From Platform Visibility to Pedagogical Durability: Discovery, Monitoring, and Organization in Online Instructional Video
Michael V. Miller and Anna S. CohenMiller
Abstract
Platformed educational media environments have expanded access to instructional resources, but access and visibility do not by themselves make media pedagogically durable. This article develops the Discovery-Monitoring-Organization (D-M-O) framework to theorize the curatorial labor required to convert platformed educational media into retrievable and reusable teaching resources. Using online instructional video as a focal case, we argue that the critical shift is not only the growth of individual media items, but the rise of productive online video repositories that persist, expand, and require source-level attention over time. This repository-level accumulation changes the unit of pedagogical curation from isolated media objects to evolving sources. D-M-O distinguishes discovery, monitoring, and organization as separate activities with different temporal structures and infrastructural requirements, and extends this sequence through retrieval and application. The framework clarifies why platform-centered search, recommendation, subscription, and saving systems often collapse distinct curatorial functions into episodic encounter or repeated retrieval. RSS monitoring and social bookmarking are discussed not as novel or prescribed tools, but as analytically revealing examples of external curatorial infrastructure: RSS isolates the monitoring function by supporting source-based awareness outside platform feeds, while social bookmarking preserves pedagogical judgment for later retrieval. The article contributes to research on digital media, educational technology, personal information management, and platformed educational culture by showing how pedagogical durability depends on curatorial systems that make accumulating resources usable across courses, semesters, and changing instructional contexts.
Keywords: platformed educational media; online video repositories; media curation; pedagogical durability; personal information management; RSS; digital education
1. Introduction: Platform Visibility and Pedagogical Durability
Educational media increasingly circulate through platformed environments rather than through formal curricular, institutional, or publication channels. Videos, podcasts, data visualizations, interactive graphics, recorded lectures, public scholarship, and other teaching-relevant materials are now produced continuously and distributed through search engines, video platforms, social media feeds, project websites, and creator channels. These environments have greatly expanded the availability of instructional resources, but they have also changed the conditions under which such resources become visible, remain salient, and can be reused over time.
This shift is especially evident in online instructional video. Platforms such as YouTube have made vast quantities of teaching-relevant video publicly accessible, searchable, and persistently available (Burgess and Green 2009). Materials that once required institutional purchase, physical storage, or one-time classroom screening can now be located quickly and incorporated into teaching with minimal technical difficulty. Yet this expansion does not simply solve the problem of access. Under conditions of continuous digital accumulation, the central challenge is no longer finding an isolated resource for immediate use, but sustaining awareness of productive sources, preserving pedagogical judgment, and retrieving relevant materials when they become useful across courses and semesters.
The critical shift is not only that more educational video exists, but that educationally relevant video increasingly accumulates through productive repositories. Online video repositories multiply, persist, and continue producing. They are not merely containers for individual videos; they are ongoing sources with recognizable orientations, update patterns, authority structures, and pedagogical possibilities. This changes the unit of curation. Instructors are no longer dealing only with discrete media objects selected for immediate classroom use. They are increasingly dealing with evolving sources that must be discovered, followed, selectively organized, retrieved, and applied over time.
In this sense, platform visibility should not be mistaken for pedagogical durability. Platform systems are highly effective at surfacing content episodically through search, recommendation, subscription, and feed-based interfaces. They help users encounter items, respond to trending material, and locate resources that are already well indexed or algorithmically favored. However, they provide much weaker support for the cumulative practices that teaching requires: monitoring sources as they change, distinguishing durable repositories from incidental items, organizing selected materials around instructional purposes, and retrieving previously evaluated resources under the time constraints of course preparation. The result is a recurring mismatch between the abundance of available media and the practical capacity to transform that abundance into stable educational infrastructure.
This mismatch is often understood as a problem of individual skill, digital literacy, or technological adoption. Instructors and students alike are frequently assumed either to possess intuitive competence in digital environments or to lack the technical sophistication required to manage them effectively. The “digital native” framing has been widely criticized on precisely these grounds (Bennett, Maton, and Kervin 2008; Kirschner and De Bruyckere 2017). Research on student information practices shows that confidence in online search does not necessarily translate into systematic strategies for evaluating, preserving, or reusing digital materials (Head and Eisenberg 2010, 2011). Similarly, research on personal information management documents persistent reliance on ad hoc practices such as informal bookmarking, memory-based retrieval, repeated searching, and fragmented storage across platforms and devices (Jones 2007, 2012; Whittaker 2011; Jacques, Campion, and Leger 2021).
These difficulties are not simply personal failures or transitional problems associated with new technologies. They reflect a broader infrastructural condition of platformed educational media. Platforms are organized around discovery, circulation, and engagement more than long-term pedagogical organization. Their interfaces encourage users to search again, scroll further, subscribe loosely, or rely on recommendation systems, but they do not necessarily help educators maintain durable relationships with evolving sources or build cumulative teaching libraries. Content that is institutionally supported, professionally branded, frequently recommended, or rewarded by engagement metrics may remain repeatedly visible, while pedagogically valuable sources that do not align with platform signals can fade from view. As a result, instructors are often returned to episodic searching even after they have identified useful materials or productive repositories.
This article develops the Discovery-Monitoring-Organization framework to clarify these distinct but often conflated forms of curatorial labor. Discovery refers to the episodic identification of relevant materials or productive sources. Monitoring refers to the ongoing maintenance of awareness once such sources are known. Organization refers to the selective retention, annotation, and indexing of materials so that they remain available for future pedagogical use. Platform-centered search and recommendation systems tend to collapse these activities into repeated discovery or episodic retrieval, obscuring their different temporal structures and practical requirements. By separating them analytically, the D-M-O framework identifies why platform visibility does not automatically produce durable instructional use.
The article also extends this framework through the fuller Discovery-Monitoring-Organization-Retrieval-Application sequence. Retrieval refers to the ability to locate previously identified and organized materials when they become relevant to a course, topic, concept, or classroom moment. Application refers to the integration of those materials into teaching, where videos or other digital artifacts are used to explain, illustrate, provoke, contextualize, or invite analysis. The pedagogical significance of curation is realized only when materials can be retrieved and applied under actual teaching conditions. D-M-O therefore names the infrastructural stages that make later retrieval and application possible, while DMORA situates those stages within a broader cycle of pedagogical reuse.
The framework is not offered as a claim that discovery, monitoring, organization, retrieval, or application are unknown activities. Each has been addressed in adjacent literatures on media curation, personal information management, current awareness, digital literacy, educational technology, and instructional design. The problem is that these activities are often treated separately, folded into broad accounts of curation, or collapsed in practice by platform interfaces that organize educational media around search, recommendation, subscription, and saving. The contribution of D-M-O/DMORA is not to rename familiar acts of curation, but to disaggregate them as a sequence of pedagogically consequential breakdown points in platformed educational media use. The framework’s value lies in showing where the conversion of platform visibility into pedagogical durability succeeds or fails.
Online instructional video provides a useful focal case because it makes the problem of platformed accumulation especially visible. Video repositories are persistent, publicly accessible, and often pedagogically rich, yet they vary widely in visibility, authority, production rhythm, disciplinary location, and instructional usefulness. Some are produced by universities, research centers, professional organizations, or public intellectuals; others are maintained by independent creators, teachers, journalists, activists, or media projects. Their value is rarely captured by platform ranking alone. For instructors, the challenge is not simply to find videos, but to identify repositories worth following, monitor them without excessive cognitive burden, and organize selected items in ways that support reuse across time.
Although the article focuses on online video, its argument applies to a broader range of digital educational materials. Podcasts, data interactives, newsletters, public scholarship sites, open educational resources, and other web-based materials also accumulate through platformed or semi-platformed environments. In each case, educators face the same basic problem: how to convert episodic visibility into durable pedagogical resources. The specific tools used for monitoring and organization may vary, but the underlying distinction among discovery, monitoring, organization, retrieval, and application remains analytically useful.
The contribution of this article is therefore conceptual and methodological rather than evaluative. It does not test the effectiveness of a particular platform, tool, or instructional intervention. Instead, it offers a framework for understanding the curatorial labor required to work with educational media under conditions of continuous digital accumulation. Using online instructional video repositories as an illustrative case, we show how lightweight monitoring and organizational infrastructures can help educators reduce dependence on repeated search, preserve pedagogical judgment, and build cumulative teaching libraries. More broadly, we argue that pedagogical durability depends on practices and infrastructures that platforms rarely provide on their own.
The sections that follow develop this argument in stages. First, we situate the problem within research on personal information management, current-awareness practices, and educational content. Second, we explain why online instructional video should be understood increasingly at the repository level rather than only as isolated clips or individual media objects. Third, we formalize the D-M-O framework and extend it to the broader DMORA sequence of retrieval and application. Fourth, we show how the demands of discovery, monitoring, and organization vary across instructional contexts, especially between discipline-centered and substantive-topic courses. Finally, we examine RSS monitoring and social bookmarking not as preferred tools in themselves, but as examples of external curatorial infrastructures that separate functions platforms often collapse. The conclusion returns to the central claim: platformed educational media environments make instructional content increasingly visible, but pedagogical durability depends on the cumulative labor of monitoring, organization, retrieval, and application.
2. Personal Information Management, Current Awareness, and Educational Media Curation
The problem identified in the introduction is not unique to teaching. It belongs to a broader set of difficulties associated with managing information across digital environments. Research on personal information management (PIM) examines how individuals acquire, store, organize, retrieve, and use information in everyday and professional life (Jones 2007, 2008, 2012). Across settings, PIM research shows that people routinely struggle to maintain useful materials over time, especially when those materials are distributed across multiple platforms, devices, formats, and storage systems (Boardman and Sasse 2004; Whittaker 2011). These findings are directly relevant to educators, who increasingly work with instructional resources that are not housed in a single institutional system but scattered across video platforms, websites, podcasts, social media feeds, open educational resource collections, newsletters, and other digital sources.
PIM research is especially useful because it shifts attention away from access alone. The difficulty of working with digital materials rarely ends once an item has been found. Users must also decide whether it is worth keeping, where it should be stored, how it should be named or classified, what contextual information should be preserved, and how it might be retrieved later. These decisions are not merely technical. They involve judgments about relevance, future use, anticipated contexts, and the relationship between current attention and later memory. In educational settings, these judgments are pedagogical as well as informational: instructors must preserve not only the location of a resource, but also the reason it mattered, the concept it helped explain, the course or module it might support, and the form of student engagement it might enable.
This pedagogical dimension makes instructional media curation distinct from general personal information management. Instructors do not simply collect materials for private reference. They work with resources in relation to courses, learning objectives, disciplinary debates, student needs, institutional calendars, and recurring teaching situations. A video, podcast episode, data visualization, or public lecture becomes pedagogically useful only when it can be connected to a teaching purpose and retrieved when that purpose arises. Thus, the management of educational media involves a temporal and interpretive burden: instructors must anticipate possible future uses and encode enough context to make later retrieval meaningful.
Prior research suggests that this burden is often addressed through informal and fragmented practices. Students and instructors alike frequently rely on episodic searching, browser bookmarks, locally saved files, screenshots, emailed links, platform “save” features, or memory-based retrieval rather than systematic methods for monitoring sources or maintaining reusable collections (Head and Eisenberg 2010, 2011; Jones 2012; Whittaker 2011; Jacques, Campion, and Leger 2021). Such practices may be adequate when resources are few, stable, or used only once. They become less reliable when instructional media accumulate continuously and when instructors need to return to materials across semesters, course preparations, and changing classroom contexts.
Work on current-awareness practices addresses part of this problem by examining how professionals remain informed about new information in their fields. Library and information science research has long considered the tools and routines through which scholars and professionals track emerging materials, including alerting services, RSS feeds, databases, newsletters, and social media streams (Bawden and Robinson 2009; Case and Given 2016; Tenopir, Volentine, and King 2013). This literature is important because it recognizes that information work is not limited to finding known items. It also includes maintaining awareness of changing sources, identifying new developments, and responding to ongoing flows of information.
However, current-awareness research often treats monitoring and organization as adjacent rather than integrated practices. Tools that surface new information are discussed separately from tools that preserve, classify, or retrieve materials for later use. This separation is understandable in many professional contexts, but it becomes problematic for instructional media. For educators, awareness of new material has limited value unless potentially useful items can also be retained, annotated, organized, and retrieved in relation to teaching purposes. Conversely, an organized collection that is not connected to ongoing monitoring can become static, gradually losing contact with new materials, updated examples, and emerging public issues. Educational media curation therefore requires the linking of current awareness with long-term organization.
Earlier work on RSS feeds and social bookmarking anticipated this linkage but did not fully theorize it as a staged curatorial process. Mu (2008), for example, identified RSS feeds and social bookmarking as useful resources for managing online information streams in library services, and Mu and Kern (2011) described efforts to introduce these tools to faculty through information-literacy workshops. Similarly, research on Personal Learning Environments and Personal Learning Networks emphasized learner control over distributed digital tools, often citing RSS aggregation and social bookmarking as components of self-directed learning environments (Attwell 2007; Dabbagh and Kitsantas 2012; Downes 2005; Drexler 2010). In these accounts, RSS typically appears as a way to receive new information, while bookmarking appears as a way to store or share resources.
What remains less developed is the relationship between these functions under conditions of platformed accumulation. RSS and bookmarking are not important simply because they are useful tools. They are important because they separate functions that platform-centered environments tend to collapse. RSS supports monitoring: the ongoing maintenance of awareness once a source has been identified. Social bookmarking supports organization: the selective retention and indexing of materials judged to have future value. When linked, these practices create an external curatorial infrastructure that compensates for the limited support platforms provide for pedagogical memory, retrieval, and reuse.
This distinction is especially important because platforms often invite users to experience search, recommendation, subscription, saving, and retrieval as parts of a single seamless environment. In practice, these functions operate according to different logics. Search and recommendation are oriented toward immediate visibility. Subscription and feeds support partial awareness of new content, though often within platform-specific interfaces. Save functions may retain items but rarely preserve pedagogical judgment, contextual notes, cross-course tags, or durable organizational schemes controlled by the instructor. As a result, platform-native tools may keep content accessible while still failing to make it pedagogically durable.
The educational problem, then, is not simply that instructors need better digital skills or more efficient tools. It is that platformed media environments redistribute curatorial labor in ways that are easy to overlook. Platforms host, rank, recommend, and circulate materials, but educators must still identify which sources are worth following, decide which items matter, preserve contextual judgments, and maintain collections that can be used under instructional constraints. This labor is infrastructural because it creates the conditions under which media can later become teachable. It is also pedagogical because the value of a resource depends on how it is interpreted, sequenced, framed, and applied.
The D-M-O framework builds on PIM and current-awareness research by making these stages explicit. Discovery, monitoring, and organization are not interchangeable activities. Discovery is episodic and visibility-dependent; monitoring is ongoing and source-oriented; organization is selective and retrieval-oriented. The broader DMORA sequence adds retrieval and application to emphasize that pedagogical value is realized only when curated materials can be found again and integrated into teaching. By distinguishing these stages, the framework clarifies why platform access and platform visibility do not, by themselves, produce cumulative educational use.
This perspective also reframes the role of external tools. RSS readers, dashboards, social bookmarking systems, citation managers, spreadsheets, databases, learning management systems, and emerging AI-assisted interfaces may all support parts of the process. The framework is technology-agnostic, but it is not functionally indifferent: different tools support different curatorial stages with varying degrees of fit. A durable curatorial system allows educators to remain aware of changing sources without relying on memory, to retain selected materials without losing pedagogical context, and to retrieve those materials when instructional opportunities arise. The next section applies this logic to online instructional video, where the shift from individual media objects to accumulating repositories makes the need for source-monitoring and organization particularly visible.
3. From Individual Media Objects to Repository-Level Educational Media
Instructional media have often been treated as individual artifacts selected for specific teaching moments. Instructors choose a documentary, assign a podcast episode, screen a film clip, link to a lecture, or locate a short video to illustrate a concept. This item-level approach remains pedagogically valuable. Many teaching situations require precisely selected media objects that align with a particular topic, example, or classroom activity. Yet item-level selection does not fully describe the conditions under which educational media now circulate. In platformed environments, instructional media increasingly appear not only as isolated objects, but as parts of accumulating repositories: creator channels, institutional archives, curated playlists, podcast series, documentary collections, public scholarship projects, and other ongoing media streams.
The growth of online instructional video is not merely quantitative. It changes the unit of pedagogical curation. Instructors increasingly confront not only isolated videos but productive repositories that persist, expand, and vary in authority, rhythm, and instructional relevance. This repository-level accumulation makes monitoring and organization central rather than supplementary. The pedagogical question becomes not only “Is this item useful?” but “Is this source worth following, and how can its evolving production be made usable across time?”
This shift matters because repositories have temporal properties that individual media objects do not. A single video or podcast episode may be found, evaluated, and used once. A repository, by contrast, persists and grows. It can become familiar to instructors over time, establish a recognizable pedagogical orientation, accumulate authority, change in response to public events, and develop patterns of production that make monitoring worthwhile. Repositories therefore invite a different form of engagement. They ask not only whether a particular item is useful, but whether the source itself deserves sustained attention.
Online instructional video makes this shift especially visible. Platforms such as YouTube host millions of individual videos, but educational value is often distributed unevenly across channels, series, playlists, and institutional collections rather than contained in isolated items alone. A single search may lead an instructor to a useful video, but the more consequential discovery may be the underlying source: a channel that repeatedly produces conceptually clear explainers, a public lecture series, a documentary project, a media-criticism archive, a research institute’s video collection, or a classroom-based repository that documents teaching practice over time. The pedagogical value of such sources lies partly in their accumulation. They provide not one resource, but an evolving body of material that can be monitored, selectively retained, and reorganized for future teaching.
For this purpose, we use the term online video repositories to describe publicly accessible collections of videos that persist and grow over time. OVRs may be hosted on commercial platforms, university websites, project pages, institutional archives, or other public-facing infrastructures. They vary widely in scale, authorship, production quality, authority, update frequency, and pedagogical orientation. Some are formally instructional, with videos organized around course-like sequences or concept explanation. Others are indirectly pedagogical, offering public scholarship, expert commentary, cultural analysis, documentary evidence, testimony, or media critique that instructors may adapt for teaching. What unites them is not a single format or institutional location, but their repository character: they accumulate material in ways that make sustained engagement potentially valuable.
Repository-level thinking extends rather than replaces earlier traditions of media curation in higher education. Instructors have long selected films, documentaries, news clips, and other media artifacts to enliven classroom discussion, illustrate abstract concepts, or connect course themes to public life. In sociology, for example, The Sociological Cinema demonstrated the pedagogical value of curating individual videos with teaching applications, learning goals, and critical commentary (Andrist et al. 2014). Similar curatorial practices exist across disciplines whenever instructors search, vet, contextualize, and reuse media for teaching. These practices remain important. The difference is that contemporary platformed media environments have expanded the scale and temporality of the curatorial problem. The challenge is no longer only finding “the right clip” for a particular class session; it is also recognizing, following, and organizing sources that continue producing relevant material over time.
This repository-level shift reflects broader changes in digital media distribution. Platforms support persistent hosting, searchable archives, subscription mechanisms, recommendation systems, and ongoing creator publication. These affordances allow media collections to accumulate across months and years rather than disappear after a single broadcast, course, or institutional event. At the same time, platform visibility remains uneven and unstable. Search results, recommendations, and feed rankings may draw attention to some materials while leaving other pedagogically valuable repositories weakly visible. Persistence, therefore, does not guarantee discoverability; and discoverability does not guarantee durable instructional use.
The distinction between item-level and repository-level engagement also clarifies why platform-native practices often remain insufficient. Item-level search can be highly effective when instructors need an immediate example. A keyword query may locate a clip, lecture segment, or explainer quickly enough for a specific course preparation task. Repository-level engagement involves a different problem. Once a productive source has been identified, the instructor must decide whether and how to remain aware of new content, how to evaluate additions without constant manual checking, and how to preserve selected materials in ways that support later retrieval. The relevant unit of curatorial attention shifts from the media object alone to the source, its production pattern, and its possible future relevance.
This shift is not limited to video. Podcasts, newsletters, data visualization projects, open educational resource sites, public scholarship blogs, online archives, and interactive media collections all exhibit repository-like properties when they persist and expand over time. Video is the focal case here because it combines public accessibility, rapid accumulation, platform dependence, instructional appeal, and uneven pedagogical organization in especially visible ways. It also reveals how educational media are shaped by multiple authority structures. Some repositories derive legitimacy from universities, research institutes, or professional organizations. Others derive it from creator expertise, lived experience, public engagement, technical skill, ideological coherence, or audience trust. Repository-level curation requires instructors to evaluate these forms of authority while also considering how materials might function pedagogically.
This point is particularly important for fields and courses that depend on contemporary examples. Repositories often respond to changing public conditions, policy debates, cultural controversies, scientific developments, or political events. Their value may lie less in providing timeless instructional content than in helping instructors connect course concepts to unfolding social life. Yet this usefulness depends on monitoring. Without ongoing awareness of new production, instructors may miss precisely the materials that make a topic timely and vivid. Without organization, newly encountered materials may be forgotten before they can be integrated into teaching. Repository-level media therefore intensify the need to distinguish between encountering content, following sources, retaining selected items, and retrieving them later.
Recognizing instructional media as repository-based also changes how we understand curation. Curation is not merely the selection of exemplary items. It is the maintenance of relationships with evolving sources and the construction of systems through which selected materials can be made pedagogically durable. This work includes identifying repositories, monitoring their output, evaluating additions, retaining useful items, annotating their instructional value, tagging them for future retrieval, and periodically revisiting the collection as courses and teaching purposes change. Much of this labor remains invisible because it occurs before the classroom moment in which a video, podcast, or visualization is finally used.
To make the repository-level problem concrete, Table 1 presents illustrative examples from sociology and economics. The examples are not intended as exhaustive inventories or rankings. They show how repository-level accumulation varies across disciplinary ecologies and why discovery, monitoring, and organization place different demands on instructors. Sociology’s video ecology is comparatively decentralized, heterogeneous, and often creator- or classroom-driven, while economics includes a more visible infrastructure of concept explanation, policy translation, and ideologically organized public pedagogy. The comparison illustrates why platform visibility cannot be treated as a neutral indicator of pedagogical value and why instructors need systems for monitoring and organizing repositories after discovery.
Table 1. Illustrative Repository Ecologies in Sociology and Economics
Sociology: classroom/dialogic archive. SOC 119 illustrates how course-based video can accumulate as an archive of interaction, discussion, and pedagogical risk. Its value depends less on isolated clips than on monitoring an evolving record of classroom practice.
Sociology: public sociology and expert commentary. SociologistRay and the Havens Wright Center illustrate how public-facing sociological repositories often respond to events, policy debates, and social movements. They require monitoring because their pedagogical relevance changes with public conditions.
Sociology: media and cultural critique. Pop Culture Detective and Alexander Avila illustrate how sociology-relevant repositories may not be formally branded as sociology, making them weakly visible through discipline-specific search while still highly useful for teaching culture, gender, inequality, and power.
Sociology: disciplinary memory and professional reflection. Demographile, Snakegrrl Sociology, and Prof. David Stuckler illustrate repositories that preserve disciplinary knowledge, professional practice, or scholarly identity rather than modular course content. Their value depends on selective organization and later retrieval.
Economics: concept explanation and modular instruction. Adam’s Axiom and Money & Macro illustrate how economics repositories often provide reusable concept explanations and policy-oriented frameworks. Their modularity supports organization by topic, course level, and conceptual use.
Economics: institutional policy translation. The Economic Policy Institute and New Economic Thinking illustrate institutionally supported repositories that translate research and policy debates into public-facing media. Their authority and update cycles make source-level monitoring especially useful.
Economics: ideological and public pedagogy. Learn Liberty, Democracy at Work, and Unlearning Economics illustrate how economics video repositories often make ideological positions explicit, allowing instructors to organize materials comparatively by theoretical orientation, argument structure, and pedagogical purpose.
Economics: curated media indexing. Economics Media Library and Radical Discourse illustrate repositories that generate value through curating, remixing, or indexing existing media rather than producing conventional lectures, showing that organization itself can be a form of pedagogical production.
These examples demonstrate that repositories differ not only in content, but in the kind of curatorial labor they require. Classroom archives may require selective retrieval from long recordings; public commentary repositories require monitoring because their relevance changes with current events; cultural critique repositories may require disciplinary translation; institutional policy repositories require attention to authority and framing; ideological repositories require comparative organization rather than simple adoption. The D-M-O framework is designed to make these differences manageable by separating the work of identifying sources, following their development, and preserving selected materials for later pedagogical use.
The D-M-O framework formalizes this repository-level curatorial labor. Discovery identifies relevant sources or items; monitoring sustains awareness of repositories as they change; organization preserves selected materials and the pedagogical judgments attached to them. The fuller DMORA sequence then clarifies how these practices support retrieval and application within teaching. The next section develops this framework more explicitly, showing why platformed educational media environments tend to collapse discovery, monitoring, and organization into repeated search, and why separating these stages is necessary for converting platform visibility into pedagogical durability.
4. From Platform Visibility to Pedagogical Durability: The D-M-O Framework
Repository-level educational media require forms of curatorial labor that platform environments only partially support. Platforms are effective at making content visible through search, recommendation, subscription, and feed-based interfaces, but visibility is not the same as pedagogical durability. A resource becomes pedagogically durable only when it can be noticed, followed, retained, contextualized, retrieved, and applied across teaching situations. The Discovery-Monitoring-Organization framework clarifies these stages by distinguishing among activities that are often collapsed within platform-centered practices.
The framework begins with three core activities: discovery, monitoring, and organization. Discovery refers to the episodic identification of relevant materials or productive sources. In repository-level contexts, discovery includes not only finding an individual video or media object, but recognizing that an underlying source may be worth continued attention. Monitoring refers to the ongoing maintenance of awareness once such a source has been identified. It shifts attention from remembering to check a repository manually toward establishing routines or systems that make new production visible over time. Organization refers to the selective retention, annotation, classification, and indexing of materials judged to have future pedagogical value. It preserves not only the resource itself, but also the instructional judgment that makes later reuse possible.
These activities differ in temporal structure. Discovery is intermittent and often contingent. It occurs through search, recommendation, social sharing, professional networks, disciplinary references, or accidental encounter. Monitoring is ongoing and source-oriented. It maintains a relationship with a repository after discovery has occurred. Organization is cumulative and retrieval-oriented. It builds a teaching library by recording decisions about what matters, why it matters, and how it might be used. Treating these activities as a single process obscures their different requirements and helps explain why instructors may repeatedly encounter valuable materials without converting them into durable instructional resources.
Platform-centered media environments tend to collapse discovery, monitoring, and organization into episodic retrieval. Search boxes and recommendation systems encourage users to return to the platform each time a need arises. Subscription mechanisms and “save” functions provide partial support for ongoing awareness or retention, but they often remain platform-bound, weakly annotated, poorly integrated across sources, and organized around engagement rather than pedagogical purpose. As a result, the same instructor may repeatedly search for similar materials, rediscover previously encountered resources, or lose track of productive repositories because the platform provides no stable way to integrate source awareness, pedagogical judgment, and future retrieval.
This collapse matters because instructional media use unfolds across longer time horizons than platform interfaces typically foreground. Teaching involves semester cycles, recurring course preparations, conceptual sequences, changing student needs, institutional constraints, and repeated opportunities for reuse. A video encountered in one semester may become relevant in a different course, a future module, a revised assignment, or an unexpected classroom discussion. But this reuse depends on whether the resource was organized in a form that preserves enough context to make it findable and meaningful later. Without monitoring and organization, platform visibility remains episodic: resources appear, disappear, and must be reconstructed through repeated search.
The D-M-O framework therefore reframes instructional media use as a problem of pedagogical durability rather than mere access. Access refers to whether materials can be reached. Visibility refers to whether they are surfaced in a particular moment. Durability refers to whether they can be made available for future use while preserving the pedagogical context. Instructors do not need every accessible resource to become durable. They need systems that allow selected resources to survive beyond the moment of encounter and re-enter teaching when relevant. D-M-O identifies the curatorial stages through which this happens.
The framework’s contribution is both diagnostic and descriptive. D-M-O helps identify where the conversion of platform visibility into pedagogical durability breaks down. Discovery may fail when useful repositories remain weakly visible. Monitoring may fail when known sources are not systematically revisited. Organization may fail when materials are saved without pedagogical context. Retrieval may fail when collections cannot be searched or interpreted under course-preparation constraints. Application may fail when retrieved materials are not meaningfully integrated into teaching. The framework is therefore less a taxonomy of obvious tasks than a way of locating breakdown points in platformed educational media use.
Although the framework centers on discovery, monitoring, and organization, these activities matter because they support later retrieval and application. Retrieval refers to the ability to locate previously identified and organized materials under the temporal and cognitive constraints of teaching. Course preparation often occurs under pressure, and instructors rarely have time to reconstruct prior search processes or reassess large numbers of platform results. Retrieval depends on the availability of organized cues: tags, notes, source labels, course associations, conceptual categories, or evaluative markers that reduce the friction of finding materials again.
Application refers to the integration of retrieved materials into teaching. A media item becomes pedagogically consequential when it is used to explain a concept, provoke discussion, illustrate a social process, invite comparison, provide testimony, visualize data, or support analytical work. Application may confirm, refine, or revise the instructor’s earlier judgment about the item. Materials that work well in class are more likely to be reused, annotated further, or incorporated into teaching repertoires. Those that prove less effective may be retagged, demoted, or removed. In this way, teaching itself feeds back into organization.
Together, these stages form the broader Discovery-Monitoring-Organization-Retrieval-Application sequence. DMORA emphasizes that curation is not complete when an item is saved. Nor is it complete when a source is monitored. Pedagogical value emerges through the full cycle by which platformed media become durable enough to be retrieved and meaningful enough to be applied. This sequence also clarifies why platform-native systems remain insufficient even when they provide search, subscription, and saving features. They may support pieces of the cycle, but they rarely preserve the instructor-defined relationships among source, item, pedagogical purpose, course context, and future use.
Figure 1. The DMORA sequence: platform visibility -> discovery of productive sources -> monitoring of repository activity -> organization of selected materials and pedagogical judgment -> retrieval under teaching constraints -> application in course explanation, discussion, analysis, and student engagement -> pedagogical durability.
4.1 Discovery as Visibility-Dependent Encounter
Discovery is the most visible stage of instructional media use because it is the stage most strongly supported by platforms. Search engines, video platforms, recommendation systems, hashtags, trending lists, professional networks, and informal sharing all help users encounter materials. Instructors often begin with a topical need: a concept to illustrate, a contemporary case to explain, a public event to contextualize, or a media object to assign. Platform search can be highly effective for these purposes, especially when the goal is to locate a single item for immediate use.
One practical implication is that discovery strategies can use platform-native signals more deliberately without treating them as sufficient. For example, YouTube hashtags allow viewers to find videos or playlists connected by a shared tag, either by entering a hashtag in the search bar or by selecting a hashtag attached to a video (YouTube Help n.d.). A search such as #moralpanic may therefore surface clusters of videos, creators, and adjacent repositories that would not appear as readily through ordinary keyword search alone. Such hashtag searching is useful because it can expose topic-centered pathways into platformed media ecologies, especially for concepts that circulate through public discourse and academic teaching. At the same time, hashtag search remains a discovery practice. It can help instructors identify items and potential sources, but it does not, by itself, sustain awareness of those sources or preserve pedagogical judgment about selected materials.
Yet repository-level discovery involves more than finding an item. A useful video may reveal the existence of a productive channel. A podcast episode may point to a recurring series. A data visualization may lead to a research center or public scholarship project. A single item becomes a gateway into a source that may reward sustained attention. The discovery problem, therefore, is not only whether instructors can locate content, but whether they can recognize when an encounter should be converted into an ongoing curatorial relationship.
This recognition is shaped by platform visibility. Repositories that are professionally branded, institutionally supported, frequently updated, or favored by engagement metrics are more likely to be surfaced repeatedly. Other sources may be pedagogically valuable but weakly visible because they lack search optimization, large audiences, regular production schedules, or platform-friendly formats. Platform visibility therefore does not reliably correspond to instructional quality, disciplinary relevance, or repository durability. Discovery remains necessary, but it is unevenly structured by systems not primarily designed for educational reuse.
For this reason, the D-M-O framework does not treat discovery as a problem that can be fully solved by better searching. Search and recommendation may initiate engagement, but they do not sustain it. Once a productive source has been identified, the more important question becomes how to prevent that source from disappearing back into the platform stream. Discovery becomes pedagogically significant only when it can lead to monitoring and organization.
4.2 Monitoring as Sustained Source Awareness
Monitoring begins where discovery ends. Once an instructor identifies a source worth following, monitoring maintains awareness of its continuing production. In repository-level media environments, this function is crucial because new materials are added over time. Without monitoring, instructors must either remember to check sources manually or depend on platforms to resurface them later. Both strategies are unreliable. Memory is limited, and platform visibility is contingent.
Monitoring changes the unit of attention from the individual item to the evolving source. It asks whether a repository continues to produce relevant material, whether its orientation changes, whether new items respond to unfolding events, and whether patterns of production make the source more or less useful for teaching. Monitoring can be light-touch. It need not require immediate evaluation of every new item. Its function is to make change visible without demanding constant search.
This distinction matters because awareness and adoption are different activities. A monitoring system may alert an instructor that new content exists, but the instructor still decides whether and when to examine it, retain it, or use it. By separating awareness from adoption, monitoring reduces the cognitive burden of staying current while preserving pedagogical judgment. It allows instructors to maintain peripheral awareness of multiple repositories without turning each new item into an immediate teaching decision.
Platforms provide some monitoring mechanisms, such as subscriptions, notifications, channels, playlists, and recommendation feeds. These features can be useful, but they are often limited by platform boundaries, algorithmic filtering, interface changes, and the absence of instructor-controlled organization. A platform may notify users that something has been published, but it rarely helps them integrate that awareness into a broader teaching library organized around course topics, theoretical frames, pedagogical goals, or future retrieval needs. Monitoring therefore requires infrastructures that can maintain source awareness while remaining connected to organization.
4.3 Organization as Externalized Pedagogical Memory
Organization is the stage at which selected materials become durable. It involves deciding which items are worth retaining, recording why they matter, and indexing them in ways that support future retrieval. Organization transforms media from encountered content into externalized pedagogical memory. Without it, even valuable resources remain vulnerable to forgetting, platform drift, link loss, or repeated reconstruction through search.
The organizational problem is not simply storage. Instructors can save links in many ways: browser bookmarks, playlists, learning management systems, cloud documents, citation managers, spreadsheets, email, or platform “watch later” functions. But saving an item does not necessarily preserve the pedagogical judgment attached to it. Why was the item useful? Which concept did it clarify? Was it effective as testimony, illustration, provocation, data visualization, or critique? Was it appropriate for introductory students or better suited to advanced discussion? Did it work in a particular course, or might it be adapted elsewhere? These questions require annotation, tagging, or classification practices that preserve instructional context.
Organization also supports reuse across changing teaching situations. A video saved for one course may become relevant to another; a repository monitored for a current-events unit may later support a theory module; a media critique used as a discussion catalyst may be repurposed as an assignment prompt. This flexibility depends on organization that is not limited to a single folder, platform, or course shell. Instructor-defined metadata, however simple, allows materials to be retrieved through multiple pathways.
In this sense, organization is pedagogical rather than merely administrative. It encodes a theory of use. Tags, notes, ratings, and categories do not simply describe materials; they anticipate future teaching situations. They help instructors remember how a resource might function, not just where it is located. Organization therefore creates the bridge between platformed media abundance and instructional application.
4.4 Scaling D-M-O Across Instructional Contexts
The demands associated with discovery, monitoring, and organization vary across instructional contexts. They are shaped by course type, disciplinary structure, institutional support, and the rate at which relevant media are produced. A small, stable course may require only modest curation. A large, recurring, or rapidly changing course may require sustained monitoring and more robust organization. The D-M-O framework is useful because it clarifies how these demands scale.
In discipline-centered courses, discovery is often relatively bounded. Instructors may identify a core set of professional associations, disciplinary channels, journals, textbook supplements, public scholarship projects, or established creators. Once these sources are known, monitoring can stabilize around a manageable number of repositories, and organization can draw on disciplinary categories that already structure the field. The curatorial burden remains real, but it is partly supported by existing professional conventions.
Substantive-topic or problem-centered courses often generate greater curatorial demands. Courses organized around topics such as inequality, climate change, race and ethnicity, public health, migration, media, labor, democracy, or technology draw relevant materials from multiple disciplines, institutional sites, public controversies, and media genres. Their source environments are more heterogeneous and less bounded. Discovery remains ongoing because new repositories, data sources, commentary streams, and documentary projects continually emerge. Monitoring becomes more important because relevant materials may respond directly to unfolding events. Organization becomes more complex because disciplinary categories alone may not provide adequate retrieval pathways.
These courses also face stronger temporal pressure. Their instructional relevance is often shaped by changing public conditions, policy debates, social movements, crises, cultural narratives, and institutional responses. Materials that were useful in one semester may become outdated, newly salient, or politically reinterpreted in the next. Under these conditions, monitoring is not an optional enhancement. It becomes part of how instructors maintain pedagogical relevance amid historical change.
Organization also scales differently in these contexts. Because substantive-topic courses draw from multiple domains, instructors often need to organize materials according to pedagogical dimensions such as level of analysis, theoretical orientation, empirical case, institutional setting, affective tone, media genre, or classroom use. The relevant question is not simply “What discipline does this belong to?” but “What work can this resource do in teaching?” Such organization allows instructors to retrieve materials across categories that platforms and disciplines do not supply.
The scaling problem highlights why D-M-O should not be understood as over-curation or excessive personal system-building. It responds to the structure of the media environment. Where instructional media are abundant, heterogeneous, rapidly changing, and platform-mediated, instructors need ways to maintain awareness and preserve pedagogical judgment without relying on repeated search. The more open-ended and historically responsive a course becomes, the more central monitoring and organization are to pedagogical durability.
4.5 From Framework to Infrastructure
The D-M-O framework identifies distinct curatorial functions; it does not prescribe a single technological solution. Different instructors and institutions may support discovery, monitoring, organization, retrieval, and application through different tools. The essential requirement is functional separation. A durable curatorial system must help instructors distinguish between finding sources, following them, retaining selected materials, preserving pedagogical judgment, and retrieving resources for teaching.
This distinction sets up the practical question addressed in the next section: what kinds of external curatorial infrastructure can support these functions when platforms do not? RSS monitoring and social bookmarking provide one useful example because they separate source awareness from pedagogical organization. RSS makes new repository activity visible without requiring repeated search. Social bookmarking records selected items, annotations, tags, and evaluative judgments in a form that can support later retrieval. Their value lies less in the specific tools than in the curatorial logic they make visible: monitoring and organization are different activities, and pedagogical durability depends on linking them without collapsing them.
5. External Curatorial Infrastructures
The D-M-O framework identifies distinct curatorial functions, but these functions require infrastructural support to become durable teaching practices. Platform-native systems provide partial support for discovery, subscription, saving, and recommendation, but they rarely preserve the instructor-defined relationships among sources, selected items, pedagogical judgment, course context, and future use. For this reason, instructors often need external curatorial infrastructures: lightweight systems that allow monitoring and organization to be separated, linked, and sustained over time.
The purpose of this section is not to recommend a particular toolset or provide a procedural guide. Rather, it uses specific tools to make visible the functional distinction between monitoring and organization, and to show why that distinction matters for platformed educational media that accumulate through productive repositories.
The term external does not imply that these infrastructures must be technically complex or institutionally separate from everyday teaching practice. Rather, it signals that they operate outside the default organizational logic of the platform. A video platform may host a repository, recommend related videos, notify subscribers of new uploads, and allow users to save items to playlists. These functions can be useful, but they remain structured by the platform’s interface, data model, recommendation priorities, and account architecture. External curatorial infrastructures allow educators to impose instructional categories, cross-platform relationships, evaluative notes, and retrieval pathways that platforms do not supply.
The need for such infrastructures becomes clear once monitoring and organization are distinguished. Monitoring requires a way to remain aware of new activity from known sources without repeatedly searching for them or manually checking each repository. Organization requires a way to retain selected materials, annotate their pedagogical value, and index them for future retrieval. When these functions are handled only within platform-native systems, they tend to blur together. Subscribing, saving, liking, playlisting, and searching may all occur within the same interface, but they do not necessarily create a durable teaching library. They keep media within reach, but they do not reliably preserve why a resource mattered, how it might be used, or where it belongs within a broader course ecology.
RSS monitoring and social bookmarking provide a useful example of how external curatorial infrastructure can separate and link these functions. RSS supports monitoring by allowing curators to follow known sources as they publish new material. Rather than relying on memory, repeated search, or algorithmic resurfacing, an instructor can use RSS aggregation to maintain low-cost awareness of activity across multiple repositories. This awareness does not require immediate evaluation or use. It simply keeps source activity visible in a consolidated space, reducing dependence on platform feeds and manual checking.
RSS warrants particular attention because it is not merely another possible application within the framework. It is unusually well matched to the monitoring problem created by repository-level accumulation. Once instructional media are understood as products of evolving repositories rather than as isolated items, educators need a way to maintain awareness of source activity over time. RSS supports this function directly: it is source-based, update-oriented, relatively lightweight, and external to platform recommendation systems. Its value lies not in novelty or popularity, but in its alignment with the temporal structure of monitoring.
Although RSS is often treated as a legacy technology, its core affordances align closely with contemporary concerns in platformed educational media: source-based monitoring, user-controlled aggregation, chronological awareness of new production, and partial independence from platform recommendation systems. Its diminished cultural visibility should not be confused with functional irrelevance. Platform feeds and recommendation systems reduced the everyday visibility of RSS, but they did not replace its source-monitoring function for educational curation. The apparent anachronism of RSS is therefore analytically revealing. Its marginalization reflects the dominance of platform feeds, not the disappearance of the monitoring problem it was designed to address.
The significance of RSS is therefore limited but important. It does not solve discovery, evaluation, organization, retrieval, or application. Nor does it eliminate platform dependency. Instead, it isolates and supports one curatorial function that becomes increasingly important when media accumulate through productive repositories: maintaining instructor-defined awareness of known sources over time. This narrowness is precisely why it is useful within the D-M-O framework. RSS supports monitoring without pretending to replace the pedagogical judgment required at other stages.
Social bookmarking supports a different function. It allows educators to retain selected materials and attach pedagogical metadata to them: tags, brief annotations, course associations, conceptual labels, evaluative cues, or notes about classroom use. Unlike platform “save” functions, which typically preserve an item within the platform’s own interface, social bookmarking can support cross-platform organization. A video, podcast episode, data visualization, public lecture, article, or interactive resource can be indexed within a shared organizational scheme. This makes bookmarking less a storage device than a form of externalized pedagogical memory.
Used together, RSS and social bookmarking operationalize the D-M-O distinction. RSS maintains awareness of repositories after discovery has occurred. Social bookmarking preserves selected items and the pedagogical judgments attached to them. The two functions are connected but not identical. New content may be monitored without being saved. Saved content may come from monitored repositories, episodic discovery, professional sharing, or prior course use. Separating these functions prevents awareness from being confused with adoption and prevents saving from being confused with organization.
This separation is especially important because educators often work under conditions of constrained attention. It is unrealistic to expect instructors to evaluate every new item from every relevant source as it appears. A monitoring infrastructure allows new production to remain visible without demanding immediate action. Periodic review can then become selective: the instructor scans new items, retains only those with possible pedagogical value, and records enough context to support future retrieval. In this way, external infrastructure distributes curatorial labor across time rather than concentrating it during moments of urgent course preparation.
The value of such infrastructure is not limited to individual efficiency. It also changes the character of instructional media use. Without monitoring and organization, course preparation often depends on reactive searching: the instructor identifies a need, searches for a resource, evaluates available results, and uses or discards what appears. This can work for isolated teaching moments, but it offers little continuity across semesters. With curatorial infrastructure, instructors can build cumulative teaching libraries. Materials encountered in one context can be retained for another. Repositories identified during one course can remain visible for future courses. Classroom experience can feed back into notes, tags, and evaluative labels that make later retrieval easier.
External curatorial infrastructures also support pedagogical judgment in ways that platform metrics cannot. Platforms may indicate popularity, recency, watch time, or engagement, but these signals do not necessarily correspond to instructional usefulness. A video with modest public visibility may be highly effective for illustrating a concept; a widely recommended video may be too long, too superficial, too ideologically narrow, or poorly matched to a learning objective. Instructor-defined annotations and tags allow pedagogical relevance to be recorded independently of platform visibility. They preserve local judgments that would otherwise remain tacit or be lost after the immediate teaching moment.
As a worked operational example, the authors developed a demonstration RSS dashboard and social bookmarking archive organized around illustrative sociology and economics video repositories. The dashboard aggregates feeds from selected repositories, allowing new uploads to be monitored at the source level rather than rediscovered through repeated platform searches. The bookmarking archive records selected repositories and videos with tags and annotations that preserve pedagogical judgment for later retrieval. These materials are not presented as an evaluated instructional intervention or as a prescribed toolset, but as illustrative infrastructure that makes the D-M-O distinction visible in practice. Demonstration materials are available at https://www.protopage.com/2026millercohenmiller#OVRs_Sociology, https://www.protopage.com/2026millercohenmiller#OVRs_Economics, and https://pinboard.in/u:2026millercohenmiller/.
Materials availability note: The demonstration dashboard and bookmarking archive are provided as illustrative examples of curatorial infrastructure. They are not analyzed as human-subjects data and are not presented as evidence of instructional effectiveness.
The same logic can support collaborative curation. Departments, teaching teams, faculty learning communities, libraries, or centers for teaching and learning may develop shared repository lists, tagging conventions, or curated teaching libraries. Such systems need not impose uniform pedagogy. They can provide common infrastructure while allowing instructors to adapt materials to specific courses and student populations. Shared curation may be especially valuable in large programs, interdisciplinary fields, or substantive-topic courses where relevant media are widely distributed across platforms and disciplinary boundaries.
This point also clarifies why the framework is technology-agnostic but not functionally indifferent. RSS readers and social bookmarking systems are examples, not universal prescriptions. The underlying issue is not whether instructors use a particular application, but whether their systems preserve the functional distinction among discovery, monitoring, organization, retrieval, and application. Different educators may use RSS dashboards, email alerts, newsletters, citation managers, spreadsheets, shared databases, learning management systems, collaborative documents, digital notebooks, AI-assisted search tools, or institutional repositories. These systems vary in durability, portability, cost, and usability. Their pedagogical value depends on whether they support source awareness, selective retention, contextual annotation, and future retrieval.
Technology-agnostic design is important because educational technologies change. Tools are discontinued, platforms alter interfaces, search functions degrade, export options disappear, and institutional systems are replaced. If a curatorial system depends entirely on a single proprietary platform, accumulated pedagogical memory may become fragile. By contrast, systems organized around functions rather than brands are more resilient. Monitoring can migrate from one feed reader or alert system to another. Bookmarks and tags can be exported, reorganized, or translated into new systems. The durable element is not the tool itself, but the instructor-defined structure of pedagogical judgment.
Emerging AI tools are likely to affect these infrastructures, but they do not eliminate the need for them. AI systems may assist with summarization, tagging, transcription, recommendation, clustering, and retrieval. They may reduce the labor required to scan newly published materials or identify possible connections among saved resources. Yet such tools are most useful when they operate on already identified sources, accumulated collections, and meaningful metadata. AI can accelerate parts of the curatorial process, but it cannot determine pedagogical value independently of instructional purpose, course context, student needs, or disciplinary judgment. In this sense, AI is better understood as a possible layer within curatorial infrastructure than as a replacement for curation.
The broader implication is that pedagogical durability depends on infrastructural support for memory, not simply on expanded access to media. Platformed educational environments make more content available than instructors can meaningfully process through search alone. External curatorial infrastructures help convert that abundance into usable teaching resources by separating the labor of staying aware from the labor of selecting, annotating, and retrieving. They make it possible for educational media to accumulate not only on platforms, but within instructor- and institution-defined systems of pedagogical use.
The next section returns to the article’s broader argument. Platformed educational media environments have expanded the visibility and availability of instructional materials, but they have not solved the problem of pedagogical durability. The D-M-O framework, extended through retrieval and application, identifies the curatorial labor required to make digital media usable across time. External infrastructures matter because they support that labor without reducing it to platform engagement, individual memory, or repeated search.
6. Conclusion: Curation, Platform Dependency, and Pedagogical Durability
Platformed educational media environments have transformed the conditions under which instructional resources are found, followed, preserved, and reused. The problem educators face is not simply that there is too much content, nor that instructors lack access to useful materials. The deeper issue is that platform systems make educational media visible without necessarily making them pedagogically durable. They support search, recommendation, subscription, and circulation, but they provide limited support for the cumulative work of monitoring sources, preserving instructional judgment, organizing materials across contexts, retrieving them under teaching constraints, and applying them in meaningful pedagogical situations.
This article has developed the Discovery-Monitoring-Organization framework to clarify that work. Discovery, monitoring, and organization are often treated as a single activity: finding useful material online. Yet they operate across different temporal horizons and require different forms of support. Discovery is episodic and visibility-dependent. Monitoring is ongoing and source-oriented. Organization is selective, interpretive, and retrieval-oriented. When these stages are collapsed into repeated search, educational media use remains fragile. Instructors may encounter useful resources, but those resources do not necessarily become part of a cumulative teaching repertoire.
The broader DMORA sequence–Discovery, Monitoring, Organization, Retrieval, and Application–extends this argument by emphasizing that curation is pedagogically meaningful only when it supports use. Materials become valuable not because they are saved, but because they can be found again and integrated into teaching. Retrieval lowers the friction of returning to previously identified resources; application connects those resources to explanation, illustration, discussion, analysis, and student engagement. Repeated cycles of retrieval and application then feed back into organization, allowing instructors to refine tags, notes, evaluations, and teaching libraries over time. In this sense, curation is not a preliminary task that occurs before teaching. It is part of the ongoing infrastructure of teaching.
The framework’s broader relevance is tied to the rise of repository-level accumulation. Earlier approaches to instructional video often centered on individual media objects: a clip, documentary, lecture, or short video selected for a particular class. That model remains useful, but it no longer captures the structure of platformed educational media. Online video repositories now multiply and continue producing. Their pedagogical significance lies not only in the items they contain, but in their status as evolving sources. As the unit of curation shifts from isolated media objects to productive repositories, monitoring becomes central rather than optional.
This shift helps explain why D-M-O is more than a commonsense list of curatorial tasks. The individual activities it names are familiar, but repository-level accumulation makes their differentiation newly consequential. When a teacher uses a single clip once, discovery and application may appear to exhaust the problem. When instructors work with many productive repositories across courses and semesters, discovery, monitoring, organization, retrieval, and application become distinct sites of possible failure. The framework identifies where platformed educational media fail to become durable teaching resources and what kinds of infrastructural support are needed at each stage.
The framework also shows why platform visibility should not be mistaken for educational value. Platforms organize attention through metrics, recommendations, personalization, ranking, and interface design. These systems can surface useful materials, but they do not evaluate resources according to course aims, disciplinary expectations, student needs, or pedagogical timing. A highly visible item may have limited instructional value; a weakly visible repository may become central to a course once it is recognized, monitored, and organized. Pedagogical relevance is therefore not given by the platform. It is produced through instructor judgment and sustained through curatorial infrastructure.
The apparent anachronism of RSS is instructive in this regard. RSS is not significant here because it is novel, fashionable, or sufficient as a general solution to educational media curation. Its significance lies in the curatorial function it isolates. It supports source-based monitoring at precisely the moment when platformed educational media have become increasingly repository-based. Its decline in mainstream visibility reflects the rise of platform feeds and recommendation systems, not the disappearance of the monitoring problem it was designed to address. In this sense, RSS helps clarify a broader argument: platformed educational media environments make content visible, but they do not necessarily support instructor-defined awareness of productive sources over time.
The article’s focus on online instructional video has made these dynamics visible, but the argument extends beyond video. Podcasts, newsletters, public lectures, open educational resources, interactive graphics, data dashboards, and other digital materials share repository-like features when they persist and accumulate over time. They all raise similar questions: How are useful sources discovered? How is new production monitored? How are selected items retained? How is pedagogical judgment preserved? How can materials be retrieved later, and how are they translated into teaching? The D-M-O framework provides a vocabulary for analyzing these questions across media formats.
The framework also reframes the role of tools. RSS readers, social bookmarking systems, dashboards, shared databases, citation managers, learning management systems, and AI-assisted interfaces are not valuable because they are novel or because any one of them offers a universal solution. They are valuable when they help educators separate and connect distinct curatorial functions. A durable system supports source awareness without demanding constant attention, organization without losing pedagogical context, retrieval without repeated reconstruction, and application without making curation an end in itself. The underlying issue is therefore infrastructural rather than merely technical.
This has implications for how institutions understand teaching labor. The labor of finding, following, evaluating, annotating, and organizing educational media is often invisible because it occurs outside the classroom and outside formal measures of instructional preparation. Yet this labor shapes what students encounter, how current examples enter courses, how instructors adapt to changing conditions, and how teaching materials accumulate across semesters. Treating curation as pedagogical labor makes visible a form of educational work that is often individualized, under-supported, and mistaken for ordinary digital competence.
Recognizing this labor also challenges deficit models of technological adoption. The difficulty educators face is not simply that some instructors are reluctant, outdated, or insufficiently skilled. Nor is it solved by assuming that students or younger faculty naturally manage digital resources well. The problem lies in the mismatch between platform systems optimized for visibility and educational practices that require durability. Instructors may be highly competent platform users while still lacking infrastructures that support long-term monitoring, organization, retrieval, and reuse. The issue is not individual failure but the absence of durable curatorial systems within platformed educational culture.
Future research could extend this framework in several directions. Comparative studies might examine how D-M-O practices vary across disciplines, institutional settings, national contexts, or media formats. Design-based research could investigate how instructors actually build and maintain curatorial infrastructures over time. Studies of collaborative curation could explore how departments, libraries, teaching centers, or professional associations support shared monitoring and organization. Research on AI-assisted educational media systems could examine when automation reduces curatorial burden and when it reintroduces opacity, platform dependency, or the collapse of distinct stages into apparently seamless retrieval.
The framework also invites more critical attention to platform dependency in education. As more instructional resources circulate through commercial platforms, educators gain access to enormous reservoirs of public material while becoming dependent on systems not designed around educational continuity. Search rankings change, interfaces are redesigned, channels disappear, recommendation systems shift, and saved materials may become difficult to retrieve or contextualize. External curatorial infrastructures do not eliminate these dependencies, but they can reduce their pedagogical consequences by preserving instructor-defined organization outside the platform’s immediate logic.
Ultimately, the contribution of D-M-O/DMORA is to show that pedagogical curation under conditions of platformed accumulation is not a single act of finding, saving, or using content. It is a sequence of curatorial practices through which productive sources are discovered, monitored, organized, retrieved, and applied. As online instructional repositories multiply and continue producing, the unit of pedagogical attention shifts from isolated media items to evolving sources. The central challenge for educators, institutions, and educational media scholarship is therefore not only how to expand access to digital resources, but how to make accumulating resources pedagogically durable.
Ethics and data statement
This article is conceptual and methodological in nature and does not report original human-subjects research. No new datasets were generated or analyzed. The demonstration dashboard and bookmarking archive are provided only as worked examples of curatorial infrastructure.
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Acknowledgments
This article is conceptual and methodological in nature and does not report original human-subjects research. No new datasets were generated or analyzed for this study. AI-assisted tools were used to improve clarity and flow during editing. The authors are solely responsible for the content of the article and its accuracy.