Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies
Volume
9
Issue
4
Publisher
IEEE
Publication Date
10-2016
First Page
354
Last Page
365
Abstract
Wearable activity tracking devices associated with the Quantified Self movement have potential benefit for educational settings because they produce authentic and granular data about activities and experiences already familiar to youth. This article explores how that potential could be realized through explicit acknowledgment of and response to tacit design assumptions about how such technologies will be used in practice and strategic design for use in a classroom. We argue that particular practical adaptations that we have identified serve to ensure that the classroom and educational use cases are appropriately considered. As an example of how those adaptations are realized in actual elementary classrooms, we describe an effort to provide fifth-grade students each with their own Fitbit activity trackers in the context of a multi-week unit exploring core ideas in elementary statistics. Observational descriptions and transcript excerpts of students and teachers discussing their own Fitbit data are presented to illustrate what opportunities exist to leverage youth familiarity with daily activities in a way that targets development of statistical thinking. Quantitative written test results showing learning gains and differences between traditional and wearable device-enhanced instruction are also presented. Improvement on several statistical thinking constructs is identified, including in the areas of data display, conceptions of statistics, modeling variability, and informal inference.
Recommended Citation
Lee, Victor R.; Drake, Joel R.; and Thayne, Jeffrey L., "Appropriating Quantified Self Technologies to Support Elementary Statistical Teaching and Learning" (2016). Instructional Technology and Learning Sciences Faculty Publications. Paper 622.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/itls_facpub/622
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