Using Video-Diaries in Educational Research Exploring Identity: Affordances and Constraints

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Abstract

To use video in educational research has become more and more common in the last few decades, including methodologies where informants themselves use video-cameras for documentation. The purpose of the article is to discuss affordances and constraints of using video-diaries as a data generation method for investigating students’ identity constitution. Video-diaries were recorded as part of a larger project, where the empirical data also included observations and videorecordings of teaching and semi-structured interviews. The noninterference of the researchers during the video-diaries was found to be both a strength, in that students more freely could tell their own stories, and a weakness, in that it put high demands on the students’ ability to express themselves in monologue format. An important affordance of the video-diaries was that they contributed to a “thick” data set, both in that they informed our individual, semi-structured interviews and allowed us to quickly move on to in-depth conversations, and in that the students were able to utilize artifacts and show environments of importance to them.

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APA

Danielsson, A. T., & Berge, M. (2020). Using Video-Diaries in Educational Research Exploring Identity: Affordances and Constraints. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 19. https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920973541

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