Evans Jabari M
School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of South Carolina, 800 Sumter Street, Room 328, 29201 Columbia, SC USA.
Qual Sociol. 2022;45(3):393-411. doi: 10.1007/s11133-022-09514-6. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
Using the Connected Learning framework as a conceptual lens, this study utilizes digital ethnographic methods to explore outcomes of a Hip-Hop Based Education program developed to provide music related career pathways for Chicago youth. Using the narratives of the participants within the program, I draw on participant observation online and in-depth interviews collected to explore the link between the tenets of Connected Learning and digital participation in this artistic community of practice. I explore participants' work within social media platforms toward building their creative skill, cultivating a public voice, connecting to mentors, and communicating in ways that strengthens the social bonds within their peer community. This study's findings affirm prior studies that suggest late adolescence is an important time frame where children are developing social identities online in affinity spaces but in ways that are tied to civic engagement, self-empowerment, and critical skill development for their future pathways. To conclude, I suggest that investigating participant activity on social media platforms as a part of field work can help ethnographers to better connect their impact to the agency and life trajectories of their youth participants.
本研究以关联学习框架为概念视角,运用数字民族志方法,探索一个以嘻哈为基础的教育项目的成果。该项目旨在为芝加哥青少年提供与音乐相关的职业道路。通过该项目参与者的叙述,我利用在线参与观察和收集的深度访谈,来探索关联学习原则与在这个艺术实践社区中的数字参与之间的联系。我探讨了参与者在社交媒体平台上为培养他们的创作技能、树立公众声音、与导师建立联系以及以加强其同龄人群体社会纽带的方式进行交流所做的工作。本研究的结果证实了先前的研究,这些研究表明青春期后期是一个重要的时间段,在此期间孩子们在亲和空间中在线发展社会身份,但方式与公民参与、自我赋权以及为其未来道路发展关键技能相关联。最后,我建议将调查社交媒体平台上的参与者活动作为田野工作的一部分,这有助于民族志学者更好地将他们的影响与青年参与者的能动性和生活轨迹联系起来。