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Original Article

Embodied experiences of place: a study of history learning with mobile technologies

S. Price

Corresponding Author

UCL Institute of Education, London Knowledge Lab, , London, UK

Correspondence: Sara Price, UCL Institute of Education, London Knowledge Lab, 23‐29 Emerald Street, WC1N, London, UK. Email:

sara.price@ucl.ac.uk

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C. Jewitt

UCL Institute of Education, London Knowledge Lab, , London, UK

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M. Sakr

UCL Institute of Education, London Knowledge Lab, , London, UK

Middlesex University, London, UKSearch for more papers by this author
First published: 12 April 2016
Cited by: 2

Abstract

This paper reports an empirical study that takes a multimodal analytical approach to examine how mobile technologies shape students' exploration and experience of place during a history learning activity in situ. In history education, mobile technologies provide opportunities for authentic experiential learning activities that have the potential to re‐mediate students' understanding of space and place through enacted interaction, and to make the learning more memorable. A key question is how learners work with the physical and digital information in the context of that learning experience, and how this supports new experiences and understanding of space and place. Findings suggest that embodied mobile experiences foster the creation of both physical and digital markers, which were instrumental in concretizing the history experience and developing new narratives. The findings also show how different representational forms of digital information mediated interaction in specific ways and how digital augmentation can lead to conflation in student understanding of space and time. These findings inform our understanding of the value of mobile applications in supporting embodied learning experiences and provide key implications for pedagogical design, both in situ and back in the classroom.

Number of times cited: 2

  • , Designing for Mobile Learning, Design of Technology-Enhanced Learning, 10.1108/978-1-78714-182-720171011, (261-304), (2017).
  • , Conceptualising and researching the body in digital contexts: towards new methodological conversations across the arts and social sciences, Qualitative Research, 17, 1, (37), (2017).