Developing a Taxonomy of Informal Learning Space
Abstract
The move from traditional teaching-centred approach to student-centred approach has resulted
in more student collaboration outside classroom, contributing to the growing importance of
information learning space (ILS). Review of recent literature suggests the ILS research agenda
is at an initial stage of development, without convergence in research methods and lacks
theoretical underpinning. Research studies were conducted on a piece meal basis, lacking
comparability and generalization. Using a mixed-method approach, this study contributes to
ILS knowledge by introducing a qualitative methodology based on concept mapping and
sorting for idea generation; to develop a taxonomy of four user-generated ILS types from a
portfolio of 38 ILS sites on campus. This is followed by quantitative validation using seven
ILS sites to evaluate satisfaction and usage behaviour. Drawing from middle range theory and
the ILS taxonomy, practical design principles are proposed based on functionalities and
features for the four ILS types. The learnings can be shared with designers, policy makers and
different institutions to facilitate knowledge transfer, which contributes to generalization of
learnings and theory building