Studying Virtual Math Teams centers on detailed empirical
studies of how students in small online groups make sense of math
issues and how they solve problems by making meaning together.
These studies are woven together with materials that describe the
online environment and pedagogical orientation, as well as
reflections on the theoretical implications of the findings in the
studies. The nature of group cognition and shared meaning making in
collaborative learning is a foundational research issue in CSCL.
More generally, the theme of sense making is a central topic in
information science. While many authors allude to these topics, few
have provided this kind of detailed analysis of the mechanisms of
intersubjective meaning making.
This book presents a coherent research agenda that has been
pursued by the author and his research group. The book opens with
descriptions of the project and its methodology, as well as
situating this research in the past and present context of the CSCL
research field. The core research team then presents five concrete
analyses of group interactions in different phases of the Virtual
Math Teams research project. These chapters are followed by several
studies by international collaborators, discussing the group
discourse, the software affordances and alternative representations
of the interaction, all using data from the VMT project. The
concluding chapters address implications for the theory of group
cognition and for the methodology of the learning sciences. In
addition to substantial introductory and concluding chapters, this
important new book includes analyses based upon the author's
previous research, thereby providing smooth continuity and an
engaging flow that follows the progression of the research.
The VMT project has dual goals: (a) to provide a source of
experience and data for practical and theoretical explorations of
group knowledge building and (b) to develop an effective online
environment and educational service for collaborative learning of
mathematics. Studying Virtual Math Teams reflects these twin
orientations, reviewing the intertwined aims and development of a
rigorous science of small-group cognition and a Web 2.0 educational
math service. It documents the kinds of interactional methods that
small groups use to explore math issues and provides a glimpse into
the potential of online interaction to promote productive math
discourse.
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