This articlereportson a qualitativemultiplecase studythatexplored the academicdiscoursesocializationexperiencesof L2 learnersin a
Canadian Groundedin thenotionof of university. "community prac-
tice"(Lave&Wenger1,991,p.89),thestudyexaminedhowL2learners
negotiatedtheirparticipationand membershipin theirnewL2 class-
roomcommunities, in classdiscussionsT.he particularly open-ended
included6female studentfsrom and10of participants graduate Japan
theircourseinstructorSst.udent interviewasn,dclassroom self-reports,
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ofthestudents' abouttheir in-depthl,ongitudinaalnalysis perspectives
classparticipationacrossthecurriculumT.hreecase studiesillustrate
thatstudentsfaced a major challengein negotiatingcompetence,
identities,and power relations,which was necessaryfor them to
and be as and membersof participate recognized legitimate competent
theirclassroomcommunitiesT.he studentsalso attemptedto shape
theirown learningand participationby exercisingtheirpersonal
and their whichwere agency activelynegotiating positionalities, locally
constructedin a classroom. forclassroom
given Implications practices
and futureresearchare also discussed.
In this paper I identify some current elaborations on the theme of participation and digital literacy in order to open further debate on the relationship between interaction, collaboration and learning in online environments. Motivated by an interest in using new technologies in the context of formal learning (Merchant, 2009), I draw on in-school and out-of-school work in Web 2.0 spaces. This work is inflected by the new literacies approach (Lankshear & Knobel, 2006a). Here I provide an overview of the ways in which learning through participation is characterised by those adopting this and other related perspectives. I include a critical examination of the idea of “participatory” culture as articulated in the field of media studies, focusing particularly on the influential work of Jenkins (2006a; 2006b). In order to draw these threads together around conceptualizations of learning, I summarise ways in which participation is described in the literature on socially-situated cognition. This is used to generate some tentative suggestions about how learning and literacy in Web 2.0 spaces might be envisioned and how ideas about participation might inform curriculum planning and design.
Stronger participation is a step towards sustainable corporate governance in the economic, social and ecological dimension, which in itself is a step towards a sustainable company. The ETUC reiterates its call for a strengthening and broader scope of the information and consultation procedures, in particular by a revision of the general framework directive, but also of the participation rights in the Member States where such rights exist.
What kind of message are we sending about the viability these democratic ideals—about openness, transparency, public participation, public collaboration? How hollow must American exhortations to democracy sound to foreign ears? Mr Snowden may be responsible for having exposed this hypocrisy, for having betrayed the thug omertà at the heart of America’s domestic democracy-suppression programme, but the hypocrisy is America’s.
C. Dienel. Local Governance - Mehr Transparenz und Bürgernähe?, volume 24 of Bürgergesellschaft und Demokratie, VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden, 1. Aufl edition, (2007)
P. Ellerani, and M. Mendoza. Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, 83 (0):
659 - 666(2013)2nd World Conference on Educational Technology Research.