Dataset2

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Contents

Summary

  • Date: Spring of 2006
  • Participants: volunteer students, selected by invited teachers, grouped in 5 teams of 3 to 5 students
  • Sessions: Four group chats per team for a total of 18 1-hour chats over two weeks
  • Task: [Sticks and Square patterns ]
  • Feedback/Moderation: A moderator was present in all sessions but tried not to participate in the math activity. Feedback was provided in between sessions
  • Other supports: A [Wiki environment] was provided

This dataset corresponds to 18 sessions held as part of the first VTM Spring Fest in 2005.
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Data Sources

Teams and Sessions
Team Summary Session 1 Session 2 Session 3 Session 4
Team A Summary Transcript
TeamA.jno
Team B Summary Transcript
TeamB.jno
Team C Summary Transcript
TeamC.jno
Team D Summary Transcript
TeamD.jno
Team E Summary Transcript
TeamE.jno

[data] (password protected)

Overarching Questions

  • What are the interactional bridging methods that can be identified in these VMT online learning sessions?
  • How can we effectively conceptualize these phenomena and analyze their interactional effects?
  • How does bridging activity span across the teams' trajectories over time?

Goals

The central goal of this second design study is to test and expand the initial characterization of bridging phenomena and the various methods used by participants to engage in bridging activity. In particular we are interested in exploring the how bridging activity span cross the individual, the small group and the community (cross-group) levels of knowledge-building.

Methods & Procedures

The data for this study comes from 18 collaborative sessions held in the Spring of 2006 as part of the Virtual Math Teams project. Four teams of 3-5 secondary students. Recordings. The teams engaged in online math discussions for four hour-long sessions over a two-week period. We expect that the sequential nature of the mathematical tasks that will be utilized in addition to the collaborative nature of the multi-team setup will provide with a propitious setting for bridging work to be investigated.

  • Team Composition and Evolution: Each team will be composed of three to four non-collocated, upper middle-school or high-school students. Participants will be recruited through the Math Forum online community and selected by volunteer teachers at different schools across the USA or abroad. To the extent possible, teams will be composed of students from different schools. Participants will use anonymous handles throughout the four sessions and will be encourage to behave in a natural way. Attendance to all sessions will be highly encouraged but because of the voluntary nature of the study and the naturalistic environment that the Math Forum entails, it is possible that changes in team composition will occur. However, we see these changes as propitious opportunities to study bridging and, as a result, they will be managed as such. Across the four sessions, we will encourage teams to stay together but changes in team membership might also occur due to attendance constraints or personal preference of the participants.
  • Settings: The elements of the activity system that we expect to investigate in this study include the sequential structure of the task, the composition of the teams (as well as their development across sessions), and the online environment. We described these three elements below.
  • The task: Teams will work on the â��Grid worldâ�� mathematical task, which allows for both, collaborative problem finding and problem solving. In the first session, the teams will be given a brief description of this non-traditional geometry environment: a grid-world where one could only move along the lines of a grid. The students will be asked to generate and pursue their own questions about the grid-world, such as questions about the shortest distance between two points in this world.


Figure 2. Grid world task


The online sessions where facilitated by a member of the VMT research project team. In each session, the facilitator welcomed the students to the chat, introduced the task, and provided technical assistance regarding the special features of the collaboration environment. The facilitator did not actively participate in the team�s mathematical collaboration. After the first session, the teams received feedback on their prior work and the work of other teams. The instructions for each session directed teams to continue their prior work, consider the work of other teams or pursue new questions. We expect that these aspects of the task, including the feedback given to the teams, would promote sustained problem-solving work by the teams. The analysis of the data collect would then provide us with an opportunity to validate this expectation and analyze how continuity is established in interaction. The fact that the task is open for the team to find, formulate, and purse the questions that are of interest to the participants, leads us to predict that we will be able to observe a wide range of problem-solving activity including problem formulation, problem representation, strategic .
  • Online Environment:. Participating teams will use the ConcertChat virtual room environment for their interactions. ConcertChat combines a persistent chat environment with a shared whiteboard and a set of special referencing tools to reduce ambiguity when referring to chat postings or objects on the whiteboard.

Figure 2. ConcertChat collaboration environment with references from chat to whiteboard

  • In this study, the teams will be provided a new ConcertChat room for each one of the sessions. Teams will not have direct access to the persistent records of their interactions from previous sessions or those of other teams and will only learn about them in a direct way through the feedback provided by the facilitators. No additional information will be available directly in the system about the members of the teams, their meetings and results. We expect that the setup of the online environment can be considered one with no explicit computational supports for bridging. ConcertChat also provides a detailed and timed log of the room activity which includes a transcript of the chat discourse, a recording of all public activity performed on the whiteboard, and a detailed log of other interactional events such entering or exiting the room. This log can be replayed on a special research tool developed as part of the Virtual Math Teams project in order to have a naturalistic view of how the interaction was performed from the participantsâ�� point of view.

Trajectories

File:Trajectoriesd2.gif

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