We propose an analysis of the effects on the teaching/learning practices of mathematics that stem from digital technologies in school classrooms. We describe two episodes - an exchange of messages in the Stream of Google Classroom and an extract from a private Whatsapp chat between two classmates. We analyze such episodes with a theoretical lens based on the Chevallard Triangle of Di- dactics (Chevallard & Joshua, 1982) and the sociological per- spective, proposed by D’Amore (2005), considering the classroom as a society. Digital technologies enable new com- plex teaching/learning environments whose study require a systemic and relational approach as the one offered by the concept of Triangle. Moreover, we show how such environ-ments in turn can be considered societies with their constitu- tive practices and extra-functional meta-practices that are linked with the societies that originate in the school classrooms. We show how the interaction between these theoretical perspectives allows us to characterize teaching/learning pro- cesses when physical and virtual environments contaminate each other
Theoretical perspectives for the study of contamination between physical and virtual teaching/learning environments
agnese del zozzo
;george santi
2020-01-01
Abstract
We propose an analysis of the effects on the teaching/learning practices of mathematics that stem from digital technologies in school classrooms. We describe two episodes - an exchange of messages in the Stream of Google Classroom and an extract from a private Whatsapp chat between two classmates. We analyze such episodes with a theoretical lens based on the Chevallard Triangle of Di- dactics (Chevallard & Joshua, 1982) and the sociological per- spective, proposed by D’Amore (2005), considering the classroom as a society. Digital technologies enable new com- plex teaching/learning environments whose study require a systemic and relational approach as the one offered by the concept of Triangle. Moreover, we show how such environ-ments in turn can be considered societies with their constitu- tive practices and extra-functional meta-practices that are linked with the societies that originate in the school classrooms. We show how the interaction between these theoretical perspectives allows us to characterize teaching/learning pro- cesses when physical and virtual environments contaminate each otherI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


