Distrusting Educational Technology
Critical Questions for Changing Times
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:20th Nov '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£135.00(9780415707992)
This book offers a critical perspective on the integration of digital technology in education, highlighting its alignment with neo-liberal values and individualism. Distrusting Educational Technology calls for a reevaluation of these tools.
The book Distrusting Educational Technology critically examines the prevailing optimism surrounding digital technology in education. It challenges the assumption that these tools are neutral and beneficial, revealing how they often reinforce neo-liberal values that compromise the public nature of education. By drawing on diverse theoretical and empirical perspectives, the author argues that the push towards individualism in education is a reflection of broader capitalist tendencies in the twenty-first century.
Through a thorough analysis of various digital technologies currently employed in educational settings, Distrusting Educational Technology delves into the implications of virtual education, open courses, digital games, and social media. Each of these technologies is scrutinized to uncover the underlying ideologies that shape their use and the consequences for learners and educators alike. The book emphasizes the need for a critical understanding of how technology influences educational practices and outcomes.
In its concluding sections, the book offers practical recommendations for creating fairer and more equitable forms of educational technology. It serves as a vital resource for educators, policymakers, and anyone interested in the intersection of technology and education. Distrusting Educational Technology provides a comprehensive critique that is essential for navigating the complex landscape of contemporary education.
"Neil Selwyn’s book is a superb analysis of the key reasons to ‘distrust’ many aspects of the use and application of technology as represented to teachers, students and educationalists. His book is not a simple or crude polemic attack directed at ‘technology’ digital or otherwise, it is in fact a work that promotes thinking and provokes reflection on many of our assumptions regarding the usefulness and application benefit for both the individual student and society of assuming that technology as such is a politically – ideologically free agent in all our lives and simply a ‘good thing’." - John Senior, Gifted Education International
“Beginning with Thomas Edison's 1913 proclamation that motion picture machines would replace books in the schools, a never-ending stream of boosters and self-styled reformers have sought to ‘revolutionize’ education through massive infusions of technology. Neil Selwyn's masterful study examines today's leading contenders – social media, gaming, open source, and others – revealing the dubious ideological, economic, and political agendas at the basis of their schemes. Clearly the best book on educational technology of this generation, it will shake the digital establishment to its core.” - Langdon Winner, author of The Whale and the Reactor and Thomas Phelan Professor of Humanities and Social Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
"Distrusting Educational Technology is exactly the kind of book that anyone concerned with major current trends in educational reform, policy, and practice needs at this time. It illuminates crucial questions and raises important cautions that tend to be ignored as we all too often assume that a technology driven education will solve most of our problems. Neil Selwyn has much to teach us about the dangers of easy technical solutions to complex social and educational problems." - Michael W. Apple, author of Can Education Change Society? and John Bascom Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Educational Policy Studies University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA
ISBN: 9780415708005
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 380g
196 pages