Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students

Digital technology is used extensively in the Australian tertiary education sector to facilitate learning and teaching. While technology enabled learning systems have received considerable academic attention, the impact of such technologies on learning performance has been sporadic. Some key disadva...

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Main Authors: Rabbanee, Fazlul, Quaddus, M., Gururajan, Raj, Abawi, Lindy, Dickinson, Sonia
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2019
Online Access:https://litec.curtin.edu.au/events/conferences/tlf/tlf2019/contents-all.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80247
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author Rabbanee, Fazlul
Quaddus, M.
Gururajan, Raj
Abawi, Lindy
Dickinson, Sonia
author_facet Rabbanee, Fazlul
Quaddus, M.
Gururajan, Raj
Abawi, Lindy
Dickinson, Sonia
author_sort Rabbanee, Fazlul
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Digital technology is used extensively in the Australian tertiary education sector to facilitate learning and teaching. While technology enabled learning systems have received considerable academic attention, the impact of such technologies on learning performance has been sporadic. Some key disadvantages of using technology have been found to be: feelings of disconnection; a tendency toward procrastination; and technology-use anxiety. These not only affect students’ learning performance adversely but also raise a fundamental question regarding tertiary-level student resilience when using digital technology in the education system. Existing research is largely silent about students’ digital resilience. This research draws on the theory of social-ecological resilience (Folke, 2006 ) and conceptualizes digital resilience of tertiary-level students in terms of its definition, drivers, and consequences. Guided by a qualitative approach, twenty one in-depth interviews were conducted using a semi-structured interview schedule. The respondents were recruited from Curtin University student volunteers (undergraduate and post graduate students as well as local and international students) based on whether they had previously enrolled in a technology enabled flipped class. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Transcripts were analysed thematically using deductive coding. Based on the findings, we define digital resilience as an individual student’s psychological capacity to remain functional by absorbing, recovering from, adapting to and learning from adversities stemming from the use of digital technology in the tertiary educational context. The findings reveal several factors influencing digital resilience that can be grouped into three broad categories: (i) individual (e.g., self-motivation towards study), (ii) social (e.g., peer influence), and (iii) institutional (e.g., university support systems) factors. It has also been found that digital resilience helps students achieve positive learning outcomes. Thus the study extends the theory of social-ecological resilience in the digital technology context and offers practical implications for tertiary education managers.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-802472021-03-02T04:01:53Z Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students Rabbanee, Fazlul Quaddus, M. Gururajan, Raj Abawi, Lindy Dickinson, Sonia Digital technology is used extensively in the Australian tertiary education sector to facilitate learning and teaching. While technology enabled learning systems have received considerable academic attention, the impact of such technologies on learning performance has been sporadic. Some key disadvantages of using technology have been found to be: feelings of disconnection; a tendency toward procrastination; and technology-use anxiety. These not only affect students’ learning performance adversely but also raise a fundamental question regarding tertiary-level student resilience when using digital technology in the education system. Existing research is largely silent about students’ digital resilience. This research draws on the theory of social-ecological resilience (Folke, 2006 ) and conceptualizes digital resilience of tertiary-level students in terms of its definition, drivers, and consequences. Guided by a qualitative approach, twenty one in-depth interviews were conducted using a semi-structured interview schedule. The respondents were recruited from Curtin University student volunteers (undergraduate and post graduate students as well as local and international students) based on whether they had previously enrolled in a technology enabled flipped class. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Transcripts were analysed thematically using deductive coding. Based on the findings, we define digital resilience as an individual student’s psychological capacity to remain functional by absorbing, recovering from, adapting to and learning from adversities stemming from the use of digital technology in the tertiary educational context. The findings reveal several factors influencing digital resilience that can be grouped into three broad categories: (i) individual (e.g., self-motivation towards study), (ii) social (e.g., peer influence), and (iii) institutional (e.g., university support systems) factors. It has also been found that digital resilience helps students achieve positive learning outcomes. Thus the study extends the theory of social-ecological resilience in the digital technology context and offers practical implications for tertiary education managers. 2019 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80247 https://litec.curtin.edu.au/events/conferences/tlf/tlf2019/contents-all.html restricted
spellingShingle Rabbanee, Fazlul
Quaddus, M.
Gururajan, Raj
Abawi, Lindy
Dickinson, Sonia
Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title_full Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title_fullStr Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title_short Conceptualising Digital Resilience of Australian Tertiary-level Students
title_sort conceptualising digital resilience of australian tertiary-level students
url https://litec.curtin.edu.au/events/conferences/tlf/tlf2019/contents-all.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80247