Critical theorists subscribe to the Hegelian view that philosophical or critical reflection is retrospective, and for fear of becoming uncritical are generally against the idea that particular worldviews or ideologies should be propagated through formal education. This can make it difficult for the critical theorist to be anything other than negative about education, and perhaps with good reason: modern education is undergoing seismic changes which often manifest themselves as crises of commodification, corporatization, or the intrusion of extreme forms of technological modernity into educational institutions. Yet technological innovation raises pedagogical possibilities – many of them outside the academy – which are distinctly critical.
In this presentation I assess the state of the art in educational technology, focusing on approaches which identify as ‘open’. The kind of technological interventions in education typical of the last fifty years have often been centrally led and imposed, and thus representative of the encroachment of system imperatives into educational lifeworlds. However, recent technologies present new possibilities for a less linear and more lateral approach to education. While optimism about the pedagogical potential of new technologies must of course be tempered by remaining attentive to the dubious strategies and ideologies being employed by education policymakers. I focus on the case of open education to show how technological change is bringing about opportunities both for new and inclusive pedagogies, and for social critique. I appeal to Dewey, Freire and Illich to indicate some of the ways in which a radically democratic pedagogy rooted in information and communication technologies might stand as a bulwark to neo-liberal interventions in education, concluding with the suggestion that critical theorists should consider significant engagement with the design of learning system and communication technologies.
2. Main claims of this presentation
• Higher education is in transition
• Traditional learning theories based on closed environments: need for
new pedagogies based on open paradigm
• Academics should do more to engage with novel technologies and
embrace ‘openness’
3. Structure
• I. Contemporary higher education
• II. State of the art in educational technology
• III. Critical theory and educational technology
• IV. Openness
4. I. Higher Education
• Commodification of education
• Forced introduction of market forces
• Students seen as customers/consumers; tuition rising
• Education as means to employability
• Govt strategy: fund research according to ‘impact’
• Strategization of academia
5. I. Higher Education
• Technological and cultural change
• Increasing specialism among universities
– Elite institutions
– Mass university
– Niche institute
– Local university
• Division of research and teaching functions; career uncertainty
• Scholars less tied to particular institutions
• Scholars less tied to traditional dissemination
6. I. Higher Education
• ‘Massification’ of higher education
• Improved access to education and scholarly artefacts
• Emergence of new forms of technologically mediated inquiry: digital
humanities, interdisciplinarity, big data
• Rise of ubiquitous and informal learning
• Interest in markets opened up by technology
• Co-opting the language of ‘openness’
– Green & gold access
– The mixed picture with MOOCs
7. II. Educational Technology
• Broadly construed as study of all tools and techniques
employed in education
• Interdisciplinary
• A collaborative approach to iterative improvement of systems
and practices
8. Open Education Movement
• Belief that education is undergoing fundamental changes as a result of
innovation in digital technologies
• Improving access to education and widening participation by closing the
‘digital divide’ (Smith and Casserly, 2006)
• Encouraging collaboration across disciplinary boundaries and between
academics, educators, technologists and support staff within and
beyond educational institutions
• Argues that we need new pedagogies and systems for intellectual
property which are adequate for contemporary education
9. Open Education Movement
• A normative commitment to the idea that knowledge should be free,
both to access and develop.
Reducing cost of education at point of delivery
Providing courses which are free to participate in
Rethinking educational materials as open-access, OER
Supported by a range of Creative Commons licences
Research projects and policy initiatives taking place around the
globe
Working towards pedagogies which make use of new technology
10. Open Educational Resources (OER)
“OER are teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the
public domain or have been released under an intellectual property
license that permits their free use or re-purposing by others. Open
educational resources include full courses, course materials, modules,
textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools,
materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge.”
(Atkins et al, 2007:4)
Potential to catalyse a range of educational practices
11. Open Educational Practices
• ‘Openness’ in education necessarily shifts the focus from
content (OER) to practices (OEP) that are necessary for the
use of that content (Mackey & Jacobson, 2011; Weller, 2011).
• Assumption: learning is becoming more open, more complex
• OER as radical object
• OEP as radical practice
• Degrees of openness
The Open University's Institute of Educational Technology
McAndrew & Farrow (2012)
12. “Open Educational
Practices (OEP) are the
set of activities and
support around the
creation, use and
repurposing of Open
Educational Resources.
It also includes the
contextual settings
within which these
practices occur.”
Conole (2011)
13. III. Openness & Critique
• Critical theories share an interest in the critique of oppressive or
dominant economic and/or sociopolitical force
• Link between educational technology & critical theory generally
underexplored
• Feenberg (2002) suggests critical theory has been left out of the
debate over technology
• Kellner (2003) advocates radical restructuring of educational
systems
• Critical theories of education should have normative-utopian
dimensions (Nicholls & Allen-Brown, 1996)
14. III. Openness & Critique
• New ways of seeing, categorizing, mapping, connecting and
relating theory to practice (Kellner, 2003)
• Knowledge is fundamentally political and bound up with human
interest: critical theories strive towards emancipatory forms of
knowledge (Habermas, 1971)
• Rejection of idealist, elitist and oppressive elements of pedagogy
15. Dewey
• Education is fundamentally
pragmatic, with theory emerging
from practice
• Emphasis on freedom and
independence, not conformity
and memorization
16. Freire
• Leading advocate of
critical pedagogy
• Emancipatory, dialogical
approach which rejects
dominant values and
promotes
transformation
• Link knowledge to praxis
to bring about social
change
17. Illich
• Postindustrial model of
education
• Emphasis on ‘community
webs’; informal and
autonomous learning
networks
• Connectivism
18. Adorno
• Disabusing ideology ‘of
its pretention to
reality’ through
critique
• This forms the basis for
alternative forms of
understanding and
possibilities for action
19. Habermas
• Stresses
communicative aspects
of academia
• For Habermas the
university has a
centrality in the
symbolic reproduction
of the lifeworld
• Defence of systems
even in the face of
colonizing tendencies
21. The role of the university
• What role for the university envisaged by Humboldt or Schelling?
• Bildung is bigger than education [Erziehung]: complex concept
comprising educational, cultural and political perspectives, emphasizing
rationality, autonomy, self-activity and a culture of active participation
• A reflective, creative form of self-realization or self-cultivation achieved
with and through relations with others
• Unrestrained interplay between the individual and the world
• Fulfilling the innate human potential of the individual
• Education has a function; Bildung is a value in itself
• See Deimann & Farrow (2013)
22. Bildung (Modern)
• Bildung had a considerable impact on German educational thought and
has entered educational and political terminology
• Widely seen by the 1970s as ideologically compromised and without
empirical value; relaunched by Klafki (1985)
• Hegelian-Marxist tradition: criticism of capitalist model of knowledge
production: increase profits by treating learners as consumers rather
than active, reflective agents (Adorno, 1966; Leissman, 2006)
• In Germany, now a byword for education as business, framed in terms
of measurable competencies, though arguably currently undergoing a
renaissance (Prange, 2004)
The Open University's Institute of Educational Technology
23. IV. Openness: summary
• Obviously the relationship between technology and society is complex
and disputed
• Technology can now be used to perpetuate centrally controlled systems
or decentralized, informal, dialogues which support learning
• Resources for self-reflexive critique of commercialisation of education
and engaging in discourse about educational culture
• Need for new pedagogies which emphasize critical reflection,
autonomous inquiry and information literacy rather than instruction
and print literacies reproduced online
24. Open Education: Opportunities for Reflexivity
• New emphases on authenticity, autonomy
• New possibilities for articulation through participatory culture: social
media, identity, mobile, augmented reality
• Resources for self-reflexive critique of commercialisation of education
and engaging in discourse about educational culture
• OER has the potential to support critical thinking through access to a
rich base of learning materials from different contexts
• New pedagogies which may be involve re-appropriation or remixing of
educational materials
25. Critical Pedagogy: worries about e-learning
• Technology suspected of instrumental attitudes; being insufficiently
dialogic and mechanistic
• ‘Factory’ model response to the changing economic conditions of higher
education
• Automated models of education typically reproduce, rationalize and
perpetuate established forms of knowledge and ways of learning
• Technological determinism
• Myth of the knowledge economy (Friesen, 2008)
26. Being Open, Being Critical
• Researchers should consider only disseminating their work ‘in the
open’. (This may have career implications!)
• Need for sensitivity to the way that commercial providers are co-
opting the rhetoric of openness.
• Resistance to the commodification of knowledge
• Critical theory provides a way to question the background
assumptions, definitions and roles informing technological innovation
in education
• Conversely, openness in education provides fresh opportunity for
reflection, critique & building communities and sharing perspectives
27. References
• Adorno, T. W. (1966). Negative Dialektik. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag
• Atkins, D., Seely Brown, J., & Hammond, A. L. (2007). A review of the open educational resources (OER)
movement: Achievements, challenges, and new opportunities. San Francisco, CA: William and Flora Hewlett
Foundation. Retrieved from http://www.hewlett. org/uploads/files/ReviewoftheOERMovement.pdf
• Conole, G. (2011) Defining Open Educational Practices [online]. Available from http://e4innovation.com/?
p=373.
• Deimann, M. & Farrow, R. (2012) Bildung as a critical foundation for open education. Open Education:
Beyond Content. October 16-18, Vancouver, Canada.
• Feenberg, A. (2002). Transforming Technology: A Critical Theory Revisited. Oxford University Press.
• Friesen, N. (2008). Critical Theory: Ideology Critique and the Myths of E-Learning. Ubiquity (June). Available
from http://ubiquity.acm.org/issue.cfm?volume=2008&issue=June.
• Habermas, J. (1971). Knowledge and Human Interests. trans. by Jeremy J. Shapiro. Boston: Beacon. Press.
• Kellner, D. (2003). Towards a critical theory of education. Available from
http://pages.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/kellner/papers/edCT2003.htm.
28. References
• Klafki, W. (1985). Neue Studien zur Bildungstheorie und Didaktik: Zeitgemäße Allgemeinbildung und kritisch-
konstruktive Didaktik. Weinheim: Beltz.
• Liessmann, K. (2006). Theorie der Unbildung: Die Irrtümer der Wissensgesellschaft. Wien: Zsolnay.
• Mackey, Thomas and Trudi Jacobson (2011). “Reframing Information Literacy as a Metaliteracy.” College
and Research Libraries 72, no. 1: 62-78.
• McAndrew, P. & Farrow, R. (2013) ‘Open Education Research: From the Practical to the Theoretical’ in
McGreal, R., Kinuthia, W. and Marshall, S. (eds) Open Educational Resources: Innovation, Research and
Practice. Commonwealth of Learning and Athabasca University, Vancouver. pp.65-78
• Nichols, R., & Allen-Brown, V. (1996). Critical theory and educational technology. In D. Jonassen (Ed.),
Handbook of research for educational communications and technology. New York: Simon and Shuster
Macmillan, 226-252.
• Prange, K. (2004). Bildung: a paradigm regained? European Educational Research Journal, 3(2), 501-509.
http://dx.doi.org/10.2304/eerj.2004.3.2.5
• Smith, M.S. & Casserly, C.M., (2006). The promise of open educational resources. Change: The Magazine of
Higher Learning, 38(5), 8–17.
• Weller, M. (2011) The Digital Scholar: How Technology is Transforming Scholarly Practice. Bloomsbury
Academic.