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Kelly, Nick & Antonio, Amy(2016)Teacher peer support in social network sites.Teaching and Teacher Education, 56, pp. 138-149.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2016.02.007
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Teacher peer support in social network sites
Nick Kelly
Australian Digital Futures Institute, University of Southern Queensland; and Queensland
University of Technology, Australia
nick.kelly@usq.edu.au
Amy Antonio
Australian Digital Futures Institute, University of Southern Queensland, Australia
amy.antonio@usq.edu.au
This paper describes the types of support that teachers are accessing through the Social
Network Site (SNS) 'Facebook'. It describes six ways in which teachers support one
another within online groups. It presents evidence from a study of a large, open group
of teachers online over a twelve week period, repeated with multiple groups a year later
over a one week period. The findings suggest that large open groups in SNSs can be a
useful source of pragmatic advice for teachers but that these groups are rarely a place
for reflection on or feedback about teaching practice.
Keywords: social network; teacher; teacher education; beginning teacher; Facebook;
natural language processing; online professional development
1. Introduction
Teachers learn from one another in many ways, from the formality of structured mentoring
through to casual conversations in the hallway (Clarke, Triggs, & Nielsen, 2014; Richter,
Kunter, Klusmann, Lüdtke, & Baumert, 2011). In recent decades the Internet has extended
the circumstances in which this collegial contact can occur, opening up a range of avenues for
support and development (Dede, 2006). Social Networking Sites (SNSs) in particular have
emerged as a significant way in which teachers access support online. Teachers can be
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observed supporting one another in commercial SNSs (e.g. Facebook, LinkedIn and
EdModo) as well as on private sites offered to teachers by government education departments
and universities (e.g. Scootle Community in Australia and eTwinning in Europe). It is now
common for teachers to be members of many different SNSs and members of many different
groups (cliques with clear bounds within the environment) within each SNS. The support that
teachers receive from their fellow professionals is known to be a significant contributor to job
satisfaction, professional development and teacher retention (DeAngelis, Wall, & Che, 2013;
Edwards, 2011; Ingersoll & Strong, 2011; McCormack, Gore, & Thomas, 2006). It follows
that if teachers are receiving support through SNSs then it is of great interest to understand
the interactions occurring within these groups.
This paper is concerned with the question: How do teachers access support within
large open groups within SNSs? SNSs are defined as “web-based services that allow
individuals to (1) construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system, (2)
articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection, and (3) view and traverse
their list of connections and those made by others within the system” (boyd & Ellison, 2007).
Anecdotally, many teachers are using SNSs to receive support. While there is evidence in the
literature of online communities for teacher support (Lin, Lin, & Huang, 2008; Matzat, 2013;
Yeh, 2010), there is limited empirical evidence about the kinds of support that teachers are
finding within these communities and SNSs in particular. Such evidence would be valuable in
that it can potentially advise teacher education, policy and design of SNSs for teachers. In
addressing the question of support in SNSs we focus on the platform Facebook, due to its
popularity within English-speaking nations and its widespread use by teachers (Junco, 2013).
The question is addressed by distinguishing types of online teacher support and then
studying open groups in SNSs to observe the presence of this support. The framework of
House (1981) is used to describe the different forms of social support that teachers find
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within online communities, based on existing research. This foundation forms the basis for
establishing categories that are particular to online teacher support following the work of
Clarke et al. (2014).
The paper uses these categories of online teacher support to conduct a two-phase
study of teachers finding support within Facebook groups. In the first phase, a large, open
group within Facebook is studied to determine the support present in interactions between
teachers over a 12-week period. In the second phase, these results are tested for repeatability
by conducting a study of an additional five groups over a one-week period. The results
suggest that teachers are using open groups in SNSs to find collegial and pragmatic support
online but that they are rarely engaging in discussion relating to teaching practice. When
teachers request any kind of support in large open groups it is typically forthcoming;
however, they appear to be reticent to ask, which has implications for teacher education,
particularly training around relational agency (Edwards, 2005) in online environments –
learning how to draw on other teachers as a resource.
2. Background
2.1 Distinguishing ways that teachers support one another online
Having the support of others within their profession is critical for a teacher’s development.
This is especially true for pre-service and early career teachers (Ingersoll & Strong, 2011;
Long et al., 2012; McCormack et al., 2006), but continues to be important as teachers
progress in the profession. Learning through open groups in SNSs constitutes a form of
informal support, where there is no specified curriculum or structure (Grant & Zeichner,
1981; Richter et al., 2011).
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2.1.1 General forms of social support
Teachers helping one another online is a form of social support, where social relationships
lead to positive outcomes for individuals within the professional realm (Cobb, 1976; House,
1981). Teacher social support can be summarised as interpersonal relations with elements of
“affect, aid and affirmation” (Kahn & Antonucci, 1980) and problematized as the question of
“who gives what to whom regarding which problems?” (House, 1981, emphasis in original).
Types of social support can be distinguished as (after House, 1981):
Emotional support in the form of esteem, affect, trust, concern and listening;
Appraisal support in the form of affirmation, feedback and social comparison;
Informational support in the form of advice, suggestion, directives and information;
and
Instrumental support in the form of aid in kind, money, labour and time.
These four forms of social support provide a framework for studying the positive
professional outcomes from peer relationships between teachers, and many studies discuss
these kinds of support. A study by Greenglass, Fiksenbaum, and Burke (1996) looked
explicitly at the impacts of emotional, informational and instrumental support on Canadian
teachers’ emotional exhaustion (N=833). They found that of three types of supportive
relationship (co-workers, supervisor, friends and family), co-workers were the most
important buffer of emotional exhaustion. Informational support was another buffer of
emotional exhaustion, whether it came from a supervisor or a co-worker. Instrumental
support in general can help a teacher feel that they have a greater sense of control over their
work situation. Whether these findings apply to online social support has not yet been
confirmed in the literature. A mixed methods study of twelve first year beginning teachers in
the USA interacting in an online network revealed that “an online support community is an
effective means of providing social, emotional, practical, and professional support to
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beginning teachers” (DeWert, Babinski, & Jones, 2003). In particular, the study suggests that
peer-to-peer online support can alleviate isolation and loneliness in the profession (through
emotional support), and that online forums can facilitate joint reflection on practice.
A study of secondary teachers in the UK (N=628) found that burnout and job
dissatisfaction were reduced by emotional support from peers (Kinman, Wray, & Strange,
2011). An exploratory study of secondary teachers in Hong Kong (N=75) looked at the
support provided by online forums. Their findings showed that teachers find emotional
support in these online spaces, and suggest that anonymity within the community enabled
participants to feel comfortable in requesting support (Leung, Chiang, Chui, Lee, & Mak,
2011). Paulus and Scherff (2008) conducted a qualitative case study (N=15) of pre-service
teachers using computer-mediated communication (an online forum) to access support during
their practical experience. They found that, in addition to providing a space for structured
reflection, there was emotional support to be found, and “knowing that someone is there to
listen to their concerns may help [teachers to get through their first year]” (Paulus & Scherff,
2008).
Finally, there is evidence that formal mentoring relationships can, when mentors are
well prepared, provide all aspects of social support (Barrera, Braley, & Slate, 2010; Clark &
Byrnes, 2012; Hobson, Ashby, Malderez, & Tomlinson, 2009). In a review of the literature
on mentoring, Hobson et al. (2009) found evidence that mentees receive emotional and
psychological support, increasing confidence, morale and job satisfaction. However, these
benefits are only realised where the mentoring is “fit for purpose and addresses, and is
responsive to, the needs of the mentee/learner” (Hobson et al., 2009, p. 212), i.e. where the
conditions for effective mentoring are met.
These studies provide evidence of the four types of social support that teachers
provide for one another. They demonstrate that collegial support, either through formal
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relationships (e.g. mentor-mentee) or informal relationships (e.g. in the staff room, in online
forums), is currently occurring in both the real world and online.
2.1.2 Forms of teacher online social support
Based on the description of various roles for co-operating teachers provided by Clarke et al.
(2014), we propose that a more fine-grained (six categories in place of the aforementioned
four) typology of online teacher support is appropriate for studying online communities of
teachers (Table 1). In a comprehensive literature review, Clarke et al. (2014) identify eleven
roles that co-operating teachers—those who supervise and support student teachers during
practical experience—take on to support pre-service teachers. Of these eleven roles only six
apply to the context of teachers supporting one another online. Four roles were not applicable
because they were specific to pre-service and early career teachers;1 and one role was not
applicable because it was specific to co-location within a classroom and the in-school
context2. The six remaining roles are (Table 1): (i) providers of feedback; (ii) modelers of
practice; (iii) supporters of reflection; (iv) conveners of relationships; (v) agents of
socialisation; and (vi) advocates of the practical. Each of these roles can be further described
with reference to the literature.
Firstly, teachers are providers of feedback for their peers. They give feedback about
the what and how of practice (the technical skills) as well as the why of practice (deeper
reflection). Both types of feedback are important; however, the literature suggests that
teachers have a tendency to focus on the technical aspects of teaching rather than encouraging
reflection (Grimmett & Ratzlaff, 1986; Kahan, Sinclair, Saucier Jr, & Nguyen Caiozzi, 2003).
1 Four roles are: (i) gatekeeper of the profession; (ii) purveyors of context; (iii) gleaner of knowledge;
(iv) abider of change (Clarke et al., 2014)
2 Role is: (v) teacher of children (Clarke et al., 2014)
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In the online context, removed from the in-school context, practice must first be shared by a
teacher before feedback can be provided.
Secondly, teachers are modelers of practice for their peers in that they look to one
another for images of how to teach (Calderhead & Robson, 1991). In an online setting, the
descriptions that teachers provide of their own and others’ practice provide opportunities for
a teacher to glimpse into other classrooms and learn from such observations. The role of one
teacher modelling the practice of another facilitates learning through mimicry (the
apprenticeship model), by which teachers put into practice what they have learnt from
watching other teachers. Observation of experienced teachers is one of the ways in which the
“apprenticeship of observation” (the tendency for new teachers to teach as they have been
taught rather than how they have been taught to teach) can be overcome (Grossman, 1991;
Loughran, 1995), aiding in the development of reflective practice.
Thirdly, the literature emphasises the importance of the role that teachers play as
supporters of reflection. Transformative reflection on practice is critical to teachers’
development within the profession (Griffiths, 2000). Through reflection on their actions,
teachers are able to transform a state of doubt or ambiguity about a situation into a coherent
understanding (Schön, 1983). Teachers can be seen to prompt reflection in other teachers in
five ways: (i) offering suggestions and observations from personal experience; (ii) providing
supportive commentary; (iii) providing advice and insight; (iv) recommending instructional
and participatory strategies; and (v) validating thoughtful lesson preparation (Stegman, 2007,
p. 77). Each of these prompts for reflection can potentially occur within online communities.
However, there is a challenge in creating the conditions in which online reflection will occur,
as joint reflection requires both privacy and a depth of trust in connections, and these
conditions are often tenuous within a SNS (Clarà, Kelly, Mauri, & Danaher, 2015).
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Fourthly, teachers are conveners of relationships, in the sense that they can initiate
and maintain a relationship with another teacher as well as facilitate new connections
between unconnected teachers. These relationships can allow teachers to develop new
understandings through scaffolding or by providing a cultural or collectivist understanding
(Edwards, 2005). This concept can be further explained by drawing on Edwards’ notion of
relational agency. Teachers can benefit from developing the ability of knowing how to know
who to draw upon when they need to develop some aspect of their teaching. Teachers online
can be conveners of relations by initiating direct relationships, by initiating connections and
by helping others to develop relational agency.
Fifthly, teachers act as agents of socialization by contributing to the maintenance of
customs, ideologies, dispositions and habits of the profession (Clarke et al., 2014). This
influence can be positive and contribute to the maintenance of a cohesive identity within the
profession, although this is not always the case. According to Hoy and Rees (1977), teachers
can alternatively reinforce values of “conformity, impersonality, tradition, subordination, and
bureaucratic loyalty” (p. 25). Through peer relationships (including those online) teachers co-
create the cultural norms of the profession.
Finally, teachers are advocates of the practical for one another, which refers to the
role of teachers in assisting with day-to-day problems as they occur and finding pragmatic
ways to work (Clarke et al., 2014). For example, as advocates of the practical, teachers may
provide support through descriptions of aspects of daily practice (Edwards & Protheroe,
2004) and through the sharing of resources (Hew & Hara, 2007). Being an advocate of the
practical involves to-the-point responses to problems encountered in the day to day of
teaching. This kind of peer support appears to be a good fit with the ‘dive in dive out’ norms
of the online world. However, a focus on the practical is distinct from the aforementioned
needs of teachers for joint reflection on practice. Reflection is the process by which
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coherence is given to a “situation that is initially incoherent and unclear” (Clarà, 2014). In
contrast, advocates of the practical do not engage with the situation but rather with distinct
elements of the situation within which teaching practice occurs (e.g. requests for specific
resources).
The argument for adopting this typology is made in three ways: that the coverage of
the categories is similar; that the categories are drawn from the literature on teacher support;
and that the six categories allow for distinction between situational and declarative
knowledge of teaching practice.
Firstly, the six categories described provide coverage of the entire range of social
support categories. The recognised forms of social support are not lost in shifting to the forms
of online teacher support. However, it is recognised that some of the prior distinctions are lost
in the novel typology, e.g. appraisal from informational support. The suggestion is that the
following two arguments justify this loss of distinction.
Secondly, the categories of online teacher support have been drawn from the work of
Clarke et al. (2014). It is significant that these categories arose from a systematic review of
the literature of ways in which (pre-service) teachers receive support from co-operating
teachers. The categories have names and definitions that, due to their etiology, map onto the
way that researchers have been talking about teacher education over recent decades. For
instance, the term “providing feedback” has a clear meaning for teacher educators, which has
a deeper distinction than, say, providing either “informational support” or “instrumental
support”.
Finally, the distinction between declarative and situational knowledge in teaching is
of great significance for discussions pertaining to teacher support (Clarà, 2014). Much of the
knowledge that teachers need in their day-to-day practice is situational: knowing how to
integrate content with pedagogy (Shulman, 1986). In analysing the online support that
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teachers provide for one another it is useful to be able to distinguish between these types of
knowledge. It is valuable for online communities to help their members develop situational
knowledge through reflection on practice, and thus important to research whether such
support is being provided (Clarà et al., 2015). The six categories proposed enable a
distinction between these types of knowledge; whether, for example, support is provided
through information that is “advocating the practical” (declarative) or through the sharing of
information that is “modelling practice” (situational).
Table 1 Forms of online teacher support and related forms of social support
Forms of Online Teacher Support (after
Clarke et al., 2014)
General Forms of Social Support (House
1981)
Providers of feedback Appraisal; Informational
Modelers of practice Informational
Supporters of reflection Informational
Agents of relationships Emotional
Agents of socialisation Emotional
Advocates of the practical Instrumental; Informational
2.2 Teacher use of SNSs and Facebook for support
2.2.1. The motivation to study teacher use of SNSs
Teachers’ widespread use of SNSs is a relatively recent phenomenon. It was noted as recently
as 2010 that the “interconnectedness and ground-up, user-generated world of Web 2.0 has yet
to reach into the realm of teacher professional learning” (Lieberman & Pointer Mace, 2010,
p. 78). However, by 2012, a US national study showed that 43% of teachers were using Web
2.0 tools (primarily Facebook) to communicate with other teachers (Kennedy &
Archambault, 2012). A smaller and more recent study suggests a similar number, with 46.7%
of beginning teachers (n=62) reporting that they used Facebook to maintain communication
with their cohort from university (Kelly, Reushle, Chakrabarty, & Kinnane, 2014).
The participants’ responses in the above study provide further motivation for studying
the types of support accessed by teachers within Facebook. When asked to “Please describe
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the ways in which you have been supported during your first year of teaching service...” two
respondents gave unprompted indications of their reliance on Facebook (unpublished data
from the study reported in Kelly et al., 2014):
(1) Support through the school through a mentoring program and Beginning
Teachers conference. Support from colleagues through our online Facebook
community that I set-up during university and still run during the first year of
teaching.
(2) Very little support as I needed registration to be a kindy teacher. All uni[versity]
subjects were aimed at primary and staff had little/no knowledge about the new
kindy regs for kindy teachers. Most support has been from the other kindy
teachers I met through uni[versity] and the Facebook group we started
There is thus evidence to suggest that collegial support for teachers, which traditionally
occurred in a face-to-face setting, is increasingly being augmented with online support. SNSs,
and Facebook in particular, appears to be one of the ways in which this type of collegial
support is being accessed.
2.2.2. Studies of teacher support through SNSs
There are some examples in the literature of prior studies that have looked at the ways in
which SNSs are being utilised by teachers. Rutherford (2010) sought to determine if
discussions on a Facebook group (Ontario teachers- resource and idea sharing group) could
be considered as professional development for teachers. Staudt, St. Clair, and Martinez
(2013) similarly analysed the Dreeben School of Education Teacher Network’s organisational
Facebook page to determine whether or not it enabled professional development
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opportunities for beginning teachers. They found that members posted comments and
announcements to the Facebook page, but were hesitant to post queries regarding
professional needs. Goodyear, Casey, and Kirk (2014) sought to understand how teachers
leverage sites such as Facebook and Twitter for professional learning purposes. They
explored 2125 interactions through Facebook and Twitter between five physical education
teachers. They found that as teachers grew in confidence (from second year onwards) they
began to tweet about their own practices, which gave them an identity as someone who was
pedagogically competent and innovative. This study focused primarily on the affirmation of
competence that teachers receive when they share their ideas and receive positive comments
(or “likes”), rather than on how SNSs are used to provide support. Hart and Steinbrecher
(2011), in contrast, used a mixed methods approach to examine the Facebook features that are
utilised by pre-service educators for both personal and professional reasons. They found that
Facebook is now being utilised for professional purposes and that the nature of these
interactions serves three major purposes: collaboration and generation of ideas for instruction,
connecting, updating and supporting one another, and seeking professional advice.
2.2.3. Theoretical understandings of teacher support through SNSs
There are many types of SNS and many types of group within these sites, yet they all share
the same design features in terms of being an online space with mechanisms to restrict
membership, to engage in dialogue using written language and to share media and external
references (boyd & Ellison, 2007). Two ways in which groups can vary significantly are
privacy and size. Firstly, groups within Facebook are either private (‘closed’), in the sense
that membership and interaction is moderated, or open to the public (‘open’), such that any
member of the SNS is able to join the group and interact within it. Secondly, groups can
range in size, in terms of the number of members in a given group. Recent work has
suggested that these two variables (privacy and size) have a mixed impact upon teacher
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communities (Clarà et al., 2015; Lin et al., 2008). Having large and open online communities
is positive in that there are more members to provide support and information is freely
shared. However, there is a cost in that trust, stability and privacy are vital to a willingness to
share information and knowledge at the level of depth required for reflection on teaching
practice (Clarà et al., 2015). As communities grow there is an expectation that collegial
support will be lost, with a constantly shifting base of members eroding trust within the
community.
Lin et al. (2008) identify problems that prevent participants in massive communities
from interacting with one another, which stems from an ambiguity around roles, a lack of
understanding of the context of communication (due to many asynchronous contributions), a
lack of clear focus (due to the same) and a fear of criticism. They also discuss the lack of
psychological obligation, in that participation in a SNS requires time and energy and
engagement only occurs where there is an expectation of return in terms of direct or indirect
benefits.
This study of the norms of reciprocity or balanced exchange of social and material
resources forms the basis of social exchange theory (SET) (Blau, 1964), which holds that
reciprocity is critical to a social network’s maintenance and resource flows, and a lack of
reciprocity can become a dilemma in online communities (Kavanaugh, Reese, Carroll, &
Rosson, 2005). This model is based on the premise that individuals enter into and remain part
of relationships to meet certain needs, for as long as the parties continue to benefit. Sites such
as Facebook take advantage of this deeply ingrained impulse to reciprocate “by making the
gesture-and-return cycle visible and salient” (Grimmelmann, 2009, p. 1156). The model of
SET has formed the basis for implementing teacher mentor-mentee relationships, and is
appropriate to understanding communities of mutual teacher support (Ingersoll & Strong,
2011; Zey, 1984).
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In the absence of material exchange individuals build and sustain social relationships
with others by sharing their knowledge with an expectation of future returns (Jin, Park, &
Kim, 2010). If members of a group believe they will receive extrinsic benefits (knowledge
sharing) or intrinsic benefits (self-satisfaction or social recognition) then they are likely to
develop a more positive attitude to knowledge sharing. In accordance with SET, individuals
are guided by rational self-interest, and knowledge sharing will thus occur when its outcomes
exceed its costs.
2.2.4.Quantitative studies of support in SNSs
Two quantitative studies explore the relationship between participation in Facebook groups
and support more generally. Greene, Choudhry, Kilabuk, and Shrank (2011) analysed the 15
most recent posts from 15 Facebook groups pertaining to diabetes. Wall posts were assigned
to categories and it was found that while 68% of posts described users’ personal experience
with diabetes, explicit product promotion was found in more than a quarter (27%) of all
posts. While open Facebook groups can be used for support, they simultaneously serve as
promotional spaces.
Gerolimos (2011) similarly examined users’ comments posted on the Facebook pages
of 20 American libraries. The results of this study showed that of the 3,513 posts that were
analysed, 3,191 did not receive any comments. Infrequent spikes were, however, triggered by
a comment or question. Asking a question was found to be more likely to encourage
participation when compared to disseminating frivolous materials about events and/or
activities. In teacher groups it is hypothesised that a similar kind of relationship may exist:
that genuine requests for help in the form of posts elicit more responses/feedback in the form
of comments than posts relating to self-promotion, which are less likely to engender
significant activity in response.
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2.4. Summary
Teachers are using Facebook and similar online communities to receive many kinds of social
support. The informal social support between teachers that is occurring on a large-scale basis
within open Facebook groups has largely been unexamined in the literature. This study was
thus conducted to address the question: How are teachers supporting one another in large,
open Facebook groups?
There is a need for teacher educators to understand the support currently occurring
within SNSs. Findings have the potential to inform future policy around teacher education
and professional development, through questions such as: How might SNSs be better used by
teachers in need of support? How might teacher education prepare teachers for accessing this
support?
3. Methods
The study involves two phases of data collection and analysis. Firstly to study a selected
group of teachers using Facebook for support online and, secondly, to test for repeatability of
these findings:
Phase 1: A large, open Facebook group of teachers was selected and studied for
activity within a 12-week period from 18th
August to 10th
November 2014 using
mixed methods to establish the types of support present in the community.
Phase 2: The results from Phase 1 are tested for repeatability by conducting the same
analysis over a reduced time period for the same group a year later (November 2015),
and for four additional groups meeting similar criteria.
Some terms to describe groups can be introduced for the purpose of characterising the
groups being studied (after boyd & Ellison, 2007):
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The size of a group can be described as small (having <200 members), large
(having > 200 but < 2000) or massive (having > 2000).
The regionality of the group can be local (restricted to a small area, e.g. a
suburb), regional (for a city, state, nation or continent) or unspecified
(unrestricted)3.
The privacy of the group can be open (open to all members) or closed (private,
with membership either restricted to a small group or moderated).
3.1 Phase 1: Analysing a Facebook group
An open group of Facebook teachers was selected for study based upon certain criteria. The
group was to be open to the public as the aim of the study was to determine what was
happening within open groups within SNSs. A comparison with closed groups was outside
the scope of the study due to the ethical problems presented by studying these groups. The
group was to be large with an aim of studying what is occurring in groups of this size. Based
upon these criteria, an experienced teacher educator recommended a specific Facebook
group. This process of purposive group selection is recognised as a limitation of the research
that is addressed in part by Phase 2 of the research. This group had an unspecified regionality.
3.1.1 Ethical considerations
The study of online groups such as Facebook is still an ethically contested area (Reilly &
Trevisan, 2015; Ward & Wasserman, 2010; Whiteman, 2012). In this study we focussed on
studying open groups of teachers, largely due to the contentious ethical position involved in
studying closed online groups within Facebook. In studying a large or massive closed group
of teachers it is infeasible to gain consent from all members of the closed group. It is however
3 Note that regionality was designated in this study based upon the stated name of the group. The
location of users is in no way imposed in the group. For example, a group labelled “Minnesota
teachers” could potentially have members from other regions but would have a tendency to attract
teachers from Minnesota
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methodologically problematic to only include data from those giving consent (e.g. a
conversation thread cannot be followed with only half of the discourse). The authors thus
made a decision at the outset of the study that it was against human research ethics policy to
gather qualitative data from closed Facebook groups without consent.
The University of Southern Queensland granted ethical approval for this study
(H14REA099). Participants in all the Facebook groups studied were aware they were posting
into public forums at the time of posting. Group names and member names are reported
anonymously in accordance with ethical approval.
3.1.2 Coding scheme
Group interactions were coded using the six roles that teachers take on to support one another
online. The six categories, described in Section 2.1.2 and shown in Table 2, were: (i)
providers of feedback; (ii) modelers of practice; (iii) supporters of reflection; (iv) conveners
of relations; (v) agents of socialisation; and (vi) advocates of the practical. The unit of
analysis is referred to as an utterance by a user, involving text, image, video, sound or
hyperlinks. Utterances can be posts that initiate a thread of discussion (and are typically
longer) or a comment that responds to a post or another comment (typically shorter, e.g. one
sentence in length, although at times longer).
Through the process of coding and resolving disagreements between the two coders,
two additional distinctions around these categories were clarified that serve to further
establish the six categories in Table 2. Providing feedback required that the utterance be
responding to a description of practice and providing feedback on that practice. This excluded
utterances where feedback was merely ‘advocating the practical’ such as adding their
approval of a teaching resource. Modelling practice required that the utterance include a
description of the context of teaching practice. This excluded utterances that might simply
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advocate mentioning something regarding practice devoid of context (e.g. “I love the flipped
classroom, you should try it”) in which case it was coded as ‘advocate of the practical’.
Table 2 Coding Book
Type of support/ category Description Example
Providers of feedback
(prv-fdbk)
Teachers give feedback about the what,
why and how of practice.
“…definitely didn't go overboard; your
ideas are so creative and very inspiring!
love love the idea of the sand pit and
having their own chance of finding
'gold' as a reward….”
Modelers of practice
(mod-prac)
Teachers look to one another for
images of how to teach, through
descriptions teachers provide of their
own and others’ practice.
“…We have ipads in our classrooms
and some of the apps are the same as
Google or at least similar. We use them
for basic things like dictionary apps for
English work, drawing pad to work out
maths questions etc. Ebooks are great
too as well as apps that allow us to
mirror the iPad onto the IWB for whole
class lessons…”
Supporters of reflection
(sup-refl)
Teachers prompt reflection in other
teachers by offering suggestions,
providing supportive commentary,
providing advice, recommending
strategies and validating lesson
preparation.
“Interesting. Not sure how I feel about
it. Maybe if these kids are distracted
and need movement that much, a new
teaching approach could be tried…”
Convener of relationships
(conv-rel)
Teachers initiate and maintain
relationships with other teachers and
facilitate new connections.
“Thank you so much for all of your
ideas… I have found the book "The
Day the Crayons Quit" and I think it
will be great for Early Stage 1. Does
anyone know of this book and if so
have any good mathematics lesson
ideas that have come from it…”
Agents of socialisation
(agnt-soc)
Teachers contribute to the maintenance
of customs, ideologies, dispositions and
habits of the profession.
“We are off again! The blossoming
Jacaranda trees and increasing heat is
not only a sign Christmas is
approaching, but it also marks the
beginning of School Reporting Season.
Yea ha!...”
Advocates of the practical
(adv-prac)
Teachers assist each other with day-to-
day problems and find pragmatic ways
to work.
“I have combined sound and musical
instruments to 'show' sound and the
vibrations. Get a tambourine and some
sand and a drum stick. Place the sand
on the tambourine and hit with the stick
from underneath. You can see the
movement of the sand in patterns.”
The process for analysis involved coding and counting of posts and comments by two
independent raters for a quantitative summary of the types of activity within the group over
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the 12-week period. This was supplemented by a qualitative description of the support
observed in users’ posts and comments within the groups.
As a result of being an open, online group, little is known about the participants
themselves. However, given the title of the group (withheld) and the nature of the discussions
taking place, it is surmised that the group consisted predominantly of practicing teachers,
with a focus on primary school teaching. Despite an unspecified regionality in the group
description, the comments suggest that many members of the group are from Australia. All
conversations in the group were in English.
Coding and counting was carried out for all posts and comments in the 12-week
period. An inter-rater reliability analysis using the Kappa statistic was performed on all
comments and posts that were coded by both raters to determine consistency amongst raters
and found to be Kappa = 0.71 (po=0.78, pe=0.23), indicating substantial agreement (Landis &
Koch, 1977). Following established reliability, all discrepancies were discussed for 100%
agreement.
3.2 Phase 2: Establishing repeatability
The analysis described in Phase 1 was repeated to address the question of whether the results
gathered were repeatable across time for the same group, and repeatable across different open
groups of teachers that matched similar criteria for selection. Seven open Facebook groups
were identified as meeting the criteria from Phase 1 and data from these groups were
gathered for a one-week period from 1st November 2015. Two groups were excluded due to
data indicating that the groups were no longer active, with fewer than ten posts or comments
within the one week period). Five groups were thus included in Phase 2 of the study, one of
which was the same group included in Phase 1. Two of the additional groups were specific to
a region, Group 2 and Group 4, whilst other groups were not.
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3.2.1. Methodological limitations of Facebook
The groups in Phase 2 were chosen based upon an exhaustive search within Facebook, for all
open groups that were returned using the search term “teacher” that met the criteria of being
open and large or massive groups of teachers. However, one of the challenges of conducting
research within Facebook is that, due to being a commercial platform with restrictions on the
data that is given away, it is not possible to conduct a truly exhaustive search. This is because
what is exhaustive for the user is not exhaustive for the entire platform. It is only possible to
do an exhaustive search of all groups that, within the vast graph constituting the entire
platform of Facebook, are sufficiently ‘close’ to the user doing the searching. When
conducting a search within Facebook, the results generated are biased towards what
Facebook knows of the person doing the searching. Facebook uses an algorithm that includes
variables such as the user’s physical location (in this case Queensland, Australia) and their
‘friends’ and ‘likes’ (declared connections within the SNS) when generating results for the
search. In this paper the groups for establishing context came from an exhaustive search by
the authors using the search term “teacher”. It is likely that the same search by another user
(e.g. one living in the United States) would provide different results.
Further, results in Facebook change over time – even the historic data for a prior time
period changes post-facto. Data for Phase 1 of the study was extracted in late 2014. If another
researcher were to extract data for this same 12-week period, a number of factors mean that
the data would not be consistent – history in Facebook is not set in stone. Changes to group
membership (which trigger changes to the data in the group), site membership (people asking
for their data to be removed) and moderation (posts being flagged for removal) can all lead to
changes in the data4.
4 Whilst there are challenges for research that arise from the relational nature of Facebook, it is
interesting to note that many of Weber’s bases for rejection of objectivity in the social sciences
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4. Results
4.1. Phase 1: Types of support within a Facebook group of teachers
Table 3 shows that when teachers in the group studied (Group 1) were providing support to
one another, it was predominantly in the roles of advocates of the practical (66%), conveners
of relations (21%) and agents of socialization (8%), Table 3. There were few instances of
teachers modelling practice (3%), providing feedback (2%) or supporting reflection (<1%) in
the group.
If solely posts are considered (initial utterances to which the comments are
responding) then the majority came under the category ‘convener of relations’ (67%),
followed by ‘agents of socialisation’ (24%). If solely comments are considered (responses to
posts) then the majority were categorised as ‘advocates of the practical’ (86%).
There were 128 posts and comments coded as ‘N/A’ on the basis that they did not fit
into these six categories, making up 36% of all utterances. Of these, the posts and comments
tended to be of a different nature. The posts that were coded ‘N/A’ were typically commercial
in nature, advertising a website or product. The comments that were coded ‘N/A’ were
typically following social norms. A prevalent example is the one-word comment ‘following’,
which is a SNS norm for a user to indicate that they are following a conversation even if they
are not posting. Another prevalent example was simply to say ‘thanks’ or ‘me too’ to another
comment, both of which were coded as ‘N/A’ rather than as a form of support.
Table 3 Summary of types of support present within the group
Description P+C P C
(i.e. that knowledge of a cultural reality is always relative to a particular point of view at a point in
time) appear to have been given concrete form when conducting research in the Facebook
environment (Weber, 1949).
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Modelers of practice 6 2.68% 0 0.00% 6 3.68%
Providers of feedback 4 1.79% 0 0.00% 4 2.45%
Supports of reflection 1 0.45% 0 0.00% 1 0.61%
Convener of relations 46 20.54% 39 67.24% 7 4.29%
Agents of socialization 19 8.48% 14 24.14% 5 3.07%
Advocates of the practical 148 66.07% 5 8.62% 140 85.89%
Total 224 100.00% 58 100.00% 163 100.00%
N/A 128
P=posts, C=comments
A common sequence within the data was a post that was ‘convening relations’
followed by comments that were ‘advocating the practical’. Of the 38 posts within the time
period that were followed by a comment, 22 of them followed this sequence (58%). Such
interactions were typically a question asked by a teacher of the community, followed by
pragmatic responses with a focus on actions that would help the original poster. Twenty
posts, just over a third, received no comment in reply. Some of these were instances in which
support was sought and not received. One explanation for this is that these posts were
perceived as being off-topic or poorly worded requests.
Table 4 shows an interaction from the data that typifies this pattern. The initial
question was a request for help. The post makes clear both the situation of the poster (a
primary school teacher with a year 6 class, perhaps lacking in experience) and the help they
are requesting (advice for a mathematics starter lesson). The comments to the post are
responses from other teachers who were willing to share practical advice about what has
worked for them.
Table 4 Example of ‘convening relations’ followed by ‘advocating the practical’
Type Utterance Coding
Post
Does anyone have a fun 5/10 minute math starter for year 6? (nothing
Halloween related though, Catholic School) Cnv-rln
Comment What sort of math? Try a scoot? Adv-prac
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Comment
around the world' one kid stands up behind another in a circle/ at desks
and you ask a maths question. if they get it right, they move to the next
person, if they get it wrong they switch places with the person sitting etc Adv-prac
Comment
I teach a 6 math class and they enjoy the game 'bang', sort of made up!
Write random numbers all over the whiteboard, e.g, 13, 210 etc. Two
teams, two players from each team stand in front of the board. Call out
random math algorithms such as 20 divide Adv-prac
Comment
Time how fast they can.....count, recite tables, says months of the year.
OR. In 30 seconds how many numbers can you add, subtract from 100,
classify odd even, double. Endless ideas. Just need a pack of uno cards
or regular cards using just the numbers Adv-prac
Comment
Wizard maths duel. Wands at the ready...first one to answer the question
stays in progress around the room Adv-prac
Comment
times table duel where two students stand up and duel each other over
number facts. The winner stays and another 'contestant' stands to answer
the next 'fact'. Adv-prac
Comment
Thanks everyone. They are currently doing Time, but moving onto
Chance/ Data N/A
Comment
Google Maths Starters - transum starters is great . There is a new
challenge every day on a calendar including weekends! Suitable for
Year 6. My students are addicted. Adv-prac
Comment Thanks Lisa! N/A
Comment Give the brain teasers Adv-prac
Comment Seconding the Math Starters site! Looks great! Adv-prac
The data suggest that the clarity and specificity of the question in the initial post were
important for receiving significant responses from other teachers. For example, some
questions were overly specific to the point that perhaps nobody within the community could
respond:
Has anyone made or found a good positioning activity. I was looking at making one
around a Treasure Island theme and they would have to answer questions about
certain coordinates of objects etc. but I thought I would check here first [smile
emoticon] Suitable for years 3 and 4.
In this example, there was only one response from the entire community despite the clarity of
the question. Indeed, the one response that was posted was merely a suggestion that the
poster look up a generic teacher resource site – it was not a link to any specific resource. In
almost all cases, teachers were careful to specify information about year level and subject
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matter when making requests; however, most were sufficiently general to elicit responses.
Some examples of this were:
Hi, does anyone have any suggestions for a Handwriting lesson for year 6 (stage 3
NSW)? TIA
Hi all I am a Senior Maths and chemistry teacher. I was wondering where I can
purchase text books. I need some guidance. Thanks [Name]
Does anyone have any good ideas for picture books which involve a lot of
mathematical content? My first thoughts were The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Although
all of the activities I keep thinking of are based on other KLAs rather then maths. Any
ideas are welcome both for this book or any other recommendations
The responses to these questions were largely coded as either ‘advocates of the practical’ or
‘N/A’. Occasionally teachers responded to posts with comments that attempted to create a
one-to-one connection. For example one poster mentioned (in amongst a question) that they
were studying a Masters of Education in Guidance and Counselling. One of the commenters
picked up on this and commented:
Can I ask how you are finding the course? Will you work in Primary or Secondary? I
have a B Ed and work in primary and would love to move into this area. Would love
any info.
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There was no public response to this question, suggesting that this commenter may have
received either no response or a personal response (i.e. the two teachers began having a
conversation not visible to the public).
There were few examples of teachers discussing practice within the group. One
particular interaction, shown in Table 5, shows the kind of discussion of practice that did take
place. This extract suggests that once one teacher discusses practice, others will perhaps be
more willing to open up about their own practice – it creates the sense of trust required for
description of practice to occur. In this discussion, one teacher asks for advice about giving a
Year 5 lesson on “the gold rush”. The responses begin as expected in the main sequence, with
teachers advocating for practical suggestions. However, one teacher shares in detail how they
have developed this unit of study in the classroom, providing a glimpse into the classroom
that is rarely observed in the data. Other teachers respond in kind, to the point that there are
three teachers providing a model of practice from this one post.
Table 5 Teachers modelling practice in response to post
Type Utterance Coding
Post
Hi all, i was just wondering if anyone has any ideas for lessons based
around the Gold rush (year 5)? i have a few ideas but it would be nice to get
a different point of view.
Thanks in advance [smile emoticon]
Cnv-rln
Comment
They can create a wanted poster for a bushranger?! I created mining
licences for each child. We also had a mock stockade in drama acted out the
scene!
Adv-prac
Comment
I set up a shop in the classroom with various students being in charge of
various things, such as a banker, a fruit & veg shop, a newsagency to buy
paper to write home with, a dress maker, baker, etc. The kids loved it. We
also build a diorama of the Eureka Stockade.
Adv-prac
Comment
Those are both such great ideas! I really appreciate your ideas and
advice [name] love the license idea, would get students so enthused! Thank
you [name] I had a similar idea in mind but you have definitely given me
some great inspiration! Thank you so much ladies
N/A
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Comment
We are in the middle of our yr 5 gold rush unit. Lots of timelines for gold
discoveries, researching eureka stockade, posing inquiry questions. Set up a
panning activity for fun. The focus is around the impact of the gold rush on
the colonies and indigenous Australians and how the lives of the free
settlers and Chinese changed when they came to Australia. Have a dress up
day where children dress as miners, troopers, free settlers, convicts etc
Mod-prac
Comment
The other things I did was give everyone a gold mining licence that they
had to carry on them at all times. At random times I would call out 'licence
check' and if they didn't have it on them, they would get fined. I also had a
tiny blow up pool in the classroom that I filled with sand from the sand pit,
collected a heap of stones and sprayed some of them gold. Hid them in the
sand, and if students finished work early, or behaved exceptionally well on
any given day they could go gold panning through the sand. I even bought
proper gold panning pans. I sooo went totally overboard that year with this
unit, but it was the best unit I've ever taught. Had so much fun with it, and
the kids were totally engaged and learnt so much.
Mod-prac
Comment they are great ideas [name] , love the dress up day! thank you heaps! N/A
Comment
i want to be in your classroom! definitely didn't go overboard your ideas
are so creative and very inspiring! love love the idea of the sand pit and
having their own chance of finding 'gold' as a reward. I can tell why the kids
kept their engagement throughout the unit, i am engaged just reading your
post! Thank you so much, you have been so helpful!
Prv-Fbck
Comment
I did my prac with a year 5 class last year and we did a role play around the
types of people who experienced the gold rush... The teacher I was with
made role play cards for each student that gave them information about the
person each they was playing. They had to role play different situations.
They played gold miners of different nationalities, aboriginal people, miners
wives, people that worked in different areas. There were more but I can't
remember. The kids loved it!
Mod-prac
For the most part, teachers were unwilling to engage in discussion of practice or to
support reflection on practice. The one example of an utterance that was coded as ‘supporting
reflection’ was a statement with an ellipsis rather than a direct appeal to the community
Interesting. Not sure how I feel about it. Maybe if these kids are distracted and need
movement that much, a new teaching approach could be tried…
4.2. Phase 2: Repeating the analysis
Coding for types of support was conducted for a one-week period in 2015 for the original
group (Group 1) and an additional four groups (Groups 2-5), Table 6. These results show that
the distribution between categories is similar to that found in Phase 1. ‘Advocating the
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practical’ made up 57% of utterances showing support, compared to 66% in Phase 1.
‘Convening relations’ constituted 33%, slightly more than 21% in Phase 1. ‘Agent of
socialisation’ made up 6%, slightly less than the 8% in Phase 1. Modelling of practice was
similarly small (4% compared to 3% in Phase 1) whilst, surprisingly, there were no utterances
coded as ‘supporter of reflection’ or ‘provider of feedback’.
Looking at individual groups reveals more about what is occurring within the groups.
Group 1 is the same group studied in Phase 1 and, a year later, the distribution is quite similar
– the top three categories remain the same, in the same order. However, there is now an
absence of modelling practice, providing feedback and supporting reflection. The results
from Group 2 are similar to the results of Group 1 from a year previously (Table 3). Group 3
is an anomaly in that none of the utterances showed teacher support – this is due to all posts
being coded ‘N/A’. Group 4 has a higher than expected occurrence of convening relations
and modelling practice, while Group 5 had very few utterances coded as supportive. During
coding, the sequence of convening relations and advocating the practical, as seen in Phase 1,
was once more observed.
Table 7 shows the relative number of utterances that were coded as ‘N/A’. There were
a number of unexpected findings. Groups 1, 3 and 5 all had over 80% of utterances coded as
‘N/A’. In 2014, 34% of utterances for Group 1 were coded as N/A and in 2015 81% of
utterances were coded N/A, representing a large shift. The vast majority of these posts were
commercial in nature, with many advertising resources on third-party teacher resources sites
(e.g. teacherspayteachers.com, designedbyteachers.com.au). In Group 4, similar to Group 1 in
Phase 1, only 34% of utterances were coded as N/A.
There is a suggestion in the literature that more useful posts attract more comments
(Gerolimos, 2011). This can be expressed as a ratio of comments to posts, the fraction
comments/posts, where a large fraction indicates that each post is receiving more comments,
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which we will refer to as responsiveness. Table 8 is sorted by responsiveness and shows an
inverse relationship between responsiveness and the number of utterances coded N/A. A
Spearman co-efficient of one (𝜌 = 1) suggests that these two variables are correlated.
Table 6 Distribution of types of support found within five online groups
Mod-prac Prv-fdbk Sup-refl Conv-rel Agnt-soc Adv-prac Total
Group 1* 0 0 0 4 26.67% 2 13.33% 9 60.00% 15
Group 2 1 3.33% 0 0 7 23.33% 2 6.67% 20 66.67% 30
Group 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Group 4 2 6.67% 0 0 13 43.33% 1 3.33% 14 46.67% 30
Group 5 0 0 0 2 50.00% 0 2 50.00% 4
Total 3 3.80% 0 0 26 32.91% 5 6.33% 45 56.96% 79 *
The group from Phase 1 is designated Group 1
Table 7 Utterances coded N/A for each group
Supportive N/A Total
Group 1 15 19.48% 62 80.52% 77
Group 2 30 46.88% 34 53.13% 64
Group 3 0 93 100.00% 93
Group 4 30 66.67% 15 33.33% 45
Group 5 4 2.90% 134 97.10% 138
Total 79 18.94% 338 81.06% 417
Table 8 Posts, comments and N/A coding by group
Group posts comments comments/posts %N/A
Group 3 779 42 0.053915276 100.00%
Group 5 1677 392 0.233750745 97.10%
Group 1 702 597 0.85042735 80.52%
Group 2 396 1557 3.931818182 53.13%
Group 4 506 2072 4.09486166 33.33%
5. Discussion
5.1 Types of support present
The results of the current study suggest that teachers are predominantly using large open
groups in Facebook for connecting with other teachers (convenors of relations), for
socialising (agents of socialization) and for seeking and/or providing practical advice about
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teaching and teaching practices (advocates of the practical). These findings support those of
Hart and Steinbrecher (2011) who suggested that Facebook use by teachers serves three
major purposes: collaboration and generation of ideas for instruction; connecting, updating
and supporting one another; and seeking professional advice. Rutherford (2010) and Staudt et
al. (2013) both found that teachers readily posted comments and announcements but were
reluctant to post queries regarding professional needs. This was supported, at least in part, by
the results of Phase 1 of the current study, in that posters could generally be characterized as
either convenors of relations (67%) or agents of socialization (24%), with similar results in
Phase 2. A typical exchange involves one teacher asking the group for a favour (“does
anyone have suggestions for a resource about X”) that is responded to by multiple members
of the community making pragmatic suggestions. The majority of comments advocated the
practical components of teaching. This can be understood in the context of the findings by
Goodyear et al (2014), that teachers were more likely to post and tweet about their practice as
their confidence increased. While posts were often about developing relations and
socializing, those who elected to respond to posts frequently provided information with
pragmatic advice about practice (86% in Phase 1).
A significant finding is that the teachers in the groups studied did not typically engage
in modelling of teaching practice, reflection on practice or feedback about practice. A theory-
based explanation for this is that such discussion of practice requires trust, stability and
collegiality within a group (Clarà et al., 2015). Given the public nature of open groups and
the frequently shifting user base of large groups (largely through new members), none of
these three criteria are satisfied.
We hypothesise that any SNSs designed for teachers should focus upon satisfying
these three criteria if discussion of practice is desired and that closed groups are more likely
to exhibit evidence of these kinds of support. It is probable that, in a large, open group, the
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cycle of gesture and return is not as visible and salient as it would be in closed, private
environment. Study of closed groups within SNSs is required to determine if this is the case.
A challenge for large open groups was observed to be the presence of commercially
driven (rather than community driven) members. One potential explanation for this is that the
more successful an open group becomes (in terms of the number of members and the quality
of support present) the more of a target that group will be for commercially driven members,
as it is now visible (easier to find due to its size) and attractive (due to the activity of its
members). This may explain the differences observed between Group 1 in 2014 and 2015,
where significantly more commercial activity was recorded. If so, this presents a paradox for
designers of SNSs for teachers. A benefit of open groups is their inclusivity – the fact that
anyone can join allows for unexpected serendipity to occur. Yet this lack of control of
membership permits exploitation of the community by commercial interests.
Another potential driver of commercial activity in the groups studied is changing
technology. Between the two phases of the study there was a growth in the popularity of
websites that provide tools for teachers to develop resources that they can then share with the
community, often for a financial reward. Websites like designed by teachers
(http://designedbyteachers.com.au/) and teachers pay teachers
(https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/) were observed in many posts. Having developed a
resource, a teacher is motivated to promote it within their communities. One hypothesis is
that the presence of this kind of website is potentially changing the culture of large open
groups of teachers within SNSs, where community members are tempted to promote their
own resources out of financial rather than altruistic motivations.
5.2 Learning to ask
An interpretation of the findings is that teachers in the open groups studied have a reluctance
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to ask one another for support. The format of SNSs is of posts, and comments in response to
those posts. In most cases, where a user asked for something of the community, the
community provided supportive responses. However, we found that in the groups studied the
members did not typically ask questions pertaining to teaching practice and only few
members of the group made posts to initiate discussion. The few answers that were coded as
providing feedback on practice or supporting reflection came about in response to posts that
shared something about teaching practice, of what was going on inside the classroom. If
members of the group were more inclined to ask questions of this nature, then we hypothesise
that more valuable support for teaching practice would occur. In SNSs there is a flow-on
benefit from supportive exchanges as members of the group that are “lurking” may also
benefit from the exchange of knowledge.
One possible explanation for this lack of posts is that there are other channels within
and outside of Facebook that teachers may prefer to open groups. Both personal messages
and closed groups provide a safer and more private way to discuss what is occurring in the
classroom. Without further study it is not possible to know to what extent this is currently
occurring.
Another potential explanation is that the members of the groups are perhaps simply
unwilling to ask questions. Online groups develop cultural norms. If other members are only
ever requesting pragmatic support then it takes a courageous member to commence
discussion of an in-depth question about educational philosophy. If this is the basis for the
results observed, then there is the potential for groups to become more supportive through the
presence of champions that promote a culture of asking challenging questions (Lave &
Wenger, 1991). There is also potential for teacher education programs to promote a
willingness to ask questions by developing pre-service teachers’ relational agency (Edwards,
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2005, 2011). Teachers can be taught this skill of how to draw upon other teachers as a
resource to develop their teaching practice.
5.3. Indicators of supportive groups
The results from Phase 2 of the study form preliminary evidence for an understanding of the
patterns of group activity that indicate strong support. It is valuable for researchers and
teacher educators to be able to know if an online group of teachers is exhibiting supportive
behaviour without the need to code all utterances. The presence of a quantitative indictor
would be of use. The results in Table 8 show a strong inverse relationship between a group’s
responsiveness (comments divided by posts) and percentage of non-supportive comments
(coded as N/A), suggesting that the responsiveness of a group may be a rough indicator of the
support within a group. A hypothesis that follows is that groups with a higher responsiveness
are more likely to be providing useful support to the teachers within it. For example, in Group
3, no activity was coded as being supportive (100% N/A) and the responsiveness was 0.05. In
contrast, in Group 4 two-thirds of all activity was coded as supportive (33% N/A) and the
responsiveness was 4.09. The hypothesis suggests that the more replies that each request of
the group get (solely measured by quantity) the more supportive (in terms of both quality and
quantity) the group is as a whole. A potential explanation for this inverse correlation is that
posts that are commercial or self-serving tend not to attract replies, thus lowering the
responsiveness as well as diluting the supportiveness of the group. Posts that are engaging
and interesting, such as a well-worded question, tend to attract many responses. Groups with
a culture of having engaging posts and a lack of dilution seem to attract others in the group to
make requests.
The small sample size of the study severely limits the basis for this hypothesis, yet it
would be significant if it could be confirmed. For example, if the relationship is
generalizable, then researchers and teacher educators would have an indicator for estimating
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the supportiveness of online groups. The hypothesis raises the question of whether online
groups might be made more responsive (and in turn supportive, with a potentially false
assumption of causality) through activities such as moderation to restrict commercial posts,
training of members for more engaging posts, and engineering of the group (e.g. through paid
members) to ensure many comments to each post that is made.
5.4. Limitations
In terms of coverage, the study is only concerned with teachers in large open groups within
Facebook. There is significant activity of teachers within closed groups. Closed groups of
teachers outnumber open groups in searches of the platform, and from the experiences of the
authors (anecdotal evidence) the support that is occurring in these groups is more likely to
show evidence of modelling of practice and supporting of reflection. Further study of closed
groups is called for when the ethical concerns can be satisfactorily addressed.
The generalizability of the study is limited in a number of ways. The study does not
address other SNSs outside of Facebook. Facebook is the most dominant SNS in the
occidental world and so the results are relevant for the teaching profession. There is no
evidence as yet to suggest that the findings would generalize to other SNSs, although the
similarity in both the users (teacher groups) and the functionality (of the technology) gives
reason to hypothesise that results may be similar in other SNSs.
There are further limitations on generalizability from the sampling. There are
limitations imposed by the Facebook platform (discussed in Section 3.2.1) that prevent
exhaustive search. The sampling in Phase 2 used search that is limited by the user context.
The use of criteria for group selection (open, large or massive) limit generalizability of results
to groups that are similarly large and open. However, even within groups that meet these
criteria, there are many variables not controlled for that may potentially affect results. For
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example, groups that use different languages or that are focussed upon specific subject areas
or phases of teaching might potentially lead to different results.
The repetition of the analysis in Phase 2 of the study with similar findings in multiple
groups provides limited evidence that the findings may potentially be generalizable to certain
types of groups. However, the small sample size in this second phase with only one week of
data being coded is a further limitation of the findings.
5.5 Conclusions
The research question posed in this paper was “How do teachers access support within large
open groups within SNSs?” This question is significant, as whilst there is much anecdotal
evidence of teachers using Facebook for support, there is little empirical evidence of this in
the literature and a lack of documented evidence of the types of support occurring. The
results of this study show evidence of teachers supporting one another in pragmatic ways in
open SNS groups, sharing resources and responding to one another with pragmatic advice. In
contrast, the results show scant evidence of online support for reflection on practice, feedback
about practice or modelling of practice, all forms of support that the theory stresses as
important for teachers. The study did not address why this lack of reflective activity occurred.
The results support theoretical discussions that this may be due to the lack of trust, privacy
and stable relationships present within large, open, online groups. Whilst reflective activity is
important to teachers, there is clearly value in the pragmatic support that teachers seem to be
providing for each other, within these large, open online groups, as evinced by the continued
use of the groups by their members.
The results are significant for practice and research of teacher education and
continuing teacher professional development. There is value in teachers having a network of
fellow teachers to draw upon outside of their school grounds, and SNSs provide a potential
Page 35 of 38
source of such a network. Yet there is little within the literature upon which to base advice for
teachers about how to navigate the potential support within SNSs. This study contributes the
finding that large, open groups seem best-suited to pragmatic advice on teaching, and that
where teachers are willing to ask questions they seem to receive useful answers. It contributes
the description of six categories that are proposed as the ways in which teachers support one
another online. It contributes a methodology and discussion of methodological limitations
related to studying online groups of teachers. Whilst much is still unknown – most pertinently
the nature of private groups – current study provides a foundation for further research into
this area of teacher support that is growing in relevance.
Acknowledgements
Removed for blind review
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