Social participation and epistemic autonomy in extended reality learning
摘要
This paper develops a normative account of the metaverse as a hybrid and pedagogically relevant form of Extended Reality (XR), thereby foregrounding the social, cognitive, and collaborative dynamics that shape virtual learning environments. Instead of locating its educational value in mere immersive simulation, the paper argues that the metaverse’s normative didactic potential lies in its capacity to enable equitable participation, distributed cognition, and cross-border interaction among diverse learners. Addressing contemporary challenges—such as algorithmic personalization, filter bubbles, commercial biases, and avatar-mediated identity formation—the paper develops a normative framework for designing XR learning spaces that support epistemic autonomy while ensuring accessibility, inclusivity, and psychological safety. A special focus is on avatars as embodied interfaces that promote representation, interaction, and collective knowledge building. The paper concludes by outlining design principles for socially responsible XR environments that promote didactic participation across varied educational contexts.