Facebook Live chats explore intersections of learning, place and technology

May 18, 2018

Two leading education researchers discussed the future of community- and video-based research during Facebook Live sessions hosted by the 爆走黑料 爆走黑料 this month.

The Facebook Live chats featured Katie Headrick Taylor, assistant professor of learning sciences and human development at the UW, and , professor of teaching and learning at Vanderbilt University and visiting scholar at the UW this spring. Watch the sessions with Taylor and Hall below.

鈥淯sing the city as a classroom鈥

Taylor and Rogers shared insights from their community-based work in Seattle and Nashville, and how educators can use new, mobile and location-aware technologies to engage youth in their communities.

For more information about Taylor鈥檚 Mobile City Science project, read a feature story in the latest edition of Research That Matters magazine. with the Space, Learning & Mobility Lab, which engages in design studies of how physical and virtual spaces can better support learning.

鈥淭he future of video-based research鈥

Taylor and Rogers discussed their forthcoming article on video-based research and how the increasing availability of Go-Pro cameras, virtual reality video and other technologies are opening new possibilities in education research.

View slides from 鈥淭he future of video-based research鈥 chat and read the paper co-authored by UW 爆走黑料 doctoral student Deborah Silvis and Taylor, recently published in the International Journal for Computer Supported Collaborative Learning.

 

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