finding resources, critiquing their own work and that
of others, getting feedback, and revising.
In our analysis, we build on these theoretical and
methodological insights in the service of advancing
our understanding of how a school-based technology
learning environment supports identity formation as
authors, designers, and creative new media artists
and critics.
1.1 Context and Methods
Data collection takes place at Renaissance Academy,
a middle school serving approximately140 students
grades sixth through eighth (i.e., ages 11 to 14 years)
in a large, urban area in the Midwest region of the
United States. The school has a partnership with the
Digital Youth Network (DYN), an organization
intended to develop students’ “new media literacy,”
(Pinkard et al., 2008). Opportunities for presentation
are considered important and are built into the
program. The DYN programmatic structure contains
formal and informal learning spaces, including: (1)
mandatory weekly media arts classes offered during
the school day; (2) eight weekly after school clubs
called “pods,” including digital design, digital
music, digital radio, digital video, digital queendom
(a girl’s only space), spoken word, video game
design, and robotics; (3) weekly after school forums;
(4) Remix World, an online social networking site
that complements face-to-face participation by
creating additional spaces for project development,
presentation, and critique; and (5) unstructured time
to use the program’s production tools. While all
students attended yearlong media arts classes, the
other DYN components were voluntary.
Approximately 50 students regularly attended at
least one after school pod each week.
Data collection occurred during two academic
school years, 2006-07 and 2007-08. We are in the
final year of a three-year study documenting the
learning and development of nine focal case students
within
DYN who began sixth grade in the fall of 2006.
We use both interview and field note data to create
portraits of learning about technology across time and
setting in a genre that has been called technobiography
in recent work (Henwood, Kennedy, & Miller, 2001).
1.1.1 Interviews
Interviews with students at multiple time periods and
adult teachers and DYN coordinators were recorded
and transcribed.
Learning Ecologies Interview. A semi-structured
interview protocol was developed to obtain detail on
how computers were used at home, school, with
peers, on-line, and through community based
contexts. There were three main sections of the
interview: (1) How students used and learn about
technologies in the contexts of home, school,
friend’s houses, and community locations; (2) how
students see themselves in relation to new
technologies; and (3) interests and future plans. Each
interview was conducted by one interviewer with
one student in a private room and was recorded with
both a digital audio recorder and a video camera
when possible. Interviews varied in length from 30
minutes to over an hour. All case learners were
interviewed in December of their sixth grade year.
Artefact-based Interview. This semi-structured
interview was designed to provide a focused look at
the projects students are working on and obtain an
account from the learner’s perspective of how they
learned, how the projects came to occur (pathway),
and the opportunities for fluency building within
different projects. Questions primarily focused on
their stories of creation and learning. Two
researchers interviewed each student in a private
room at school with student work displayed on their
laptops. Interviews lasted approximately one hour
and were video-recorded with the camera focused on
the screen and keyboard to capture the visual
referent of the interviewee. All case learners were
interviewed at the end of sixth and seventh grade.
Teacher and DYN Coordinator Interviews.
During an offsite professional development
workshop, eight teachers and coordinators
participated in three 15-30 minute semi-structured
interviews about a case learner. Prompts were
designed to elicit adult perceptions of the cases as
learners, producers/creators, collaborators, and
members of the DYN community. All interviews
were audio-recorded.
1.1.2 Field Notes
Three researchers observed more than 195 hours of
the 45-minute classes and 2-hour after school
sessions. Researchers focused on: (1) instructional
delivery, (2) opportunities for production and
presentation, and (3) adult and youth interactions
around instruction and creation. While in the field,
researchers prompted participants to explain
decision-making related to teaching and production.
We recorded events as descriptive “episodes” in
effort to maintain the real-time sequencing of events
(Emerson, Fretz & Shaw, 1995). Lastly, researchers
collected audio and video recordings as well as
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