Thorne2021

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Thorne2021
BibType ARTICLE
Key Thorne2021
Author(s) Steven L. Thorne, John Hellermann, Teppo Jakonen
Title Rewilding Language Education: Emergent Assemblages and Entangled Actions
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, place-based learning, rewilding, conversation analysis, sociomaterialism, embodiment, mobile augmented reality
Publisher
Year 2021
Language English
City
Month
Journal The Modern Language Journal
Volume 105
Number S1
Pages 106-125
URL Link
DOI 10.1111/modl.12687
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Integrating concepts and techniques from ethnomethodology and sociomaterialism, this article investigates the observable material processes involving human action and place-based contexts of language use enabled by locative media. The focal pedagogical intervention utilized mobile augmented reality (AR) activities, the development of which was inspired by research on learning ‘in the wild.’ Applying the principle of reverse engineering, we introduce a pedagogical approach termed ‘rewilding’ for its emphasis on designing supportive conditions for goal-directed interaction outside of classrooms. Three instances of AR materials use are presented from an out-of-class activity associated with university-level language courses involving a quest-type AR game called ChronoOps. Video data of 3-player groups were transcribed using conventions from multimodal conversation analysis. The empirical investigation illustrates meaning making through visible embodied displays, the performance of new actions through incorporation of public semiotic resources, and the contributions of the material surround as actants in the flow of interaction. Analysis illustrates that mobile AR activities enable languaging events among assemblages of environments, mobile devices, and embodied experience. We conclude by outlining the affordances of mobile AR activities as one example of rewilding approaches to creating material conditions for language use and learning.

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