to Promote Change?: A Third-Generation Activity Theory Analysis of High School Students’ Online Role-play Designed to Teach Persuasive Writing Richard Beach, University of Minnesota, [email protected] http:// digitalwriting.pbwiki.com
May 12, 2015
What Impels Students to Promote Change?: A Third-Generation
Activity Theory Analysis of High School Students’ Online Role-
play Designed to Teach Persuasive Writing
Richard Beach, University of Minnesota, [email protected]
http://digitalwriting.pbwiki.com
Creating an online role-play: Students:
•Select an issue•Formulate a primary argument
•Choose roles and conduct research
•Post arguments on a blog or online forum
•Step out of roles and reflect
Online role-play/resource sites
• Ink game: Michigan State University: First Year Composition
• Letters to the Next President • The Persuasive Games site• Democracy• A Force More Powerful • Peacemaker • The Our Courts project• Debatepedia• Debatemapper site• Opposing Views
“Dialogic argumentation”/ “constructive controversy”
Dialogic argumentation explore alternative perspectives and solutions to address and solve problems, which requires students to attend to context, audience, and purpose
Constructive controversyEngage in collaborative debate resulting in changing the status quo (Johnson & Johnson, 2009)
Engage in collaborative arguments: “rhetoric of transformation” (JAAL, April)
•Formulate alternative arguments
•Test out different argumentso"House": determine alternative diagnoses
•Find common ground to develop solutions
Arguments to change status quo systems
3rd Generation Activity Theory (AT): Identify tensions and contradictions in status quo systems (health care, justice, law enforcement, schooling, government)Define reasons for these tensions and contradictions Propose solutions for creating alternative systems
AT: tensions/contradictions: “runaway objects”: technological innovation
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AT: Tensions: Competing systems
Internet/Web 2.0 systemFree access in the home
School systemInternet use policies: Limit access
Legal systemState athletic codes
Free speech/academic freedom
Tensions: School versus online learning (Leander; Collins & Halverson)
Space/time in school (“just-in-case”)Linear, tangible, and divisible Cover same, standardized contentNeed to protect students
Space/time online (“just-in-time”)Fluid, layered, and simultaneousIndividual/collaborative learning Focus on communication/production
Learning theories:
Situated cognition (Gee, 2008)“Projective identities”
Connectivist” (Downes, 2007; Siemons, 2009)
Simulations: construct role, norms, or knowledge operating within or across simulated systems or communities (Edwards, Biesta, & Thorpe, 2009
Through online role-play, students learn to:
construct a persona
employ rhetorical appeals
support their position with reasons
identify and refute counter-arguments
revise or modify one’s own positions
Double-voicing “hybrid discourses” (Kamberelis, 2001; Bakhtin,1981)
“Authoritative discourses”School discourses rooted in external authority
“Internally persuasive discourses”
Advantages of online versus face-to-face role-play:
participate over an extended time period
incorporate use of images and video
access to all students’ posts and comments
review posts to reflect on and cite quotes
draw on role-play material for use in their own writing
2008 study: Students read Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother (2008)
Modern version of 1984
Issues of Internet privacy/control
17-year-old Marcus, a computer hacker, takes on the Department of Homeland Security’s attempt to control society
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Using a Ning as the platform for online role-play:
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Bubbl.us mapping to identify roles and relationships between roles
Threaded discussion allows students easily follow discussion
Students use their role to create an arguments and use hyperlinks
Students use the bio pages and comments sections to personally connect to other characters.
Use avatars to create ethosEmoGirl: Critique of schoolInternet policies
I think the internet usage policies are ridiculous. The policies are almost impossible to find. I spent half an hour trying to find them and I'm a young, computer savvy person.
Students evaluated themselves by using the rubric below (see handout for rubric)
Students step out of roles and reflect on:
•Use of arguments•Comfort in role•Targeted audiences/alliances
•Who has power?oReasons: strategies
•Sense of potential change
. Students wrote a paper from their own point of view addressing a problem with Internet access
Discourses: Con student access
Students will access problematic/porn sites that will adversely influence them (“Strict father” cultural model” (Lakoff))
Students are not mature enough to select appropriate sites (Developmental discourse)
“Strict Father” cultural model: Charles Hammerstein III
The issue with sites like YouTube is that it is a helpful site when used correctly, but the ratio of students who would use it to the students who would abuse it would greatly favor the later of the two. R-rated sites are not ok because they usually contain information and content that may be considered offensive. The internet policies are very clear, if your grandmother would not appreciate it, then you probably shouldn't be doing those kind of things at school.
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Business discourse: Misuse of online access
The Internet should be like a tunnel at school, with sites meant for education being the only thing accessible to students. There are people out there who want kids to learn in ways they want to and allow them to explore, and I can see where they are coming from. I urge supporters of this idea to ask themselves this question: does it really make sense to people out there to let kids use school property to check their fantasy football teams when they should be researching for their economics project?
Discourses: Pro student access
Schooling should be designed to foster critical thinking/access to information versus locking down students (education discourse)Students live in a networked global economy (globalism discourse)Students need to be responsible for their own decisions/behavior (“permissive parent” cultural model (Lakoff)- students have a legal right to access information (legal discourse)
Legal discourse: ACLU lawyer
The school blocking technologies are not effective and often over block information that could be useful to students. Government mandated Internet blocking is censorship. Some content is blocked because it has opposing viewpoints which are contrary to local, political, or religious opinions. An example of this would be the blocking of sites with alternative views on things like AIDS prevention, birth control, and gun control. Blocking programs should not be implemented to prevent students from accessing material they are constitutionally entitled to.
Double-voicing: Challenging authoritative discourses
“Yes, we would love to have kids enjoy school more, but the purpose of the Internet is to help with your education and make things easier” (Policy Recommendation). Yes this aspect of school policies is true but how can we have an easier educational experience when we can’t find sites right away because the majority of them are being blocked without our knowledge.
Identifying tensions/contradictions: policies and practices
We can’t get onto Nazi websites, but Mein Kampft is on display in the library. I can understand that you can’t go on websites, but we can read this book, but we can’t go to a website that might have historical facts.
Value: Aware of multiple perspectives
So I think it [online role-play] did change me more than I thought it would. It surprised me how much my opinion had differed and I don’t know if it’s necessarily changed that much but that it’s more open to what other people are doing and so I don’t just classify the sort of liberal—you have to let the world be free—people as just morons. The idea that everyone has their own truth is really obnoxious, but I have more understanding of it now than I did before.
Motivation to enact change
Even though the district policies are much more specific some are still hard to understand. The policies said things like obscene and offensive material are not allowed, but they never tell the reader what those are. The schools way of telling us what is inappropriate, is the administration blocking websites. They could tell us exactly what we can and cannot view and if they make it more obvious to the students, maybe they could unblock some of the websites and see if it helps the students stay out of trouble if we know the exact rules.
Meeting with school technology coordinator
Those decisions [the individual site blocks] are a reflection of the people making them and the feedback they get from the community and parents. They don’t want parents calling them about what their students are doing in school, so they are going to turn off everything except if it’s pretty clear. It’s hard to make change in an organization with 8,000 students so you really need big groups of people to make change instead of just one person.
Achieving change in school’s Internet policies • District tech staff lifted the blocks on
sites• Allowed teachers access to YouTube • Fact that students’ efforts led to
change:• Enhanced sense of student agency• Awareness of the influence of
effective arguments
Value of collective activity
I'm realizing that a few students working together to create change on a subject they feel passionate about can actually make a difference, whether it be in the school or community.
Summary: Students:
Exposed to multiple audiences and arguments on the Ning
Sense of shared concern/need for change
Aware of counter-arguments to refute
Identified contradictions in systemsPolicies versus practices
Employed collaborative argument to achieve change
Further research
Analysis of how grappling with dialogic tensions leads to perspective-taking/change
Analysis of avatar/role construction Understanding of professional discourses
Ability to voice positions distinct from own positions
Further research: Reading strategies
Reading the rhetorical landscape/social hierarchies
Value of mapping roles/relationships
Recognizing shifts in positions
Perspective-taking to gain identification with other roles
Critically interpreting stances and discourses
Change-based assessment
Assess students attempt to or actually use of literacy tool use to achieve change in status quo systems (Beach, Campano, Edmiston, & Borgmann, 2010)Self-reflections:
- What are those changes that I am trying to achieve—what are the purposes driving my uses of literacy tools?
- How am I using literacy tools to achieve these changes?