青少年看不见的工作:青少年和英语学习家庭之间在线搜索和中介的社会文化和协作过程

IF 1.6 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Jason C. Yip, Wendy Roldan, Carmen González, Laura R. Pina, M. Ruiz, Paola Vanegas
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的本研究旨在探讨移民家庭在共同搜寻网路资讯时的合作过程。社会经济地位较低的英语学习移民成年人经常与他们的孩子合作搜索互联网。在这个被称为在线搜索和中介(OSB)的协作过程中,家庭成员依靠彼此的语言和数字扫盲技能。虽然以前的工作已经确定了影响OSB的生态因素,但研究尚未提炼出此类合作背后的具体学习过程。设计/方法/方法对于本研究,作者坚持案例研究检查的做法。这项研究的参与者包括父母、祖父母和10-17岁的孩子。大多数成年人出生在墨西哥,没有大学学位,在服务业工作,代表了社会经济地位较低的人群。这项研究对每个家庭进行了两到三次独立的家庭访问,包括访谈和在线搜索任务。通过对三个家庭的案例研究分析,本文探讨了儿童和父母在参与合作OSB体验时所面临的知识、弹性、生态支持和挑战的基础。这项研究表明,家庭计算机支持的协作过程通常是非正式的、社交的、情绪化的,并且与解决信息挑战高度相关。研究局限/启示代际OSB过程不同于发生在课堂同伴或同事之间的协作在线信息解决问题。这项研究表明,当父母和孩子与家庭成员合作寻找解决问题的方法时,他们是如何利用自己的知识、韧性和生态支持系统的。这是一个关于三个家庭相互合作的案例研究。这个案例研究提供了关于家庭的分析概括和理论构建,而不是统计概括。实际意义设计师需要认识到,儿童和青少年正在使用与成人相同的工具来寻求高层次的关键信息。本研究的模型表明,如果父母和孩子使用相同的技术工具,但知识基础、经验水平和技能不同,那么信息的呈现(例如在线搜索结果、信息可视化)需要适应不同的理解水平。本研究建议设计师通过参与式设计方法与边缘化社区密切合作,以更好地理解界面和视觉效果如何帮助适应年轻人的隐形工作。社会意义作者在这项研究中已经证明,学习和参与家庭在线搜索不仅对个人和数字素养技能的发展至关重要,而且是家庭学习的一部分。虽然社区服务、图书馆和学校有责任支持个人数字和信息素养的发展,但本研究的模式强调需要认识到知识、家庭弹性和基于资产的学习的资金。学校和教师应确定并利用青年隐性工作作为一种家庭学习形式。作者认为,教育工作者可以通过强调家庭和家庭中年轻人解决信息问题的重要性来做到这一点。图书馆和社区中心在为家长和成年人提供技术援助(如WiFi接入)和信息资源方面也发挥着关键作用。原创性/价值本研究的工作表明了围绕OSB培养富有成效的联合媒体参与(JME)的新条件。本研究有助于促进以家庭责任为中心的JME的学习和设计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Youth invisible work: the sociocultural and collaborative processes of online search and brokering between adolescents and English-language learning families
Purpose This study aims to investigate the collaboration processes of immigrant families as they search for online information together. Immigrant English-language learning adults of lower socioeconomic status often work collaboratively with their children to search the internet. Family members rely on each other’s language and digital literacy skills in this collaborative process known as online search and brokering (OSB). While previous work has identified ecological factors that impact OSB, research has not yet distilled the specific learning processes behind such collaborations. Design/methodology/approach For this study, the authors adhere to practices of a case study examination. This study’s participants included parents, grandparents and children aged 10–17 years. Most adults were born in Mexico, did not have a college-degree, worked in service industries and represented a lower-SES population. This study conducted two to three separate in-home family visits per family with interviews and online search tasks. Findings From a case study analysis of three families, this paper explores the funds of knowledge, resilience, ecological support and challenges that children and parents face, as they engage in collaborative OSB experiences. This study demonstrates how in-home computer-supported collaborative processes are often informal, social, emotional and highly relevant to solving information challenges. Research limitations/implications An intergenerational OSB process is different from collaborative online information problem-solving that happens between classroom peers or coworkers. This study’s research shows how both parents and children draw on their funds of knowledge, resilience and ecological support systems when they search collaboratively, with and for their family members, to problem solve. This is a case study of three families working in collaboration with each other. This case study informs analytical generalizations and theory-building rather than statistical generalizations about families. Practical implications Designers need to recognize that children and youth are using the same tools as adults to seek high-level critical information. This study’s model suggests that if parents and children are negotiating information seeking with the same technology tools but different funds of knowledge, experience levels and skills, the presentation of information (e.g. online search results, information visualizations) needs to accommodate different levels of understanding. This study recommends designers work closely with marginalized communities through participatory design methods to better understand how interfaces and visuals can help accommodate youth invisible work. Social implications The authors have demonstrated in this study that learning and engaging in family online searching is not only vital to the development of individual and digital literacy skills, it is a part of family learning. While community services, libraries and schools have a responsibility to support individual digital and information literacy development, this study’s model highlights the need to recognize funds of knowledge, family resiliency and asset-based learning. Schools and teachers should identify and harness youth invisible work as a form of learning at home. The authors believe educators can do this by highlighting the importance of information problem solving in homes and youth in their families. Libraries and community centers also play a critical role in supporting parents and adults for technical assistance (e.g. WiFi access) and information resources. Originality/value This study’s work indicates new conditions fostering productive joint media engagement (JME) around OSB. This study contributes a generative understanding that promotes studying and designing for JME, where family responsibility is the focus.
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来源期刊
Information and Learning Sciences
Information and Learning Sciences INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
2.90%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: Information and Learning Sciences advances inter-disciplinary research that explores scholarly intersections shared within 2 key fields: information science and the learning sciences / education sciences. The journal provides a publication venue for work that strengthens our scholarly understanding of human inquiry and learning phenomena, especially as they relate to design and uses of information and e-learning systems innovations.
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