During the summer of 2016, Hollett spent three months watching and recording youth action-sports participants to better understand how they learn. “I was basically able to just hang out at this camp and I collected about 200 hours of video data,” he said.
“One of my first days at the camp, I was walking around with a professional videographer who started the digital media program at this camp,” Hollett said. “He pointed out a trio that included a 16-year-old videographer, a 15-year-old photographer and a 15-year-old skateboarder and said, ‘These guys are going to grow up together. They’re going to call each other up and shoot film and photos and skate together over time.’”
This intrigued Hollett and he started focusing on these types of relationships. “I really became fascinated by the power of these partnerships and the analysis that was happening.”
“They were using the videos and the photos they were shooting to go back and sort of debrief, have these quick little debrief sessions where they’re reflecting on the trick and how it looked and how it can be improved,” he said. “But then they also discussed the shot and how it looked, how the video looked and how it could be improved.”
The more time he spent at the camp, the more he realized that their learning was interdependent and contingent on the success of these partnerships.
“As I was talking with one skateboarder, he said ‘You gotta vibe with the guy that you’re shooting with or skating with. And if you don’t vibe, then you’re not going to get that trick or that shot,’” Hollett said.
“Vibing,” Hollett explained, is the result of a symbiotic learning partnership that includes cycles of reflection and nurture. He observed this firsthand when an athlete and a videographer worked together on a new trick. The skateboarder failed his attempt at an alley-oop backflip, which caused the videographer to stop filming.
However, immediately after the failed attempt, the athlete and videographer watched the film and briefly analyzed and discussed what went wrong and how to improve. They continued this process for more than an hour, during which they openly asked questions that created opportunities for critique and, ultimately, learning.
Reflecting on the attempts also created a nurturing environment where the videographer provides encouragement for the skateboarder to succeed, Hollett said. After all, without the successful completion of the trick, the videographer cannot successfully complete his task.
“They depended on each other to analyze and to reflect and to support one another,” he said. “This is really powerful because, often times when we think about learning, especially in informal settings, we ask, how can one youth get better at X-Y-Z? And here, it wasn’t just collaboration but it was kind of a dependent collaboration in that you really needed that other person there to be present with you in order for both to succeed but then also to let other people see your work.”
Hollett said he was drawn to the culture of action sports because its athletes are typically youth who find themselves in the margins of more formal, school-based learning settings.
“Society says that youth who have these interests and hobbies often do not mesh well, or at least that is how they are perceived, in those predominant or privileged ways we view learning,” he said. “We need to understand more and more about how youth learn in order then to begin to think more deeply about both school and out-of-school learning settings.”
While hanging out at skate parks and watching cool tricks was fun, Hollett said his goal is to get educators thinking about the different ways in which students learn and make adaptations to accommodate that learning.
“When we look at schools, broadly, they’ve looked the same for the past 100 years or so,” he said. “As a researcher in the learning sciences, I’m looking for new and innovative ways to help reframe what learning looks like and redesign some of those settings, whether it is in school or out of school.”