On Researching Activity Tracking to Support Learning: A Retrospective
Item
Title
On Researching Activity Tracking to Support Learning: A Retrospective
Abstract/Description
Purpose
This paper aims to discuss research and design of learning activities involving activity tracking and wearable activity tracking technology.
Design/methodology/approach
Three studies are summarized as part of a program of research that sought to design new learning activities for classroom settings. The first used data from a qualitative interview study of adult athletes who self-track. The second used video excerpts from a designed learning activity with a group of fifth grade elementary students. The third study draws largely on quantitative assessment data from an activity tracking unit enactment in a rural sixth grade class.
Findings
Activity tracking appears to provide opportunities for establishing benchmarks and calibration opportunities related to intensity of physical activities. Those features of activity tracking can be leveraged to develop learning activities where elementary students discover features of data and how data are affected by different distributions. Students can show significant improvement related to statistical reasoning in classroom instructional units that centralize the use of self-tracked data.
Originality/value
As activity tracking is becoming a more ubiquitous practice with increased pervasiveness and familiarity with mobile and wearable technologies, this paper demonstrates a topical intersection between the information and learning sciences, illustrates how self-tracking can be recruited for instructional settings, and it discusses concerns that have emerged in the past several years as the technology related to activity tracking begins to be used for educational purposes.
This paper aims to discuss research and design of learning activities involving activity tracking and wearable activity tracking technology.
Design/methodology/approach
Three studies are summarized as part of a program of research that sought to design new learning activities for classroom settings. The first used data from a qualitative interview study of adult athletes who self-track. The second used video excerpts from a designed learning activity with a group of fifth grade elementary students. The third study draws largely on quantitative assessment data from an activity tracking unit enactment in a rural sixth grade class.
Findings
Activity tracking appears to provide opportunities for establishing benchmarks and calibration opportunities related to intensity of physical activities. Those features of activity tracking can be leveraged to develop learning activities where elementary students discover features of data and how data are affected by different distributions. Students can show significant improvement related to statistical reasoning in classroom instructional units that centralize the use of self-tracked data.
Originality/value
As activity tracking is becoming a more ubiquitous practice with increased pervasiveness and familiarity with mobile and wearable technologies, this paper demonstrates a topical intersection between the information and learning sciences, illustrates how self-tracking can be recruited for instructional settings, and it discusses concerns that have emerged in the past several years as the technology related to activity tracking begins to be used for educational purposes.
Author/creator
Date
In publication
Volume
120
Issue
1-2
Pages
133-154
Resource type
Background/Context
Medium
Print
Background/context type
Conceptual
Keywords
Open access/free-text available
Yes
Peer reviewed
Yes
ISSN
2398-5348
Citation
Lee, V. R. (2018). On Researching Activity Tracking to Support Learning: A Retrospective. Information and Learning Sciences, 120(1/2), 133–154. https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-06-2018-0048
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