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NETWORKED LEARNING APPROACH FOR TEACHERS’ AUTHENTIC GROWTH: A DECADE OF RESEARCH ON TECHNOLOGICAL MEDIATION IN TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

By September 12, 2025January 16th, 2026Vol. 11.2

by Rasdiana Rasdiana, Marianus Yufrinalis, Rizki Tuhulele, Ahmad Ridwan, Vina Vania Suhartawan, Muhammad Muqorrobin, Fauzia Handayani Kartini Fanolong, Afifah Marshalina, Della Febrianti, Astri Mardilla Ramli, Umi Kalsum Iwan A Rianto, Imam Fikry Fanani, Dewi Bernike Tampubolon

ABSTRACT

Networked learning has arisen as a viable method for teacher professional development, highlighting collaboration and knowledge generation across institutional borders via technology facilitation. This paper analyses the evolution of networked learning research from 2014 to 2025, highlighting significant frameworks, prominent contributions, and essential  gaps  in  the  academic  discourse.  This  study  employed  bibliometric  analysis  of  33  Scopus  articles  through VOSviewer network visualisation and systematic content analysis with predefined coding categories to investigate theoretical  frameworks,  methodological  approaches,  and  contextual  aspects.  Results  indicate  that  four  essential trends have emerged: (1) Theoretical fragmentation publications decreased by 67% from a peak of six articles in 2018-2019 to one or two articles in 2022-2025; (2) Citation hierarchy technology-oriented studies (Kannan & Munday, 75 citations) garnered twice the recognition of critical analyses (Bali & Caines, 37 citations); (3) Global South exclusion four  Western  nations  (US,  UK,  Australia,  Spain)  accounted  for  73%  of  significant  research,  thereby  marginalising viewpoints from Asia, Africa, and Latin America; (4) Conceptual blindness keyword networks focused on networked learning and connected learning, neglecting issues of power, inequality, resistance, and workload. These tendencies indicate  that  networked  learning  has  been  diminished  to  technical  solutionism  instead  of  genuine  professional transformation, systematically marginalising frameworks that address institutional restrictions and cultural settings particularly  pertinent  to  the  educational  realities  of  the  Global  South.  The  discipline  necessitates  a  thorough reconceptualisation,  shifting  from  Western-centric,  technology optimistic  paradigms  to  critical  frameworks  that recognise digital worlds as contested arenas. This approach offers essential guidance for formulating post-colonial theoretical  frameworks,  creating  research  collaborations  between  the  Global  South  and  North,  and  utilising participatory methodologies that regard teachers as co-researchers instead of subjects.

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