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Featured researches published by Ingvill Rasmussen.


computer supported collaborative learning | 2008

The right tool for the wrong task? Match and mismatch between first and second stimulus in double stimulation

Andreas Lund; Ingvill Rasmussen

Using Vygotsky’s notion of double stimulation as an analytical tool, we discuss the complex relationship between tasks, tools, and agency in CSCL environments. Empirically we examine how learners in a Norwegian senior high school class learning English as a foreign language approach and respond to an open-ended and collectively oriented task using a wiki. Our findings show that collectively oriented knowledge and language production takes place locally in small groups as well as in the larger collective of the class, and that learners find it difficult to maintain awareness of both levels of activity. However, when facing a breakdown in the wiki application, learners sustained strategies that carried many of the characteristics of collective production. We argue that there is a need to further theorize the task-tool relationship in activities involving collective knowledge production and that we need to align pedagogical as well as technological designs in order to give support for such efforts.


Mind, Culture, and Activity | 2009

The Hedgehog and the Fox: A Discussion of the Approaches to the Analysis of ICT Reforms in Teacher Education of Larry Cuban and Yrjö Engeström

Ingvill Rasmussen

This article discusses how to analyze educational reforms in which information and communications technology (ICT) is used as a central catalyst to change practises. We explore the relationship between theoretical conceptualizations and empirical findings drawing on the work of Larry Cuban and Yrjö Engeström. We claim that reform research has traditionally been too preoccupied with looking for the intended changes. One problem with this “top-down” approach is that it conceals changes that happen at the microlevel. As a result, we are left with little understanding of how educational practises change in relation to ICT reform interventions at the interactional level. As an illustrative case, we draw on the analysis of a reform program that focused on the use of ICT in teacher education and show how this reform took place and examine what was interactionally accomplished across the institutions that took part.


Education and Information Technologies | 2018

Classroom dialogue and digital technologies: A scoping review

Louis Major; Paul Warwick; Ingvill Rasmussen; V. Cook

This article presents a systematic scoping review of the literature focusing on interactions between classroom dialogue and digital technology. The first review of its type in this area, it both maps extant research and, through a process of thematic synthesis, investigates the role of technology in supporting classroom dialogue. In total, 72 studies (published 2000–2016) are analysed to establish the characteristics of existing evidence and to identify themes. The central intention is to enable researchers and others to access an extensive base of studies, thematically analysed, when developing insights and interpretations in a rapidly changing field of study. The discussion illustrates the interconnectedness of key themes, placing the studies in a methodological and theoretical context and examining challenges for the future.


Archive | 2016

Microblogging as Partner(s) in Teacher-Student Dialogues

Ingvill Rasmussen

The questions raised in this chapter are based on an overall interest in exploring how computer tools can enhance existing and promote new forms of classroom dialogues. In everyday use, ‘dialogue’ means conversation – talking together – but theoretically, within sociocultural approaches to learning, dialogues have a much more profound and foundational meaning.


International Journal of Educational Research | 2003

The process of understanding the task: how is agency distributed between students, teachers and representations in technology-rich learning environments?

Ingvill Rasmussen; Ingeborg Krange


Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference | 2010

Tasks 2.0: Education Meets Social Computing and Mass Collaboration

Andreas Lund; Ingvill Rasmussen


Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy | 2012

Visualisation of Trajectories of Participation in a Wiki: A Basis for Feedback and Assessment?

Ingvill Rasmussen; Andreas Lund; Ole Smørdal


International Journal of Educational Research | 2015

Facilitating students’ individual and collective knowledge construction through microblogs

Ingvill Rasmussen; Åste Mjelve Hagen


Learning across sites. New tools, infrastructures and practices | 2010

Introduction. Learning across sites.

Roger Säljö; Ingvill Rasmussen; Andreas Lund


Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy | 2006

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Ingvill Rasmussen

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Louis Major

University of Cambridge

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Paul Warwick

University of Cambridge

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