Chat on Collaborative Knowledge Building

This is an informal discussion from my personal perspective on computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL). In such a knowledge-building artifact, it is impossible to distinguish idiosyncratic personal views from their sources in other arti-facts too numerous to cite. I composed this invited paper as a dialog with the Qw-erty readership, almost in the format of a text chat. I envision an epical opportunity for promising new media to enable interper-sonal interaction with today's network technologies. While asynchronous media have often been tried in classroom settings, I have found that synchronous text chat in small workgroups can be particularly engaging in certain circumstances – although perhaps chat can often be integrated with asynchronous hypermedia to support interaction within larger communities over longer periods. More generally, building collaborative knowledge, making shared meaning, clarifying a group's terminology, inscribing specialized symbols and creating significant artifacts are foundational activities in group processes, which underlie inter-nalized learning and individual understanding no matter what the medium. Therefore , I look at the online discourse of small groups to see how groups as such accomplish these activities. This has consequences for research and design about learning environments that foster knowledge building through group cognition, and consequently contribute to individual learning.