The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times

The Covid-19 pandemic has been a catalyst for ongoing pedagogic changes in the higher education landscape, especially with the use of online modes of delivery. The digital shift triggered questions around student engagement and the need to ensure that, despite physical distancing, students did not...

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Main Authors: Aditi Hunma, Moeain Arend, Gideon Nomdo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2023-09-01
Series:Perspectives in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/pie/article/view/6774
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author Aditi Hunma
Moeain Arend
Gideon Nomdo
author_facet Aditi Hunma
Moeain Arend
Gideon Nomdo
author_sort Aditi Hunma
collection DOAJ
description The Covid-19 pandemic has been a catalyst for ongoing pedagogic changes in the higher education landscape, especially with the use of online modes of delivery. The digital shift triggered questions around student engagement and the need to ensure that, despite physical distancing, students did not feel alienated from online learning spaces. This was part and parcel of our ethics of care prerogative. In the context of teaching academic literacy online, our teaching experiences have prompted us to interrogate how we understand student participation and sense-making in online spaces during the pandemic. This is particularly important for us, as we view academic literacy as a set of socially embedded practices rather than decontextualised skills (Street, 1983). We argue that during the Covid-19 pandemic, the online chatroom as a boundary object (Bowker & Star, 2000) was recruited as a proxy for the traditional classroom. We focus on how this boundary object was recruited by us as academic literacy lecturers in our first-year academic literacy course to realise certain features of our pedagogy of discomfort. Through a critical discourse analysis of written interactions in the chatroom, we explore how we as lecturers constrained the multiple social uses of the chatroom in order to imbue it with a particular function, a sense-making space for the acquisition of academic literacy in the context of ‘Emergency Remote Teaching’.
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spelling doaj.art-de7333bafd1042c5af491c9a76fafb702024-03-11T23:03:56ZengUniversity of the Free StatePerspectives in Education0258-22362519-593X2023-09-01413The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times Aditi Hunma0Moeain Arend1Gideon Nomdo2University of Cape Town, South AfricaUniversity of Cape Town, South AfricaUniversity of Cape Town, South Africa The Covid-19 pandemic has been a catalyst for ongoing pedagogic changes in the higher education landscape, especially with the use of online modes of delivery. The digital shift triggered questions around student engagement and the need to ensure that, despite physical distancing, students did not feel alienated from online learning spaces. This was part and parcel of our ethics of care prerogative. In the context of teaching academic literacy online, our teaching experiences have prompted us to interrogate how we understand student participation and sense-making in online spaces during the pandemic. This is particularly important for us, as we view academic literacy as a set of socially embedded practices rather than decontextualised skills (Street, 1983). We argue that during the Covid-19 pandemic, the online chatroom as a boundary object (Bowker & Star, 2000) was recruited as a proxy for the traditional classroom. We focus on how this boundary object was recruited by us as academic literacy lecturers in our first-year academic literacy course to realise certain features of our pedagogy of discomfort. Through a critical discourse analysis of written interactions in the chatroom, we explore how we as lecturers constrained the multiple social uses of the chatroom in order to imbue it with a particular function, a sense-making space for the acquisition of academic literacy in the context of ‘Emergency Remote Teaching’. http://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/pie/article/view/6774Academic literaciesboundary objectchatroomcritical discourse analysispedagogy of discomfortsocial uses
spellingShingle Aditi Hunma
Moeain Arend
Gideon Nomdo
The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
Perspectives in Education
Academic literacies
boundary object
chatroom
critical discourse analysis
pedagogy of discomfort
social uses
title The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
title_full The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
title_fullStr The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
title_full_unstemmed The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
title_short The social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
title_sort social uses of the online chatroom as a boundary object for the acquisition of academic literacy in pandemic times
topic Academic literacies
boundary object
chatroom
critical discourse analysis
pedagogy of discomfort
social uses
url http://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/pie/article/view/6774
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