It is commonly asserted that “knowledge,” “information,” or more abstractly, “the networked” or “the postindustrial” are eponymous for our society, age, or economy. These broad and often unquestioned assertions have significant social and political implications. They bring with them urgent implications for all levels and forms of education—from the preparation of children as “knowledge builders,” through the reconfiguration of higher educational institutions, to support for different forms “lifelong learning.” This paper, appearing in Ubiquity in May critiques some of these ideologies or myths. It owes much to Frankfurt School member Jürgen Habermas (right), who is better known for his social theory than his hotdogs :-).
Critical Theory: Ideology Critique and the Myths of E-Learning
A Journal is (re)Born: Phenomenology & Practice
Phenomenology & Practice is an online, open-access journal journal dedicated to the study of the lived experience of professional and everyday human practices. This journal, for which I am both co-editor and technical editor, revives and expands Phenomenology + Pedagogy, which was founded by Dr. Max van Manen, and was published from 1983 to 1992. The first issue features papers from German, British and North American authors, and also from Max van Manen, the journal’s founding editor.
Reviving Forgotten Connections in Teacher Education
Earlier, I reported on the visit of Dr. Tone Saevi to TRU. Together with Dr. Diane Purvey and myself, Dr. Saevi taught a course that combined film and art together with an emphasis on the pedagogical relation. As a result of the rich experiences of the course, and through ongoing collaboration with Dr. Saevi a co-authored article reporting on the course is set to appear in an up-coming issue of the Journal of Curriculum Studies. In addition to an overview of the course, the paper also gives an account of the educational philosophy associated with the pedagogical relation, and explains how this philosophy was integrated with films and (other) works of art in the course. The submitted version of the document is provided.
The Tower of Hanoi and the Experience of Lived Number
Here’s a phenomenological study I wrote together with Krista Francis Poscente. It focuses on the nature and history of a particular kind of learning experience, namely young students’ engagement with the famous “Tower of Hanoi” puzzle. Considered a classical problem in both programming and artificial intelligence, this powerful “brain teaser” is widely available on the Web as a simulation, and is occasionally used in this and other forms for mathematics education. The study focuses on how “felt life” interpenetrates mathematical understanding and finds confirmation in brief experiential accounts of mathematicians themselves.
Internet Research Methods: A Canadian Perspective
Earlier in June and July, I had the pleasure of teaching a course with Maria Bakardjieva(right) at the Leopold Franzens Universität in Innsbruck, Austria.
It was a great experience to work with the issues (appropriate methodologies, timely research questions, research epistemologies) involved in studying the Internet in general.
Check out the course website, which has our presentations and other material.
Ethics and the Technologies of Empire
Recent and ongoing political and military developments have presented ethically-charged questions for both academics and technologists. Protests have recently rocked organizations like the American Psychological Association, and controversy has dogged high-tech work in cyber-cryptography. The question that often underlies this protest and contention is that of the complicity or resistance of researchers with the imperial projects of the American government. In consultation with Dr. Robert Teigrob, an assistant professor in American history at Ryerson University in Toronto (and a recent visitor at the SCOTT Centre), I developed a paper that looks at this question as it relates specifically to e-learning. The latest version is available as a PDF document. It is currently under review for publication of a special issue on technology, ethics and aesthetics of AI & Society.