraries, broadly conceived), by emphasizing the importance of
contextual sociotechnical studies of technology use and design. The
issue will consider educational technologies as complex mixtures of
people, practices and technologies, embedded in a range of
institutional, technological and social contexts. The editor
therefore invites contributions that address the qualitative and
sociotechnical study of digital educational technologies and users
‘in the wild.’ Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
Theoretical approaches
- Ethnographic, anthropological, sociological, sociotechnical,
activity theory, practice-based, and other approaches to the analysis
of digital educational technologies
Methodological approaches
- Ethnography
- HCI, user testing, scenarios, interviews, focus groups, etc.
- Discourse analysis
- Webmetrics and use models
- Etc.
Applications to particular domains
- Science education
- Medical
- Digital Libraries
- User groups and use-in-context
- Etc.
Applied approaches
- Case studies
- Qualitative research and project evaluation strategies
- Communicating qualitative research results to digital library
developers and sponsors
- Etc.
The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia (NRHM) is published by
Taylor & Francis and appears in both print and digital formats. For
more details, see the journal website:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/13614568.asp
Submissions should be sent by email to the guest editor, preferably
in pdf format. Questions and enquiries concerning this call should be
directed to the guest editor. Open topic papers meeting NRHM's scope
in general are also welcome (send to Editor, dstudhope at glam.ac.uk).
Michael Khoo, Evaluator, Core Integration Team
The National Science Digital Library (NSDL)
P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307-3000, USA
Tel: +1 303.497.2604 Fax: +1 303.497.8336
NSDL evaluation pages: http://eval.comm.nsdl.org/
Personal home page: http://www.mjkhoo.info/
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