Turkey. Her research interests are information and communications technology in education and philosophy of educational technology. Vivien Hodgson is professor of networked management learning at Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK. Her research interests are in networked learning, the learner's experience of learning and the design of learning opportunities from a critical pedagogy and constructionist perspective. Her interests include how theoretical debates that exist, together with changes and advances in information and communications technology impact on pedagogical practices and the nature, design, and experience of learning.
AbstractIn this paper, we argue that in order to get a fuller understanding of the complexity of conflict in democratic pedagogies in online and blended learning settings, it is important to know not only how to manage or resolve it, but also how it is triggered and can be avoided. The emancipatory nature of democratic pedagogies fosters differences, and differences provide the basis for the emergence of conflict among learning community members. Much has been written on certain aspects of conflict, such as conflict management or effects of conflict; however, these studies are frequently disparate and fragmented. Conflict has a cyclical dynamic and the main purpose of this study has been to experimentally build an analytical model of this cyclical dynamic of conflict, drawing on both literature and research data. We believe that such a model might empower practitioners and designers of democratic pedagogies to embrace and work with the differences that lead to conflict, as a way to support collaborative learning and action. The model of conflict which emerged at the end of the study is supported by illustrative qualitative evidence and constituted in a diagrammatic depiction of analytic themes that illustrate the connections between these themes, and the values ascribed to them. The outcomes of this study have implications for developing learning strategies for distance and blended learners.