The questionable promise of social media for education: Connective learning and the commercial imperative

N. Friesen, S. Lowe

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

155 Scopus citations

Abstract

Facebook and other social media have been hailed as delivering the promise of new, socially engaged educational experiences for students in undergraduate, self-directed, and other educational sectors. A theoretical and historical analysis of these media in the light of earlier media transformations, however, helps to situate and qualify this promise. Specifically, the analysis of dominant social media presented here questions whether social media platforms satisfy a crucial component of learning - fostering the capacity for debate and disagreement. By using the analytical frame of media theorist Raymond Williams, with its emphasis on the influence of advertising in the content and form of television, we weigh the conditions of dominant social networking sites as constraints for debate and therefore learning. Accordingly, we propose an update to Williams' erudite work that is in keeping with our findings. Williams' critique focuses on the structural characteristics of sequence, rhythm, and flow of television as a cultural form. Our critique proposes the terms information design, architecture, and above all algorithm, as structural characteristics that similarly apply to the related but contemporary cultural form of social networking services. Illustrating the ongoing salience of media theory and history for research in e-learning, the article updates Williams' work while leveraging it in a critical discussion of the suitability of commercial social media for education.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)183-194
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Computer Assisted Learning
Volume28
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2012

Keywords

  • Connectivism
  • E-learning
  • Facebook
  • Media theory
  • Online education
  • Philosophy of education

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