Koh to discuss youth maker learning at AERA Annual Meeting

Kyungwon Koh
Kyungwon Koh, Associate Professor and Director of the Champaign-Urbana (CU) Community Fab Lab

Associate Professor Kyungwon Koh and her collaborators from the University of Oklahoma and Norman Public Schools will present their research at the 2019 American Educational Research Association (AERA) Annual Meeting, which will be held on April 5-9 in Toronto, Canada. The theme of this year's meeting is "Leveraging Education Research in a Post-Truth Era: Multimodal Narratives to Democratize Evidence."

In their talk, "Bounded Autonomy: Students' Maker Learning Experiences in Public High School English Inquiry Units," Koh will discuss a case study that explored high school students' maker learning experiences in their school's inquiry-based maker units. The maker learning approach assumes that people learn as they make and share hands-on projects that are personally meaningful and potentially contribute to the community. For their study, they used multiple data sources, such as interviews, participant observation, and artifact analysis. 

"The results revealed tensions between fostering student autonomy in learner-centered, interest-based learning and constraints within the school curriculum and the structure of the inquiry units, as well as students' abilities to direct their own learning," Koh said. "Educators' scaffolding (in which teachers model or demonstrate how to solve a problem and then step back, offering support as needed) played a significant role in helping students overcome challenges and pushing them out of their comfort zone."

At the conclusion of the study, Koh and her team proposed a concept of bounded autonomy, in which students exercise ownership, choices, and control over their learning within contextual structures or constraints, as a useful concept to bridge interest-based learning and standards-based learning.

Koh's areas of expertise include digital youth, the maker movement, learning and community engagement through libraries, human information behavior, and competencies for information professionals. She is currently a co-chair of the ALISE Youth Services SIG. Koh earned her MS and PhD in library and information studies from Florida State University and BS in library and information science from Yonsei University in South Korea.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Knox recognized for public engagement

Associate Professor Emily Knox has been selected as the recipient of the Campus Excellence in Public Engagement Emerging Award. She will be honored on May 28 at a special event hosted by the Office of Public Engagement. 

Emily Knox

Schneider selected as 2024-2025 Harvard Radcliffe Institute Fellow

Associate Professor Jodi Schneider has been selected as a 2024-2025 fellow of the Harvard Radcliffe Institute, an institute of Harvard University that fosters interdisciplinary research across the humanities, sciences, social sciences, arts, and professions.

Jodi Schneider

iSchool researchers to present at ACM Web Conference

Members of Associate Professor Dong Wang's research group, the Social Sensing and Intelligence Lab, will present their research at the Web Conference 2024, which will be held from May 13-17 in Singapore. The Web Conference is the premier venue to present and discuss progress in research, development, standards, and applications of topics related to the Web.

iSchool researchers to present at CHI 2024

iSchool faculty and students will present their research at the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2024), which will be held from May 11-16 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The conference, considered the most prestigious in the field of Human-Computer Interaction, attracts researchers and practitioners from around the globe. The theme for CHI 2024 is "Surfing the World."

CHI 2024

iSchool researchers present at inaugural ASIS&T symposium

iSchool researchers will present their work at the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T) Midwest Chapter Spring Symposium on April 26. The inaugural symposium will include talks by seventeen researchers from ten institutions across the Midwest region.