Virtual Travel and Learning.
Challenges and Perspectives for an Extended Pedagogy
Parole chiave:
virtual travel, learning, physicalityAbstract
The evolution of digital technologies and the spread of the internet have given rise to new experiential modes of travel, including virtual travel. This is an important area of research within the broader field of “travel pedagogy” (Raccagni, 2025). While virtual travel offers opportunities for knowledge and discovery, it is characterised by an absence of direct physical experience — a fundamental element of embodied and situated learning (Lo Presti, 2016). This limits sensory and contextual interaction with the environment and others, affecting the depth and evocative power of the experience. Nevertheless, it is important to acknowledge that the technological tools that facilitate virtual travel can enhance distributed learning when integrated into complex socio-technical networks. From this perspective, virtual “tourism” goes beyond simulating real environments to take on a world-making function, generating new relationships, encounters, and hybrid realities that transcend the traditional distinction between online and offline dimensions (Gerosa & Milano, 2011). This pedagogical configuration challenges isolationist paradigms of cognition and learning by proposing metadisciplinary reflection on the implications of co-evolutionary learning. This places dynamic human–technical artefact interaction at the foundation of an extended pedagogy (Kilteni et al., 2012).
Riferimenti bibliografici
Cadioli, M. (2011). Internet landscape. In M. Gerosa & R. Milano (a cura di), Viaggi in rete: Dal nuovo marketing turistico ai viaggi nei mondi virtuali (pp. 28-37). FrancoAngeli.
Gallagher, S., & Zahavi, D. (2008). The phenomenological mind: An introduction to philosophy of mind and cognitive science (2nd ed.). Routledge.
Gerosa, M., & Milano, R. (a cura di). (2011). Viaggi in rete: Dal nuovo marketing turistico ai viaggi nei mondi virtuali. FrancoAngeli.
Kilteni, K., Groten, R., & Slater, M. (2012). The sense of embodiment in virtual reality. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 21(4), 373–387.
Lo Presti, F. (2016). La funzione della corporeità nello sviluppo della conoscenza. Formazione & Insegnamento, 14(1), 55–63.
Luzzi, D., Scippo, S., Cuomo, S., & Ranieri, M. (2024). Affordance pedagogiche della realtà estesa nell’educazione al territorio: Una revisione della letteratura. Ricerche di Pedagogia e Didattica – Journal of Theories and Research in Education, 19(2), 1–20.
Manovich, L. (2002). Il linguaggio dei nuovi media. Olivares.
Mezirow, J. (2003). Apprendimento e trasformazione. Il significato dell’esperienza e il valore della riflessione nell’apprendimento degli adulti. Raffaello Cortina.
Mezirow, J. (2016). La teoria dell’apprendimento trasformativo. Imparare a pensare come un adulto. Raffaello Cortina.
Ministero della Cultura. Visite virtuali. Retrieved January 12, 2026, from https://cultura.gov.it/visite-virtuali
Raccagni, D. (2023). Connections and differences: Rites of passage and “radical” journeys. Journal of Inclusive Methodology and Technology in Learning and Teaching, 1(3), 1–5.
Raccagni, D. (2025). Altrove. Riflessioni pedagogiche sull’esperienza del viaggio. Unicopli.
Riva, F. (2015). Filosofia del viaggio. Castelvecchi.
Turner, V. (1986). Dal rito al teatro. Il Mulino.
UNESCO. UNESCO Virtual Museum of Stolen Cultural Objects. Retrieved January 12, 2026, from https://museum.unesco.org
Yang K. C.C. (2019). Cases on Immersive Virtual Reality Techniques, The University of Texas, 2019.
Zini, P. (2024). L’adulto che apprende. Unicopli.
##submission.downloads##
Pubblicato
Come citare
Fascicolo
Sezione
Licenza
Copyright (c) 2026 Dalila Raccagni

Questo lavoro è fornito con la licenza Creative Commons Attribuzione - Non commerciale - Non opere derivate 4.0 Internazionale.