“创客空间不仅仅是一个充满工具的房间”:在创客空间中,女学生的学习是什么样子的

Megan E. Tomko, A. Schwartz, W. Newstetter, Melissa W. Alemán, R. Nagel, J. Linsey
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引用次数: 11

摘要

假设创造的行为会刺激学习,一项广泛的努力推动了大学校园中创客空间的整合。从社区学院到研究型高等教育机构,大量投资过去和现在都在推进创新精神,鼓励学术环境中的非传统学习。虽然我们乐观地认为学生们正在利用创客空间的资源,并从他们的经验中学习,但我们需要更直接地了解创客空间中正在发生的学习(如果有的话)。创客空间被标记为一个开放的学习环境,学生可以在这里设计、创造、创新和协作[1,2]。作为回应,我们通过研究问题:女性学生在学术创客空间中的学习体验如何?STEM领域的女学生,尤其是那些参与创客空间的女学生,拥有独特而非典型的经历,可以为各种学习和教学影响提供道路。本文的目的是强调我们的方法过程,包括深入的现象学访谈,以及利用开放和轴向编码方法来建立扎实的理论。我们通过有目的的最大变异抽样和雪球抽样对五名女学生进行了访谈。通过对10%的数据进行严格和反复的分析,我们创建了一个初步的编码方案,阐明了学习是如何发生的,学习了哪些设计技能,以及学习了哪些生活技能。这些初步发现表明,这些女学生不仅在实践中学习,学习如何在设计中解决问题,而且在这些以设计为导向的创客空间中,她们也克服了恐惧,培养了耐心,并交流了想法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“A Makerspace Is More Than Just a Room Full of Tools”: What Learning Looks Like for Female Students in Makerspaces
Postulating that the act of making stimulates learning, a widespread effort prompted the integration of makerspaces on college campuses. From community colleges to research-based higher education institutions, large investments were and still are being made to advance the making spirit and encourage non-traditional learning in academic settings. While optimistic that students are taking advantage of the makerspace resources and are in fact learning from their experiences, there needs to be a more direct effort to understand the learning, if any, that is occurring in the makerspace. The makerspace is labeled as an open, learning environment where students are able to design, create, innovate, and collaborate [1, 2]. In response, we investigate the claims of this statement through the research question: how is learning experienced by female students in an academic makerspace? Female students in STEM, especially those engaged in makerspaces, have unique and uncharacteristic experiences that can lend way to various learning and pedagogical implications. The purpose of this paper is to highlight our methodological process for incorporating in-depth phenomenologically based interviewing and for utilizing open and axial coding methods to establish grounded theory. We interview five female students through purposeful maximum variation sampling and snowball sampling. Through a rigorous and iterative data analysis process of the ten-percent of the overall, we created a preliminary coding scheme that articulates how learning is occurring, what design skills are being learned, and what life skills are being learned. These preliminary findings show that not only are these female students learning by doing and learning how to problem solve in design, but they are also overcoming fears, developing patience, and communicating ideas in these design-oriented makerspaces.
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