The VCAA study design requires analysis of the influences on a specific, selected community and — critically — the interplay between these influences. Three categories of influence are examined: (1) factors that influenced feelings of belonging, (2) ICT, and (3) economic, social, political, and geographical factors. Each is addressed in subsequent KKs; this note provides the overarching framework for understanding how they interact.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The influences on a community’s experience do not operate independently — they interact with and amplify one another. Strong sociological analysis identifies not just the individual influences but the connections between them. The word “interplay” in the study design is a signal to address these connections explicitly.
The Three Categories of Influence
| Category |
Key Questions |
| Belonging factors |
What makes members feel connected or excluded? How do belonging factors vary between members? |
| ICT |
How does digital technology shape how the community communicates, maintains itself, and connects with the wider world? |
| Economic, social, political, geographical |
What structural forces shape the community’s material conditions and members’ capacity to participate? |
The Interplay Between Influences
The concept of interplay is central to this KK. Influences interact in the following ways:
- Geographical factors shape ICT use: A geographically concentrated community (like Springvale) has a strong physical foundation that ICT supplements. A geographically dispersed community (like a diaspora spread across multiple cities) depends more heavily on ICT for cohesion.
- Economic factors shape belonging: Economic disadvantage reduces capacity to participate in community activities; conversely, the economic vitality of an ethnic business district (Springvale) strengthens community identity and belonging.
- Political factors shape belonging through ICT: Political decisions about immigration are amplified through social media; community members’ sense of belonging can be rapidly undermined by a viral news story about immigration policy.
- Social factors and ICT: Social norms around technology use vary within communities (first-generation migrants may use different platforms than second-generation); this shapes how different groups within the community experience ICT-mediated belonging.
Using the Vietnamese-Australian community in Springvale as an example:
- Belonging is strongly influenced by cultural practices (Tết, food, language, religion) and by community institutions (temples, community associations, language schools)
- ICT enables diaspora maintenance (connections to Vietnam and to Vietnamese communities in other Australian cities) but also reflects a generational divide (WeChat for first generation; Instagram and TikTok for second generation)
- Geographical concentration reinforces community cohesion by enabling face-to-face interaction and supporting ethnic businesses
- Economic factors include the economic vitality of the Vietnamese business district (positive for belonging) but also economic disadvantage in some households (reduces participation capacity)
- Political factors include the refugee heritage (creating a particular relationship with the Australian state) and the multicultural policy framework (generally enabling)
The Interplay
- Geographical concentration + economic vitality → strong community institutions (temple, language school) → stronger belonging
- ICT + diaspora networks → maintains language and cultural connection → slows cultural assimilation → preserves non-material culture
- Political policies (temporary visas) + economic vulnerability → some community members feel precarious → reduces sense of belonging
VCAA FOCUS: The phrase “interplay between these influences” is directly from the study design. In your response, explicitly use a connective analysis (“this geographic factor is compounded by…” / “the economic factor interacts with ICT because…”) rather than simply listing influences separately.