Artigo Revisado por pares

Beyond workforce preparation: contested visions of ‘twenty-first century’ education reform

2018; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 40; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/01596306.2018.1549702

ISSN

1469-3739

Autores

Ethan Chang,

Tópico(s)

Teacher Education and Leadership Studies

Resumo

Contrary to educational policy and research assumptions about an immanent 'twenty-first century' future, this article uses the concept of 'sociotechnical imaginaries' to trace how nonprofit actors in California invented and materialized distinctive visions of educational progress. Drawing on interview and ethnographic fieldnote data, I illustrate two contrasting sociotechnical visions: A Silicon Valley vision that aimed to reduce inequalities in test-based outcomes by disseminating 'achievement technologies'; and an Oakland vision that aspired to address systemic environmental, economic and educational inequities using 'civic technologies'. The diversity of these futures, and the distinctive kinds of digital technologies that co-produced these visions, trouble assumptions about 'technology' as an unquestioned good and problematize constructions of the 'twenty-first century' as an ostensibly shared, democratic future. I conclude by encouraging educational researchers to clarify a politics of the 'twenty-first century' and explore how 'bounded imaginaries', like those evident in the Oakland case, offer a potentially fruitful basis for reframing global education technology policies.

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