Affiliation:
1. University of São Paulo, Brazil
2. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Abstract
The development of the digital environment and the global network has created opportunities for learning that we are just beginning to explore. Two key features of this recent development are collaborative intelligence and ubiquitous learning. That way this chapter sets out to explore two situated practices with the common ground scholar. The authors begin by telling how this cybersocial learning environment has changed the way we see and understand education, our students, and how this changes our teaching identity. They go on to recover some historical background of our educational systems and then situate the ways they are implementing CGScholar. A consequence of this two autoetnography perspective is to generate insights and reflections on possibilities of use of this particular digital technology for education.
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