The place of school in young people's lives and learning is changing. In today's digitally connected world, traditional boundaries between school and home, information and communication, learning and playing seem blurred, even reversed - with learning happening at home or with peers online while school is a key site for social activities and the authority of teachers is challenged.
Recognising that young people's lives are diverse, uneven and complex, this research project examines the emerging mix of on- and offline experiences in teenagers' daily learning lives. We focus on the fluctuating web of peer-to-peer networks that may cut across institutional boundaries, adult values and established practices of learning and leisure.
Working with an ordinary London school, we followed the networks within and beyond a single class of 13-14 year olds at home, school and elsewhere over the course of an academic year - observing social interactions in and between lessons; conducting interviews with children, parents, teachers and relevant others; and mapping out-of-school engagements with digital networking technologies to reveal both patterns of use and the quality and meaning of such engagements as they shape the learning opportunities of young people. The research findings are presented as a book () from New York University Press as in 2016 through the .
Key research questions include:
- How do social relationships shape forms of learning in and out of school? And how do forms of learning shape social relationships?
- How do young people use digital technologies within their daily activities within and beyond the classroom, as part of their ‘learning lives’, and under what conditions is this constructive, enabling or impeding?
- How is youthful engagement with digital technologies shaped by the formal or informal practices, opportunities or risks, empowerment or constraints of the institutions and spaces in which learning occurs?
- Insofar as these technological mediations enable or complement learning, can this be harnessed constructively to develop future recommendations?
Project Team
Principal Investigator
Professor Sonia Livingstone
Associated researchers and staff
Dr Svenja Ottovordemgentschenfelde
Dr Rafal Zaborowski
Related research
Preparing for a Digital Future
Funding
This project was part of the directed by Mimi Ito at the University of California, Irvine and funded by as part of its Digital Media Learning program. 'The class' ran from 2011-2014, directed by Sonia Livingstone (s.livingstone@lse.ac.uk ) in collaboration with Julian Sefton-Green (julian@juliansefton-green.net).
Outputs
Publications
Livingstone, S., and Sefton-Green, J. (2017) In Deery, J., and Press, A. (Eds) Media and Class: TV, film, and digital culture (pp.176-188). New York: Routledge.
Livingstone, S. (2017) . In Tosoni, S., et al. (Eds.), Present scenarios of media production and engagement (55-66). Bremen: Edition Lumière.
Livingstone, S., & Sefton-Green, J. (2016) . New York: New York University Press.
Livingstone, S. (2014) . In Kramp, L., Carpentier, N., Hepp, A., Tomanic-Trivundza, I., Nieminen, H., Kunelius, R., Olsson, T., Sundin, E., and Kilborn, R. (eds.) Media Practice and Everyday Agency in Europe (pp.55-68). Bremen: Edition Lumière.
Blogs
Video/Audio
)
Contact
Professor Sonia Livingstone