We explore the dynamic relationship between technology and learning – across formal, informal, and professional education contexts throughout the lifespan.
Our research interrogates the new ways in which technologies enhance learning, and the changing learning needs of a digital society.
The Centre for Research on Education in a Digital Society works with stakeholders across learning contexts, in taking sociocultural and human-centred approaches to understanding technology in practice. We focus on the dynamic relationship between technology and learning, reflecting that how we learn (with technology) is fundamentally intertwined with what we learn (about technology).
Find out more about who we are, what we do, and how to connect at our external website
CREDS external siteTechnology permeates both what we learn, and how we learn.
Let me give you an example. In healthcare, colleagues at UTS have been investigating
how we can use sensor technologies and data analytics to support trainee nurse's teamwork
by providing real-time feedback on where they are and who they're working with. In parallel,
in the TRACK project we are using job analytics to understand the shifting skills changes
and showing in that healthcare contexts we are seeing increasing uses of many
of the same technologies to understand how to support patients, for example,
an emerging area of 'health informatics' which combines data and nursing skills.
Similarly, across learning contexts from schools and universities, to museums and online learning
communities, technology has implications for how we learn. For example, UTS researchers have
investigated how teachers learn from each other using informal communities like those on Facebook.
And again, centre researchers have investigated key issues such as
what teachers need to learn to use mobile devices effectively in their practice.
We want to understand how we can learn with technology effectively, how it is changing
learning needs across contexts, and the pros and cons - innovations and ethical quandaries,
new methods and challenges - that are involved in that. And we want to work with people who care
about learning to do that. Find out more about staying in touch, and who we are on our website.
We focus on the dynamic relationship between technology and learning.
UTS acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the Boorooberongal people of the Dharug Nation, the Bidiagal people and the Gamaygal people, upon whose ancestral lands our university stands. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands.