Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching

Abstract Technology-infused classrooms sometimes feel like tech-support sessions, where students struggle to learn platform interfaces during their process of content creation. Especially in courses where technology is the medium, not the subject matter, time and attention directed toward troublesho...

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Main Author: Chris Friend
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-06-01
Series:Discover Education
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s44217-025-00605-4
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author Chris Friend
author_facet Chris Friend
author_sort Chris Friend
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Technology-infused classrooms sometimes feel like tech-support sessions, where students struggle to learn platform interfaces during their process of content creation. Especially in courses where technology is the medium, not the subject matter, time and attention directed toward troubleshooting can feel like distractions from the “real” work of the class. The response to classroom tech trouble—as well as a common approach to technology textbooks and manuals—involves step-by-step, click-by-click instructions and screenshots of each interface element in sequence. This article objects to that approach on account of the responsive design of modern platforms and the dynamic nature of modern interfaces. By using an intentionally less-helpful approach to classroom tech, instructors can (1) avoid tech-support responsibilities; (2) show that tech-tool use is intentional, rather than inevitable; and (3) promote student agency through experiential learning. The article concludes with the assertion that teachers should pay less attention to the specific technological tools they use/suggest and pay more attention to the generic functions of those technologies. Overall, I argue that teachers should take a heuristic approach to ed-tech and provide instruction that is platform-agnostic and allow students to select what they see as the best tool to complete a given task.
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spelling doaj-art-a6c05fad02c245bcbd049bfbf61d21572025-08-20T02:37:35ZengSpringerDiscover Education2731-55252025-06-014111310.1007/s44217-025-00605-4Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teachingChris Friend0Kean UniversityAbstract Technology-infused classrooms sometimes feel like tech-support sessions, where students struggle to learn platform interfaces during their process of content creation. Especially in courses where technology is the medium, not the subject matter, time and attention directed toward troubleshooting can feel like distractions from the “real” work of the class. The response to classroom tech trouble—as well as a common approach to technology textbooks and manuals—involves step-by-step, click-by-click instructions and screenshots of each interface element in sequence. This article objects to that approach on account of the responsive design of modern platforms and the dynamic nature of modern interfaces. By using an intentionally less-helpful approach to classroom tech, instructors can (1) avoid tech-support responsibilities; (2) show that tech-tool use is intentional, rather than inevitable; and (3) promote student agency through experiential learning. The article concludes with the assertion that teachers should pay less attention to the specific technological tools they use/suggest and pay more attention to the generic functions of those technologies. Overall, I argue that teachers should take a heuristic approach to ed-tech and provide instruction that is platform-agnostic and allow students to select what they see as the best tool to complete a given task.https://doi.org/10.1007/s44217-025-00605-4
spellingShingle Chris Friend
Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
Discover Education
title Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
title_full Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
title_fullStr Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
title_short Enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
title_sort enhancing student agency through platform agnosticism and heuristic teaching
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s44217-025-00605-4
work_keys_str_mv AT chrisfriend enhancingstudentagencythroughplatformagnosticismandheuristicteaching