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 | Laptops and learning spaces: online, offline and in betweenCheryl Brown, Nicola Pallitt, Centre for Innovation in Learning and Teaching (CILT),  University of Cape Town. Researchers in the field of networked learning have recently sought to   understand the sociomaterial practices involved in networked learning (McConnell   et al., 2012). This paper investigates the sociomaterial influence of laptops as   students traverse a variety of learning spaces and considers the role of these   devices in changing learning. Current conceptions of learning spaces in Higher   Education prioritise physical ‘places’ such as libraries and lecture theatres.   The mobility of laptops and related technologies challenge this perception. This   paper brings together some central ideas for understanding learning spaces   (Boys, 2011; Temple, 2011; Savin-Baden, 2008) and positions these in relation to   networked learning. We consider the interrelationship between physical learning   places and immaterial, technologically mediated spaces. The paper reports on   data from a one-to-one laptop pilot at the University of Cape Town, South   Africa. While the initial project was conceptualised as an evaluation of   students' laptop use in four courses, the pilot evolved according to the needs   of the project and became more akin to participatory action research over time.   We consider dynamics related to networked learning in a resource constrained   higher education environment, where personal computer access and internet   connectivity is not the norm. In our context, many students rely on mobile   phones as their primary means of internet access off campus (Czerniewicz,   Williams & Brown, 2009). Students’ laptop use suggests that learning spaces   cross boundaries between formal and informal learning, include a range of   physical settings, and involve learning both online, offline and in between. Our   analytic focus has shifted from separate contexts or bounded spaces to a   continua of activities across domains. This paper contributes to previous   research on reconceptualising learning space in networked learning (Smith, 2012)   and concurs with Ryberg & Larsen (2008) that we are seeing increased   opportunities for individualised as well as connected learning. As a mobile   device, the laptop facilitates interactions, challenges traditional learning   spaces and influences educational practice. We argue that the notion of learning   spaces allows researchers to attend to the nuances of teaching and learning   interactions with technologies in a variety of physical places. In relation to   laptop use at university, networked learning involves the orchestration and   personal management of learning spaces online, offline and in between which   depends on students' discipline-specific needs. Keywords 
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