Abstract
Most social challenges fall outside of the authority of any single individual and therefore require collective action—coordinated efforts by many stakeholders to implement solutions. Despite growing interest in teaching students to lead collective action, we lack models for how to teach these skills. Collective action ostensibly involves design: the act of planning to change existing situations into preferred ones. In other domains, instructors commonly scaffold design using an instructional model known as studio critique in which students strengthen their plans by exchanging arguments with peers and instructors. This study explores whether studio critique can serve as the basis for an effective instructional model in collective action. Using design-based research methods, we designed and implemented scoping deliberations, a new instructional model that augments studio critique with domain-specific templates for planning collective action and repeats weekly to enable iterations. We used process tracing to analyze data from field notes, video, and artifacts to evaluate causal explanations for events observed in this case study. By implementing scoping deliberations in a 10-week undergraduate course, we found that this model appeared effective at scaffolding engagement in planning collective action: students articulated and refined their plans by engaging in argumentation and iteration, as expected. However, students struggled to contact the community stakeholders with whom they planned to work. As a result, their plans rested on implausible, untested assertions. These findings advance instructional science by showing that collective action may require new instructional models that help students to test their assertions against feedback from community stakeholders. Practically, scoping deliberations appear most useful for scaffolding thoughtful planning in conditions when students are already collaborating with stakeholders.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1005-1041 |
Number of pages | 37 |
Journal | Instructional Science |
Volume | 51 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Dec 2023 |
Funding
We thank Daniel Rees Lewis, Brian Reiser, Beth Noveck, Evey Huang, Gustavo Umbelino, and Delta Lab for their feedback on earlier versions of this article. This work is supported by US National Science Foundation Grant No. IIS- 2008450. An earlier and less developed report of this study was published as a short paper in the proceedings of the International Conference of Learning Sciences in 2020. This work is supported by U.S. National Science Foundation Grant No. IIS-2008450. We thank Daniel Rees Lewis, Brian Reiser, Beth Noveck, Evey Huang, Gustavo Umbelino, and Delta Lab for their feedback on earlier versions of this article. This work is supported by US National Science Foundation Grant No. IIS- 2008450. An earlier and less developed report of this study was published as a short paper in the proceedings of the International Conference of Learning Sciences in 2020.
Keywords
- Civics
- Collective action
- Design
- Scaffolding
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Education
- Developmental and Educational Psychology