“…Building more coherence among a student's funds of knowledge across contexts can support the development of that student's learning, identity, and creativity (Honey & Kanter, 2013;Kumpulainen, 2017;Rajala et al, 2016). An example of such efforts to build coherence is studies that have incorporated new online spaces and digital tools to support meaningmaking where children and young people's informal and formal identities, interests, and discourses can intersect (Erstad, 2014;Kumpulainen & Mikkola, 2014;Lantz-Andersson, Vigmo, & Bowen, 2013;Vasbø, Silseth, & Erstad, 2014;Vigmo & Lantz-Andersson, 2014). In addition, fostering robust disciplinary learning has motivated the development of pedagogical approaches to connect student learning across contexts in science (Engle, 2006;Scott, Mortimer, & Ametller, 2011), language (Dyson, 1993;Wiseman, 2011;Wong, Chin, Tan, & Liu, 2010), and mathematics (Cribbs & Linder, 2013)…”