New approaches for new media: moving towards a connected methodology

Author:

Barden Owen

Abstract

PurposeDefining and describing research methodologies is difficult. Methodologies have similarities and resonances, and overlapping characteristics. Familiar labels of case study, action research and ethnography may not be adequate to describe new and creative approaches to qualitative research. If we simply transfer old ways to new contexts, we risk limiting our understanding of the complexities of real life settings. The call to set aside old dualisms and devise new methodological approaches has been sounded. Accordingly, this article sets out to describe a fledgling new methodological approach, and how it was operationalized in a small‐scale study of digitally‐mediated classroom learning.Design/methodology/approachThe methodology combines elements of action research and case study with an ethnographic approach. It was devised for a study of the use of Facebook as an educational resource by five dyslexic students at a sixth form college in north‐west England. Its flexibility and attention to detail enabled multiple data collection methods. This range of methods enabled meticulous analysis of many of the group's online and offline interactions with each other and with Facebook as they co‐constructed their group Facebook page.FindingsReflexively combining elements of case study, action research and ethnography thus helped capture the “connected complexities” (Davies) of this contemporary classroom setting. This is necessary if researchers are to obtain any meaningful understanding of how learning happens in such contexts.Originality/valueThe author hopes to contribute to the discourse on qualitative methodology and invites other researchers studying similar contexts to consider a similar approach.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Social Sciences,Education

Reference64 articles.

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2. Author (anonymised for peer review) (in press), “Facebook levels the playing field. Dyslexic students learning through literacy in a digitally‐mediated social network”, Research in Learning Technology (forthcoming).

3. Barden, O. (2012), “…if we were cavemen we’d be fine. Facebook as a catalyst for critical literacy learning by dyslexic sixth‐form students”, Literacy, Vol. 46, pp. 123‐132, doi: 10.1111/j.1741‐4369.2012.00662.x.

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