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Journal of the Learning Sciences

ISSN: 1050-8406 (Print) 1532-7809 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/hlns20

Outgoing Editors’ Note: The Journal of the Learning Sciences as a Mirror of Trends in the Field Josh Radinsky & Iris Tabak To cite this article: Josh Radinsky & Iris Tabak (2016): Outgoing Editors’ Note: The Journal of the Learning Sciences as a Mirror of Trends in the Field, Journal of the Learning Sciences, DOI: 10.1080/10508406.2017.1260414 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10508406.2017.1260414

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Date: 28 November 2016, At: 07:13

EDITORS’ NOTE

Outgoing Editors’ Note: The Journal of the Learning Sciences as a Mirror of Trends in the Field

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It has been our distinct honor to serve as Co-Editors in Chief of JLS, and we thank the ISLS Board for entrusting us with this important service to the learning sciences

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community. In addition to four years on the masthead, we were lucky to have the chance

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to apprentice beside Yasmin Kafai and Cindy Hmelo-Silver, and to continue to work closely with our successors, Jan van Aalst and Susan Yoon, as they transition into the

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role. Brian Slattery and Jessica Roberts faced the ebb and flow of manuscripts, emails and production details with skill and graciousness, and we appreciate their contributions.

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We are also grateful to the editorial and production team of our publisher, Taylor & Francis. It has been a privilege to witness the dedication of the JLS team of Associate

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Editors, who engage each manuscript with respect, and strive to compose decisions that are exacting, fair and generative. We thank the Associate Editors we have worked with

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over these five years, with a recognition here to those whose terms are ending along with our own: Kai Hakkarainen, Chee Kit Looi, Chris Quintana and Nikol Rummel. JLS celebrates 25 years as a central venue for scholarship in the learning sciences. The

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impact and success of a journal derives from the manuscripts that it publishes. We have been fortunate to receive record numbers of submissions, from across the globe, and to have the opportunity to publish a corpus of articles that reflect core commitments of the learning sciences, while expanding the contexts, methodologies and theoretical perspectives that the field employs. We extend our gratitude and appreciation to the scholars who have published in the journal.

The evolution of the journal in many ways documents the evolution of the field. JLS two years ago transitioned from single-blind to double-blind review, reflecting not so much a change in philosophy at the journal as a recognition of the growth of the community. A year later we introduced the annual Reviewer of the Year recognition, as a way to

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acknowledge the anonymous service that has shaped the high standard of JLS

publications. We have been pleased to note the ongoing trend toward increasing

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internationalization of the journal on multiple fronts. As JLS transitions to its second

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international team of Editors-in-Chief, it also celebrates an international team of

Associate Editors, Editorial Board, and pool of reviewers. Manuscripts in the past year

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were submitted to JLS from 38 different countries – more than in any previous year. This internationalization of the journal reflects the increasing internationalization of the

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learning sciences, and speaks to the vibrant state of the field.

Other trends in the field stand out from recent years of JLS publications. The journal

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continues to be home to impactful conversations about research methods, as it has been

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since the publication of Ann Brown’s seminal “Design experiments” paper 25 years ago (Brown, 1992). The special issue on learning analytics, 22(4), marked an important moment in the adoption of data mining methods in the field (Martin & Sherin, 2013), and has been followed up by other analyses exploring the use of these methods for the study

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of learning (Blikstein et al., 2014; Martin et al., 2015; Roll, Baker, Aleven, & Koedinger, 2014). Hammer & Berland’s (2014) reflection on “confusing claims for data” provided valuable cautions for the quantitative analysis of qualitative discourse codes.

Contributions to the design-based research methods (DBR) have continued unabated, including Sandoval’s (2013) conjecture mapping approach; Penuel, Confrey, Maloney &

Rupp’s (2014) focus on design deliberations; O’Neill’s distinction between designing for the future and designing the future (2016); and Bielaczyk’s (2013) longitudinal study of the uptake of a design experiment. These contributions to DBR culminate in the special issue on CHAT-DBR in 25(4) (Penuel, Cole, & O’Neill, 2016). This issue offered a full

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rethinking of design-based research methods, returning to Vygotsky, Bronfenbrenner,

Davydov and others to review historical roots and unnoticed “branches,” and inviting the

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JLS community to delve into the ways cultural historical activity theory has developed

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sometimes-parallel, sometimes-challenging variations on similar themes of the potential roles of design in research on learning.

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Methodological contributions have gone hand in hand with theoretical ones. Core learning processes have been theorized in novel ways, such as conceptual change (e.g., in

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terms of catastrophe theory, Roth, 2014); knowledge construction (e.g., via a systemicconstructivist framework, Oeberst, Halatchliyski, Kimmerle, & Cress, 2014); complex

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systems learning (e.g., through the lens of activity theory, Danish, 2014); and the theory-

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practice gap (e.g., in terms of principled practical knowledge, Bereiter, 2014). Studies of learning across multiple levels of analysis have included Langer-Osuna’s (2015) study of identity processes across microgenetic, ontogenetic and sociogenetic levels; Akkerman & Bruining’s (2016) study of boundary crossing at intrapersonal, interpersonal and

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institutional levels; and Jurow & Shea’s (2015) study of scale-making projects at individual and sociogenetic levels. The retirement of the Learning Outside of School strand at JLS corresponds with an increasing diversity of contexts in which learning scientists study learning – such that “outside of school” is no longer seen as a necessary descriptor. There has been a notably

broad range of disciplinary contexts of learning in the past four volumes, including traditional school subjects, but also music lessons (Kupers, van Dijk & van Geert, 2017/this issue), amateur astronomy (Azevedo, 2013), a fish hatchery and laboratory (Roth, 2014), an online fandom community for a television show (Matthews, 2016), a

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Wikipedia entry (Oeberst et al., 2014), and multiple gaming environments (e.g., Martin et al., 2015; Sengupta, Krinks, & Clark, 2015).

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While disciplinary diversity has continued to be a hallmark of JLS, the increasing

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prominence of historical thinking, teaching and learning in the field has been clearly reflected in recent JLS publications. These have included a wide range of types of

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scholarship. Monte-Sano & Budano (2013) examined the development of pedagogical content knowledge for teaching history. Herrenkohl & Cornelius (2013) examined

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relationships between epistemic cognition and classroom argumentation in history, contrasted with science. Lopez, Carretero, & Rodriguez-Moneo (2015) used clinical

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interviews to study the formation of historical concepts. Matthews (2016) investigated

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affordances of an informal online environment for developing historical thinking skills. Nilsen (2016) examined design approaches for building historical perspective taking, while Sakr, Jewitt & Price (2016) used digital augmentation with mobile devices to study relationships between historical empathy and historical analysis. In the present issue,

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Litman, Marple, Greenleaf, Charney-Sirott, Bolz, Richardson, Hall, George & Goldman (2017/this issue) look at intertextual analysis in classrooms, contrasting the ways opportunities to learn vary among literature, science, and history. Clearly, historical learning has come into its own as a central area of learning sciences research.

Finally, we would like to note the rapid growth of another area of scholarship that is coming into its own in the learning sciences: social justice as a context of learning. For example, JLS papers in recent years have included studies of racialized and gendered identities in disciplinary learning processes, particularly for marginalized groups (e.g.,

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Archer et al., 2016; DiSalvo, Guzdial, Bruckman, & McKlin, 2014; Langer-Osuna, 2015; Raes, Schellens, & De Wever, 2014). Other articles have focused on learning through

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participation in social change movements or organizations (e.g., Conner, 2014; Jurow &

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Shea, 2015), and learning about social inequality and oppression (e.g., Conner, 2014; Esmonde, 2014). Recent learning sciences conference sessions, including the first-ever

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Learning Sciences Graduate Student Conference held in Chicago this year, featured indepth explorations of different conceptualizations of social justice research, while CSCL

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2017 has as its theme Making a Difference: Prioritizing Equity and Access in CSCL. These developments point to the strength of these strands of scholarship in the field, and

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learning sciences.

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the desire for developing a range of approaches to social justice research within the

Much has happened through the pages of JLS over the past five years, a reflection of the advancements, changes and trends in the field. We are thankful not only for the trust of the community, but for the incredible gift to be part of this journey. We are fortunate to

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be taking with us another, treasured gift: the friendship and camaraderie that has grown out of our collaboration as co-editors. We wish continued success to Susan, Jan, the excellent team of Associate Editors, and the whole JLS community in the coming years. It is an exciting time to be part of the learning sciences, and we look forward to reading the papers that will continue to shape and change the field.

Josh Radinsky and Iris Tabak Outgoing Co-Editors-in-Chief

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