Co-designing Data-Driven Educational Technology and Practice: Reflections from the Japanese Context

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Abstract

This paper explores co-design in Japanese education for deploying data-driven educational technology and practice. Although there is a growing emphasis on data to inform educational decision-making and personalize learning experiences, challenges such as data interoperability and inconsistency with teaching goals prevent practitioners from participating. Co-design, characterized by involving various stakeholders, is instrumental in addressing the evolving needs of technology deployment. Japan's educational context aligns with co-design implementation, with a learning and evidence analytics infrastructure facilitating data collection and analysis. From the Japanese co-design practice of educational technologies, the paper highlights a 6-phase co-design framework: motivate, pilot, implement, refine, evaluate, and maintain. The practices focus on data-driven learning strategies, technology interventions, and across-context dashboards, covering assorted learning contexts in Japan. By advocating for a co-design culture and data-driven approaches to enhance education in Japan, we offer insights for education practitioners, policymakers, researchers, and industry developers.

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Ogata, H., Liang, C., Toyokawa, Y., Hsu, C. Y., Nakamura, K., Yamauchi, T., … Majumdar, R. (2024). Co-designing Data-Driven Educational Technology and Practice: Reflections from the Japanese Context. Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 29(4), 1711–1732. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10758-024-09759-w

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