
How Viewers Orient Toward Student Dialogue in Online Math Videos
Joanne Lobato, Carren Walker, San Diego State University, United States
JCMST Volume 38, Number 2, ISSN 0731-9258 Publisher: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE), Waynesville, NC USA
Abstract
Online math videos for student learning are abundant; yet they are surprisingly uniform in their monologic, expository mode of presentation and their emphasis on procedural skill. In response, we created an alternative model of online math videos that feature the unscripted dialogue of secondary school students, who convey sources of confusion and resolve the dilemmas that arise during problem solving. Each video shows a pair of students (called the talent) next to their mathematical inscriptions, which allows other students viewing the videos (called vicarious learners) to clearly see both the talent and their work. Previous research has conceptualized vicarious learners as epistemically-detached spectators. In contrast, we found that the vicarious learners who participated in this study took an emotionally-involved, quasi-collaborative stance toward the talent in the dialogic online math videos.
Citation
Lobato, J. & Walker, C. (2019). How Viewers Orient Toward Student Dialogue in Online Math Videos. Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 38(2), 177-200. Waynesville, NC USA: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE). Retrieved April 19, 2021 from https://www.learntechlib.org/primary/p/183904/.
© 2019 Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE)