Mediated learning materials: visibility checks in telepresence robot mediated classroom interaction




Jakonen Teppo, Jauni Heidi

PublisherROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD

2021

Classroom Discourse

CLASSROOM DISCOURSE

CLASSR DISCOURSE

12

1-2

121

145

25

1946-3014

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/19463014.2020.1808496

https://doi.org/10.1080/19463014.2020.1808496

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/68070334



Videoconferencing is increasingly used in education as a way to support distance learning. This article contributes to the emerging interactional literature on video-mediated educational interaction by exploring how a telepresence robot is used to facilitate remote participation in university-level foreign language teaching. A telepresence robot differs from commonly used videoconferencing set-ups in that it allows mobility and remote camera control. A remote student can thus move a classroom-based robot from a distance in order to shift attention between people, objects and environmental structures during classroom activities. Using multimodal conversation analysis, we focus on how participants manage telepresent remote students' visual access to classroom learning materials. In particular, we show how visibility checks are accomplished as a sequential and embodied practice in interaction between physically dispersed participants. Moreover, we demonstrate how participants conduct interactional work to make learning materials visible to the remote student by showing them and guiding the 'seeing' of materials. The findings portray some ways in which participants in video-mediated interaction display sensitivity to the possibility of intersubjective trouble and the recipient's visual perspective. Besides increasing understanding of visual and interactional practices in technology-rich learning environments, the findings can be applied in the pedagogical design of such environments.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 19:46