LECTURES & WORKSHOPS

Collaboration and assistance without teachers' knowledge
It explores how secondary school pupils and students view learning and school, and how knowledge of their relationship with schoolwork can contribute to improving the school experience for pupils, teachers, and society at large. This is the core of all my lectures. They are based on my research into pedagogy and how today's students, who have grown up with smartphones and share pictures with their peers on social media daily, relate to formal educational requirements and the focus on measurable results for each student.
Examples of lectures and workshops
I discuss how compulsory school pupils and higher education students use assistance 'backstage' — that is, without their teachers' knowledge. I discuss the pros and cons of this kind of assistance and how teachers can respond to it. The lectures for compulsory school and high school are based on my research findings from a municipal middle school. These findings showed that:
Firstly, pupils log into their classmates' Google Classroom accounts in and outside the classroom to write original texts and make revisions to their classmates' texts without the teachers' knowledge; Secondly, that higher-performing pupils receive text requests from classmates asking them to share images of completed assignments, which their classmates then rephrase 'in their own words' and submit as their own work. Thirdly, that leaked national tests are shared on the class Snapchat group, to which everyone in the class has access before the due test day. These examples of the pupils’ “Backstage Pedagogy” demonstrate pupils' loyalty to their peers and how digital technology enables certain students to avoid doing the schoolwork that forms the basis for assessment and grades on a large scale.
Lectures on compulsory school:
-
Pupils’ backstage. How we can support student learning in an era of digitised information exchange. The lecture highlights various 'backstage' areas where pupils can access information to get higher grades with little effort, such as from their peers, parents, siblings and ChatGPT.
-
The clash between the school curriculum and today's pupils, who have grown up with social media and a pronounced digital sharing culture.
-
Educating future citizens. What kind of citizens are educated in a school with a strong focus on the individual and measurable results?
-
Help or cheat? Lower secondary school pupils’ views on the difference between helping and cheating, and how we can relate to them. The lecture also addresses teachers' views on students' work 'backstage'.
Lecture on and for higher education:
-
Students’ use of ChatGPT without their teachers’ knowledge; the limitations of text-matching programmes; and suggestions for validating students’ knowledge levels in an era of widespread generative AI
Examples of workshops for primary, secondary, and higher education:
-
Information or knowledge? How can students' knowledge development and their willingness to learn be strengthened in a society where information is just a click or a prompt away
-
What can teachers and educational establishments do to enhance the validation of student’s graded assignments in an era of generative AI?
-
New Public Management in education. How can we counteract the influence of neoliberal education reforms on formal education?
Contact me for more information and to book.


Presentations at international conferences in 2025
This year, I presented my research at three international conferences.
For the fifth time, I presented my research at the Nordic Educational Research Association (NERA) conference, held at the University of Helsinki in March. This year, I presented my research within the School Development Network. The presentation was titled 'What is Backstage Pedagogy?. How can we deal with the undesirable consequences of pupils' backstage pedagogy? Examples from a Swedish municipal lower secondary school'.
At the conference, I also led a workshop. 'How can we oppose the impact of neoliberal educational reforms on formal education and social life?'
This year, I presented my research for the fifth time at the European Conference on Ethics and Integrity in Academia (ECEIA), which was held at Uppsala University in June. The title of this year's presentation was 'How do pupils distinguish between helping and cheating? An ethnographic study from a Swedish municipal lower secondary school'.
In September, I presented my research for the fourth time at the European Conference on Educational Research (ECER), which was held in Belgrade, Serbia this year. My presentation was part of the Curriculum Network and was entitled 'How can teachers support individual learning in a digitalised sharing culture? Teachers' Views on Pupils' 'Backstage Pedagogy'.
PUBLICATIONS
Own publications
Doctoral thesis in Education
-
(Summary in Swedish on page 151 and in French on page 171)
Scientific articles included in the thesis
Book chapters in anthologies
-
Curriculum dilemmas: How can teachers foster pupils’ ability to collaborate and compete in the Swedish education system?, Rönn, C. (2025). I S. Sivasubramaniam & I. Glendinning (Red.), Ethics and Integrity in Educational Contexts. Springer.
-
Gaining Access to Students’ Informal Conversations with Peers: An Explorative Approach on Educational Research and Staging of Recording Devices, Rönn, C. (2021). L. K. Sarroub & C. Nicholas (Red.), Doing Fieldwork at Home: The Ethnography of Education in Familiar Contexts. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
The anthology is available in hardcover, paperback and e-book formats.


Articles about me and my research
In 2024, my thesis was named teachers' favourite by Skolporten:
'Students' strategies for helping each other'
It was featured in Forskning.se:
'More difficult to assess student learning in school'
Article in Vi lärare:
'How student texts are plagiarised behind the teacher's back'
ONGOING PROJECTS
Software development
I am currently developing the first of several software programmes that will be used as comprehensive digital solutions for recruiting staff with academic qualifications. The software aims to provide companies with new tools for identifying cheating and verifying skills, where existing text-matching programmes in higher education have failed. The software is based on research and informal conversations with students at American and Swedish universities.
Contact info@charlottaronn.se for more information.


Ongoing research projects
I am currently working on several research projects:
-
In the summer of 2025, I worked on a research project investigating how students use ChatGPT in their studies. The data was collected through semi-structured interviews with students from e.g. engineering, medical, and teaching programmes. The research aimed to answer the following questions: How do students use generative AI such as ChatGPT? What are the advantages and disadvantages? And how can universities and teachers respond to this? The results will be published in two scientific articles.
-
Teachers' perspectives on students' schoolwork “backstage” (i.e. work that teachers are not supposed to be aware of). How do teachers view and relate to the fact that students can allow themselves to be assisted with their schoolwork by peers and ChatGPT, which undermines the students' own learning? These results are based on interviews with teachers and were presented at the European Conference on Educational Research in September 2025. The presentation was titled 'How Can Teachers Support the Individual’s Learning in a Digitalised Sharing Culture? Teachers' views on pupils' 'backstage pedagogy', which will be presented in a scientific article.
-
A student perspective on the difference between helping and cheating: a study of how students at a municipal lower secondary school view cheating. The results were presented at the European Conference on Ethics and Integrity in Academia in June 2025 under the title 'How do pupils distinguish between helping and cheating? An ethnographic study from a Swedish municipal lower secondary school'. I am currently working on a scientific article in which the results will be reported.
CONTACT
To book a lecture or workshop, fill in the form
Email: info@charlottaronn.se
Mobile: +46 70 255 34 63






