‘Partly self-made niches’? Student-only spaces in an LMS
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posted on 2024-01-09, 13:47authored byJohn Pettit
Eighty-nine students were provided with a student-only live-voice space in a Learning
Management System (LMS). Would they use it and, if so, would they feel sufficient
ownership to create what Havnes (2008) described as “partly self-made niches”? In this
study, a substantial proportion of respondents reported that they used the space not only for
social support but also for key aspects of peer-learning. They reported that these studentonly
sessions gave them freedom to explore module-topics in new ways, and to share
professional practice. Some disliked the lack of structure, but many valued the freedom to
vary the focus and pace of their sessions. Several interviewees reported setting up sessions
at short notice – for example, via Twitter – to meet their immediate concerns and
requirements. A number of respondents valued these sessions as distinctive from, and
complementary to, their tutorials in the same live-voice environment. The paper links these
findings to debates about whether peer-learning should be explicitly organised, and about
how education can disrupt itself as advocated by Bass (2012).