Collboard: Fostering new media literacies in the classroom through collaborative problem solving supported by digital pens and interactive whiteboards

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Collboard: Fostering new media literacies in the classroom through collaborative problem solving supported by digital pens and interactive whiteboards
Abstract
Education systems worldwide must strive to support the teaching of a set of New Media Literacies (NMLs). These literacies respond to the need for educating human capital within participatory cultures in a highly technologized world. In this paper, we present Collboard, a constructivist problem solving activity for fostering the development of specific NMLs in classrooms: collective intelligence, distributed cognition and transmedia navigation. Collboard encompasses successive individual and collaborative work phases that prompt active student participation and engagement. It integrates digitally augmented appliances, namely, digital pens as a means to support individual work, and interactive whiteboards as a collaborative knowledge construction space. We report on the conceptual design of Collboard, its different technological and software components, as well as our findings from experiences we conducted in a Swedish school with 12 students from a 7th grade maths class. Findings from the experience provide an indication that Collboard can be well integrated in classroom teaching, and that it can foster the development of collective intelligence, distributed cognition and transmedia navigation in different knowledge domains.
Publication
Computers & Education
Volume
63
Pages
368-379
Date
4/2013
Journal Abbr
Computers & Education
Language
en
ISSN
03601315
Short Title
Collboard
Accessed
05/08/2021, 17:09
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Alvarez, C., Salavati, S., Nussbaum, M., & Milrad, M. (2013). Collboard: Fostering new media literacies in the classroom through collaborative problem solving supported by digital pens and interactive whiteboards. Computers & Education, 63, 368–379. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2012.12.019