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A review of empirical studies of affordances and development of a framework for educational adoption of mobile social media

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Abstract

As one of the most widely adopted mobile and social media applications, Tencent WeChat ® (‘WeChat’) has been increasingly used in education at all levels in Asia, and in China in particular. However, only a small number of studies have been conducted to explore educational affordances of WeChat. In this paper, these affordances are defined as opportunities for an educational activity that are determined and supported by perceived and actual features of a technology tool or an environment (Gibson in The ecological approach to visual perception, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1979; Norman in The psychology of everyday things, Basic Books, New York, 1988; Sanders in Ecol Psychol 9(1):97–112, 1997). The authors conducted a review of 21 studies out of a pool of 1984 identified publications on the topic to examine existing practices, empirical studies and recommendations for the uses of WeChat, and with the over-reaching aim of articulating a framework for the adoption of educational affordances of mobile social media. Such framework will serve practice as well as research on educational uses of mobile social media and help extend theory of affordances in this domain. A total of seven categories of educational affordances of WeChat were explicated and included in this framework: Resources Sharing, Authentic Learning, Collaboration, Community Building, Motivating Environment, Evaluation and Feedback, and Administration for Learning. Guidelines for the adoption of this framework are developed, and suggestions for future research are proposed.

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Appendices

Appendix 1: Overview of the 21 studies reviewed

Nr.

General information

Research method

Study

Countrya

Learning contextb

Subjectc

Method and data source

Sample size

Timeframe

1

Ding (2016)

CN

NF

EFL

Mixed-method (experimental, observation, document analysis)

342 students and 4 teachers

9 weeks

2

Gao and Wang (2017)

CN

FL

Engineering

Quantitative (quasi-experimental)

86

1 semester

3

Jin (2018)

CN

IF

CSL

Mixed-method (survey, interview, observation)

7

7 weeks

4

Li et al. (2016)

CN

IF

n/a

Quantitative (descriptive)

3690

3 years

5

Liu (2014)

CN

NF

ESP

Quantitative (descriptive)

1 class

n/a

6

Luo and Yang (2016)

US

FL

CSL

Mixed-method (survey, interview)

22

1 semester

7

Ma and Wu (2017)

CN

FL

Media

Qualitative (transcript analysis)

1 class

1 course

8

Qi and Wang (2018)

AU

IF

n/a

Qualitative (interview, reflection, transcript analysis)

5 teachers

1 year

9

Shang (2016)

CN

FL

EFL

Mixed-method (survey, interview)

60

1 course

10

Shen (2016)

CN

FL

EFL

Quantitative (quasi-experimental)

161

6 months

11

Shi and Luo (2016)

CN

FL

EFL

Quantitative (quasi-experimental)

60

1 semester

12

Shi et al. (2017)

CN

FL

EFL

Quantitative (quasi-experimental)

50

1 semester

13

Sung and Poole (2017)

US

NF

EFL and CSL

Mixed-method (survey, transcript analysis)

10

7 weeks

14

Tao et al. (2017)

CN

FL

EFL

Quantitative (quasi-experimental)

60

3 months

15

Wang (2017a)

US

IF

n/a

Qualitative (interview, transcript analysis)

36 students and 1 focal student

4 months

16

Wang (2017b)

US

IF

n/a

Qualitative (interview, observation, transcript analysis)

36 students and 1 focal student

4 months

17

Wang et al. (2016)

AU

NF

EFL and CSL

Qualitative (reflection, transcript analysis)

30 students and 3 teachers

1 semester

18

Wang et al. (2017)

CN

NF

Medical

Mixed-method (survey, interview)

n/a

2 semesters

19

Wang et al. (2018)

CN

FL

Medical

Quantitative (descriptive)

120

17 weeks

20

Xu and Peng (2017)

CN

NF

CSL

Mixed-method (survey, interview, transcript analysis)

13 students and 2 RA

12 weeks

21

Xu et al. (2017)

CN

NF

EFL

Mixed-method (survey, interview, reflection)

35 students and 2 teachers

12 weeks

  1. ‘n/a’ indicates that information was not available in the cited studies
  2. aCountry codes according to ISO: China (CN), United States of America (US), Australia (AU)
  3. bFormal Learning (FL), Non-Formal Learning (NF), Informal Learning (IF)
  4. cEnglish as a Foreign Language (EFL), Chinese as a Second Language (CSL)

Appendix 2: Summary of 21 studies reviewed

#

Study

Research questions

Uses of WeChat

Major findings

1

Ding (2016)

The impacts of problem-based learning practice on EFL students’ critical thinking disposition

The teacher used WeChat group to bridge in-class and out-of-class discussion to assist problem-based learning

Students’ critical thinking skills were significantly improved

2

Gao and Wang (2017)

Effectiveness of a digital mapping mobile teaching system

WeChat Official Account Admin Platform was utilized to build a mobile digital mapping teaching system

Students’ professional knowledge was enriched

Both learning interest and autonomous learning ability were enhanced

The cohesion of the class was strengthened

3

Jin (2018)

Language development affordances of WeChat for two university-level Chinese language learners in an intensive language program

WeChat group was used as an online community for CSL learners to communicate with native speakers of Chinese

Authentic meaning-focused communication was realized

Multimodal resources were generated and accessed via WeChat

A learning community was established

Learners created new identities through the use of WeChat

4

Li et al. (2016)

Developing a new mobile learning environment by integrating WeChat with Moodle

The researchers integrated WeChat with Moodle to develop a mobile learning environment

A growing number of students were willing to log in Moodle via WeChat for receiving notifications

5

Liu (2014)

Application of WeChat in ESP training

Voice messaging of WeChat was used for role-plays by student to practice English, and WeChat “Moments” were used for sharing viewpoints

Authentic communication environment was provided by WeChat for language training

Both students’ learning motivation and critical thinking were enhanced

6

Luo and Yang (2016)

The effectiveness of using WeChat in teaching Chinese language

Official WeChat account was created to assist classroom instruction in a language course

A supportive Chinese language learning community was established

Learner motivation was enhanced

Both linguistic gains and cultural learning were promoted

7

Ma and Wu (2017)

WeChat platform for team-based learning

Students selected WeChat public platforms to work in team for knowledge construction

Collaborative learning was facilitated through team-based learning

8

Qi and Wang (2018)

WeChat-based community of practice for teachers’ professional development

WeChat group was used as a community of practice for language teachers’ professional development

Rapport was built among the participating teachers

Collaboration was facilitated as they shared ideas, reflected issues and solved the problems cooperatively

WeChat was useful as a platform for teachers to develop professional competency

9

Shang (2016)

WeChat-based teaching resources pushing system for literature teaching

Wechat public account was employed as a platform for distance education

Teachers could use WeChat to share, release teaching and learning resources

Independent learning was developed in students

10

Shen (2016)

Effectiveness of a WeChat-based translation teaching model

WeChat was connected with different mobile and electronic devices to build a translation teaching model

Teachers could upload various translation materials through WeChat-based teaching model

11

Shi and Luo (2016)

Application of WeChat teaching platform in interactive translation teaching

The teachers used WeChat public account and open platform to interact with students for translation teaching

Both the engagement of students and their interaction with teachers were enhanced

The new teaching model extended teaching from the classroom to outside the classroom

12

Shi et al. (2017)

Using WeChat instant messaging for language learning

The students followed subscription account on WeChat, via which their learning was facilitated by the teachers

A virtual learning environment was established

A strong sense of confidence was nurtured in the students

13

Sung and Poole (2017)

Usefulness of WeChat for tandem language learning

Voice messaging, text messaging and camera of WeChat were used for different tasks in tandem language learning

A learning community was built for authentic written and oral communication

Both language gains and cultural learning were promoted

14

Tao et al. (2017)

Using WeChat platform for English reading teaching

Public platform of WeChat was deployed for English reading teaching

Students’ reading scope was enlarged as a wide range of reading materials were provided via WeChat

Learner motivation was promoted

15

Wang (2017a)

How students construct transnational identities and social networks

WeChat groups were created as study groups to support literacy learning

A learning community was established for coaching and tutorial.

Social connection among learners was strengthened.

16

Wang (2017b)

How spatial practices students perform on WeChat relate to literacy learning

WeChat group was used as a digital study group

A learning community was established where questions arising from the classroom were taken up

Information for administrative purposes was shared, such as due dates and assignments

Identity was formed in the group leader

17

Wang et al. (2016)

How WeChat facilitate teaching, cognitive and social presence in semi-synchronous language exchange

WeChat group served as a community of inquiry for language exchange

WeChat contributed to effective negotiation of meaning and learning outcomes

Teacher involvement was enhanced as they interacted with learners in the chat groups

18

Wang et al. (2017)

WeChat as an instant interactive platform for teaching–learning communication

WeChat official account was used for pushing notifications

Collaborative learning was facilitated as students worked cooperatively on assignments

Notifications for administration were pushed, such as reminders of course schedule

19

Wang et al. (2018)

Examining the attitudes of students towards the case studies based on mobile messaging

Group chats on WeChat were used for group discussion of medical cases

Students collaboratively worked on cases for diagnoses

Learner motivation was enhanced

20

Xu and Peng (2017)

Investigating mobile-assisted oral feedback in teaching Chinese as a second language

A class group was established on WeChat for oral feedback provision in language learning

Positive attitudes in learners were revealed towards the use of WeChat and mobile-assisted feedback

21

Xu et al. (2017)

EFL learners’ perceptions of mobile-assisted feedback for oral production

Learners used voice messaging to record oral tasks and sent recordings to WeChat groups for feedback

Feedback provision using WeChat enabled EFL learners to engage more actively in learning activities outside classroom

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Xue, S., Churchill, D. A review of empirical studies of affordances and development of a framework for educational adoption of mobile social media. Education Tech Research Dev 67, 1231–1257 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11423-019-09679-y

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