This paper aims to identify Distance Learning adaptation profiles of a sample of Italian secondary school students, placing attention on the factors connected with a decline in school performance, digital inequalities, cognitiveemotional distress, forms of exclusion. DL increases the risk of distraction/ interruption and affects academic performance; it has a negative impact on interactions between peers and with teachers by and large, causing a considerable number of interviewees to feel “deprived of quality relationships”. The profiles that emerged highlight the existence of forms of inequality that are known to predate the pandemic. The problem of access to the Internet/technology and the issue of inadequate domestic space exacerbate every other criticality identified. The data, however, allow for observations that go beyond an interpretation built exclusively around the digital divide. DL, even when delivered at optimal levels in terms of connectivity and educators’ digital competence, has jeopardized the regular execution of social processuality, a veritable belt drive of curricular knowledge. In the wake of technological advancement, accelerated by the pandemic, therefore lies the hope for wider experimentation with digital classrooms using VR technology, hinged on multidisciplinary dialogue and aimed at translating the digital from a form of technological virtuosity, to a credible and ethically grounded response.
Italian Secondary School Students and the Distance Learning Experience: From Current Critical Issues to Future Opportunities, Reflecting on VR / Fasanella, A.; Faggiano, M. P.. - 14:3(2022), pp. 17-44. [10.14658/PUPJ-IJSE-2022-3-2]
Italian Secondary School Students and the Distance Learning Experience: From Current Critical Issues to Future Opportunities, Reflecting on VR
Fasanella A.;Faggiano M. P.
2022
Abstract
This paper aims to identify Distance Learning adaptation profiles of a sample of Italian secondary school students, placing attention on the factors connected with a decline in school performance, digital inequalities, cognitiveemotional distress, forms of exclusion. DL increases the risk of distraction/ interruption and affects academic performance; it has a negative impact on interactions between peers and with teachers by and large, causing a considerable number of interviewees to feel “deprived of quality relationships”. The profiles that emerged highlight the existence of forms of inequality that are known to predate the pandemic. The problem of access to the Internet/technology and the issue of inadequate domestic space exacerbate every other criticality identified. The data, however, allow for observations that go beyond an interpretation built exclusively around the digital divide. DL, even when delivered at optimal levels in terms of connectivity and educators’ digital competence, has jeopardized the regular execution of social processuality, a veritable belt drive of curricular knowledge. In the wake of technological advancement, accelerated by the pandemic, therefore lies the hope for wider experimentation with digital classrooms using VR technology, hinged on multidisciplinary dialogue and aimed at translating the digital from a form of technological virtuosity, to a credible and ethically grounded response.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.