Cover image for Video research in the learning sciences
Title:
Video research in the learning sciences
Publication Information:
Mahwah, NJ : Lawrence Erlbaum, 2007
Physical Description:
xiii, 603 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9780805853599
Added Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010205488 LB1044.7 V53 2007 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Video Research in the Learning Sciences is a comprehensive exploration of key theoretical, methodological, and technological advances concerning uses of digital video-as-data in the learning sciences as a way of knowing about learning, teaching, and educational processes. The aim of the contributors, a community of scholars using video in their own work, is to help usher in video scholarship and supportive technologies, and to mentor video scholars, so that video research will meet its maximum potential to contribute to the growing knowledge base about teaching and learning.

This volume contributes deeply to both to the science of learning through in-depth video studies of human interaction in learning environments--whether classrooms or other contexts--and to the uses of video for creating descriptive, explanatory, or expository accounts of learning and teaching. It is designed around four themes--each with a cornerstone chapter that introduces and synthesizes the cluster of chapters related to it:

Theoretical frameworks for video research; Video research on peer, family, and informal learning; Video research on classroom and teacher learning; and Video collaboratories and technological futures.

Video Research in the Learning Sciences is intended for researchers, university faculty, teacher educators, and graduate students in education, and for anyone interested in how knowledge is expanded using video-based technologies for inquiries about learning and teaching.

Visit the Web site affiliated with this book: www.videoresearch.org


Table of Contents

Ricki Goldman and Roy Pea and Brigid Barron and Sharon J. DerryRicki GoldmanJay LemkeFrancois V. TochonMichael T. HayesJoseph Tobin and Yeh HsuehRand Spiro and Brian P. Collins and Aparna RamchandranShelley Goldman and Ray McDermottJudith Green and Audra Skukauskaite and Carol Dixon and Ralph CordovaTimothy Koschmann and Gerry Stahl and Alan ZemelFrederick EricksonBrigid BarronCathy Angelillo and Barbara Rogojf and Pablo ChavajayDoris AshMaureen Callanan and Araceli Valle and Margarita AzmitiaRandi A. Engle and Faith R. Conant and James G. GreenoCindy E. Hmelo-Silver and Elvira Kati and Anandi Nagarajan and Ellina ChernobilskySasha D. Palmquist and Kevin CrowleyDirk vom Lehn and Christian HeathSharon J. DerryKevin MillerDan Schwartz and Kevin HartmanMartha W. Alibali and Mitchell J. NathanWolff-Michael RothMiriam SherinDesiree H. Pointer Mace and Thomas Hatch and Toru IiyoshiAnthony J. Petrosino and Matthew J. KoehlerRoy Pea and Eric HoffertRonald M. Baecker and David Fono and Peter WolfLinda Beardsley and Dan Cogan-Drew and Federica OliveroBarry J. FishmanRicki GoldmanKenneth E. Hay and Beaumie KimBrian MacWhinneyReed StevensRaul Zaritsky
Prefacep. ix
Part I Theoretical Frameworks
Part I Cornerstone Chapter
1 Video Representations and the Perspectivity Framework: Epistemology, Ethnography, Evaluation, and Ethicsp. 3
2 Video Epistemology In-and-Outside the Box: Traversing Attentional Spacesp. 39
3 From Video Cases to Video Pedagogy: A Framework for Video Feedback and Reflection in Pedagogical Research Praxisp. 53
4 Overwhelmed by the Image: The Role of Aesthetics in Ethnographic Filmmakingp. 67
5 The Poetics and Pleasures of Video Ethnography of Educationp. 77
6 Reflections on a Post-Gutenberg Epistemology for Video Use in Ill-Structured Domains: Fostering Complex Learning and Cognitive Flexibilityp. 93
7 Staying the Course With Video Analysisp. 101
8 Epistemological Issues in the Analysis of Video Records: Interactional Ethnography as a Logic of Inquiryp. 115
9 The Video Analyst's Manifesto (or The Implications of Garfinkel's Policies for Studying Instructional Practice in Design-Based Research)p. 133
10 Ways of Seeing Video: Toward a Phenomenology of Viewing Minimally Edited Footagep. 145
Part II Video Research on Peer, Family, and Informal Learning
Part II Cornerstone Chapter
11 Video as a Tool to Advance Understanding of Learning and Development in Peer, Family, and Other Informal Learning Contextsp. 159
12 Examining Shared Endeavors by Abstracting Video Coding Schemes With Fidelity to Casesp. 189
13 Using Video Data to Capture Discontinuous Science Meaning Making in Nonschool Settingsp. 207
14 Expanding Studies of Family Conversations About Science Through Video Analysisp. 227
15 Progressive Refinement of Hypotheses in Video-Supported Researchp. 239
16 Soft Leaders, Hard Artifacts, and the Groups We Rarely See: Using Video to Understand Peer Learning Processesp. 255
17 Studying Dinosaur Learning on an Island of Expertisep. 271
18 Social Interaction in Museums and Galleries: A Note on Video-Based Field Studiesp. 287
Part III Video Research on Classroom and Teacher Learning
Part III Cornerstone Chapter
19 Video Research in Classroom and Teacher Learning (Standardize That!)p. 305
20 Learning From Classroom Video: What Makes it Compelling and What Makes it Hardp. 321
21 It's not Video Anymore: Designing Digital Video for Learning and Assessmentp. 335
22 Teachers' Gestures as a Means of Scaffolding Students' Understanding: Evidence from an Early Algebra Lessonp. 349
23 Epistemic Mediation: Video Data as Filters for the Objectification of Teaching by Teachersp. 367
24 The Development of Teachers' Professional Vision in Video Clubsp. 383
25 Teaching in and Teaching From the Classroom: Using Video and Other Media to Represent the Scholarship of Teaching and Learningp. 397
26 Teachers as Designers: Pre and In-Service Teachers' Authoring of Anchor Video as a Means to Professional Developmentp. 411
Part IV Video Collaboratories and Technological Futures
Part IV Cornerstone Chapter
27 Video Workflow in the Learning Sciences: Prospects of Emerging Technologies for Augmenting Work Practicesp. 427
28 Toward a Video Collaboratoryp. 461
29 VideoPaper: Bridging Research and Practice For Preservice and Experienced Teachersp. 479
30 Fostering Community Knowledge Sharing Using Ubiquitous Records of Practicep. 495
31 Orion, An Online Digital Video Data Analysis Tool: Changing our Perspectives as an Interpretive Communityp. 507
32 Integrated Temporal Multimedia Data (ITMD) Research Systemp. 521
33 A Transcript-Video Database for Collaborative Commentary in the Learning Sciencesp. 537
34 Capturing Ideas in Digital Things: A New Twist on the Old Problem of Inert Knowledgep. 547
35 Creating an Educational Research Visualization: Using Visualizations as Scientific Warrants in the Earlier Research Phasesp. 565
Author Indexp. 579
Subject Indexp. 591