Informal Learning and Becoming: Narratives of Ridesharing Youth in Kathmandu Valley
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Kathmandu University School of Education
Abstract
Ridesharing youths in Kathmandu are learning various skills informally and shaping
their identities while working on the streets. The existing literature in this field
appears to focus on the financial, technological, and environmental aspects of
ridesharing rather than on its learning and development dimension. This dissertation
aimed to highlight these dimensions based on the experiences of the five young
ridesharers in the city. Through a series of in-depth interviews, the study inquired
how participants explained their informal learning experiences and how they
navigated ridesharing to shape their positionality in the city.
As a research methodology, the researcher employed narrative inquiry,
designing open-ended questions for the in-depth interviews and observing their
activities in the street. Grounded on an interpretive paradigm, the ontological stance
of this study was individual relativism. Epistemologically, the study applied
Deleuzian constructivism, while its axiological stance was value-laden. The skills
learned informally and the becoming dimension of the participants were figured out
based on the thick descriptions of the narratives. A thematic analysis was conducted
to derive meaning from the themes identified in the stories. Additionally, the
researcher’s reflections were incorporated when presenting the study’s findings.
In brief, the study identified eight major themes, four related to learning and four to
the becoming dimension of ridesharing. Driving adaptation, technology integration,
customer satisfaction and financial literacy were the themes on the learning
dimension while self-confidence, self-employment, pleasure riding and ridesharing in
transition were on their becoming dimensions. The study found that the youth learned
to adapt technology in urban mobility, satisfy their customers while ridesharing, and
become financially literate. Meanwhile, they were shaping their identity as self
confident and self-employed ridesharers in the city, enhancing their positionality
through the capacity to enjoy, grow, develop and even exit the ridesharing industry.
To conclude, the study presents the living and learning conditions of urban
youth, exploring their lived experiences while ridesharing and becoming a self
dependent urban youth in the city. This dissertation explored the contexts they
encountered, the hardships and challenges of ridesharing they faced in extreme
conditions, and their individual, deeply personal narratives of living by and learning
through ridesharing. I hope the study’s findings will contribute to institutionalizing
the emerging tech-based youth initiatives in Nepal, such as ridesharing, particularly
by identifying the learning and becoming dimensions associated with them.
