dark side of care (1)

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Vivienne Bozalek - UWC [email protected] Daniela Gachago - CPUT [email protected] Kathy Watters - UWC [email protected]

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● Background and context

● Emerging technologies project

● The dark side of care as a framework

● Research findings

● Conclusion

South African context

Emerging technologies project

Research and Development

Expenditure

Research and development is what scientific and technological and medical companies engage in to find new designs. This can be an expensive pursuit, given the costs of materials, machines and skilled specialists. Yet the development of a new design can bring financial rewards, as well as the benefits of developing a new medicine, gadget or piece of software.

In 2002, US$289 billion was spent on research and development in the United States; in the same year there was practically no research and development spending in Angola.

The question of how to make higher education more inclusive has been a

central concern internationally over the past two decades (Drakich, Taylor &

Bankier 1995). In South Africa, inclusivity has been even more of a concern

since the first democratic election given the structuring of educational

opportunities on the basis of race under apartheid.

South African post-apartheid policy documents, reflect an intention to

embrace values such as democracy, openness and a human rights approach

to education (Department of Education, 1997; 2001, a&b). However, there

remains a disjuncture between these policy intentions and the actual

experiences of students and staff in the higher education sector.

South African concerns in higher

education

The continuing impact of apartheid-designed

segregated higher education institutions and lack of

imaginative attention to issues of difference in

teaching and learning remains a stumbling block for

achieving participatory parity amongst students in

this sector.

SA concerns in higher education

The South African higher education landscape is still affected by the historical inequities of past policies, and many students and Higher Education Institutions (HEIs), particularly the Historically Disadvantaged Institutions (HDIs) are affected by scarce resources and

poverty. Higher education institutions themselves are also unequally placed with regard to resources and the students that they enroll (Bozalek & Boughey, 2012)

Challenges facing SA HEIs

Involves the following research partners:

A group of eight differently placed HEIs in South Africa four in the Western Cape (Cape Peninsular University of Technology (CPUT), Stellenbosch University (SU), University of Cape Town (UCT) and the University of the Western Cape (UWC) as well as the Universities of Fort Hare, Rhodes, Witwatersrand and Pretoria.

An international NGO – the Open Courseware Consortium

The Research Team Members

(May 2011)

Funded by the South African National Research Foundation (NRF) for a period of three years

Overarching questionHow could qualitative outcomes in education be realised by using emerging technologies to transform teaching and learning interactions and paradigms across higher education institutions in South Africa?

Qualitative outcomes

Stimulating learning environments where:

• learners are empowered, safe to express themselves, ask and respond to peers’ questions without feeling oppressed, domesticated or silenced;

• there is encouragement to ‘think aloud’, try out new things and reflect on lessons learnt

• the psychological distance between knowledgeable others (peers and experts) is reduced

• Learners are equal partners in knowledge production (participatory parity) (Henschke, 2010)

Characteristics of ET1. May or may not be new technologies

2. Evolving organism, that exist in the state of coming into being

3. Go through hype cycles

4. They are not yet fully understood

5. They are not yet fully researched

6. They are potentially disruptive, but that potential is mostly unfulfilled Veletsianos, 2010:13-17

Veletsianos (2010, p. 17) sees ETs as transcending academic disciplines and describes ETs as ‘tools, technologies, innovations, and advancements utilized in diverse educational settings to serve varied education-related purposes’. We tended to favour this definition above others, as it emphasises the context-specific nature of ETs, which we regard as particularly important for our discussion on interdisciplinary Southern perspectives and experiences.

Sub-questions addressed by the project

In what ways are emerging technologies used in innovative pedagogical practices to transform teaching and learning across South African HEIs?

What can be learnt from an in-depth examination of case studies of innovative practice in a sample of HEIs in which these emergent technologies are being used?

What are the conscious and tacit theoretical assumptions guiding higher educators' teaching and learning practices?

What models of innovative theory and practice can be developed from the identification of transformative teaching and learning interactions and paradigms across the HEIs?

Phase 1 of Project - Survey

Ethics clearance

Literature reviews and theoretical frameworks – Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) (Engeström, 2005, Leontiev, 1981)

Survey of Emerging Technologies and Teaching and Learning Practices in SA HEIs

This survey answered sub-question 1: In what ways are emerging technologies used in innovative pedagogical practices to transform teaching and learning across South African HEIs?

Design and piloting of questionnaire (May-July 2011)

Target group: lecturers that are known to be open to/engaged with technology

Sent by email to contacts in all public HEIs institution, snowball sampling

Three parts to questionnaire – demographic, tools used, open questions re practices

Open ended questions answered by respondents

What is the most innovative pedagogical practice that you used recently

using ICTs (in the last two years)?

What prompted you to initiate or use this pedagogical practice? (own

motivation, addressing a specific problem;

Please describe your teaching context in which you used this practice

(level of programme, discipline, size of class, students’ characteristics)?

Which technology/tool did you use? Please describe

How did you come to use this specific technology? (eg heard from

colleagues, from workshops, from students, from international

conferences) ;

What impact did it have on your teaching and the learning of your

students?

Did you use other technologies?

Phase 2- Institutional Case Studies

In-depth case studies of innovative pedagogical practices using emergent technologies to enhance teaching and learning in South African higher education, with particular emphasis on those that would be useful and affordable in resource scarce contexts. These case studies were used to answer the second and third research sub-questions:

What can be learnt from an in-depth examination of case studies of innovative practice in a sample of HEIs in which these emergent technologies are being used? and

What are the conscious and tacit theoretical assumptions guiding higher educators' teaching and learning practices?

Survey at all 22 HEIs in SA – 262 responses

20 indepth interviews selected from survey

responses – analysed for this paper by three of

the research team members

Seven interviews selected which exemplify

constraints and enablements for achieving

qualitative outcomes

Qualitative outcomes

Stimulating learning environments where:

• learners are empowered, safe to express themselves, ask and respond to peers’ questions without feeling oppressed, domesticated or silenced;

• there is encouragement to ‘think aloud’, try out new things and reflect on lessons learnt

• the psychological distance between knowledgeable others (peers and experts) is reduced

• Learners are equal partners in knowledge production (participatory parity) (Henschke, 2010)

Seven case studies

Tools - blogs, LMS, google drive, digital stories and facebook

groups

Disciplines – blended learning Mphil health sciences course

HAI, collaborative lecture notes in a Physiotherapy course

HDI, Obstetrics and Gynaecology reflective practice HAI (3),

social work HAI & HDI(2), online Education education PhD

reading group HAI (1), natural science – Biodiversity adaptive

management of a fish tank HDI (1)

● paternalism - power differentials between care-giver

and care receiver - infantalising

● parochialism - caring for only those close to oneself

Both are distortions of responsibilities that people should

appropriately assume

(Tronto, 1993)

Powerful position of caregiver re care receiver

Knows and anticipates needs

Sense of importance re own role

Danger of student becoming infantilised

Duflo – necessity of state to take certain

decisions for people especially in relation to

basic needs

Care restricted to private or intimate realm

(Robinson, 1999, 2011; Tronto, 2013)

Dyadic mother-child relationships

Concerned with those close to us rather than

distant others

Young’s socially connected responsibility

regarding issues that affect all across

distances

Caring about (attentiveness)

Caring for (responsibility)

Care-giving (competence)

Care receiving (responsiveness)

Caring with (trust and solidarity) (Tronto, 2013)

Need integrity – if for example responsibility is

foregrounded in teaching > patronising

● Paternalism vs student agency

● Protectionism and expert knowledge

● Recognition of vulnerability and the power of

interdisciplinarity

● Parochialism/dyadic vs peer-to-peer/cross disciplinary

learning

They are active participants in the

process, it’s no longer a passive

exercise. They self-select, I don’t

like to impose those things. (KR)

Many of our students come from very

poor home backgrounds and also do

not the best educational backgrounds

in terms of their formative schooling.

And so my teaching philosophy is a

very developmental one (RJ)

Many of our students take their

Wizard card that they get, which

is supposed to be used for

buying food and books and they

buy stuff and they sell it and

send the money home. (BVA)

What we’re trying to do is that

students have their own

personal information which

they turn into knowledge and

they’re learning to share the

knowledge through blogs. (KR)

… And then I’ll have prepared a

PowerPoint of key point bullets or

questions for reading. And then I sort

of think maybe I manage it too much;

maybe I should just shut-up more.

maybe I’m posting too many things

so my voice is too dominant. (KMS)

I totally let the so-called

knowledgeable students assist – I

mean, they do, they just jump in.

They would sometimes be working

later at night than I am – so there

would be a question and X would

just jump in and the next morning I

would see, ...that’s way better than I

could ever say it. So that really is

my style. (BPJ)

I have a little impairment and so technology has

changed my life for me because material that

wasn’t accessible to me is now accessible, so it’s

just lifted me to a whole new space and put me

on an even footing with other people, where

before I would want to explore something and

just couldn’t because even just finding books in

the library was always difficult because I couldn’t

see what was on other shelves and reading.

(MV)

...how do we teach measuring for wheelchair alignment,

because that was one specific module someone was

developing. So I can’t really comment. I can comment on the

technologies but the other one will say, ‘Listen, this is actually

very good and it’s needed.’ And the others would say, ‘Oh,

that’s interesting, we don’t do that but we have this thing and

we can also use it in this way.’ (BPJ)

Ethics of care lens useful for analysis of the constraints and

enablements towards qualitative outcomes in teaching and

learning practices using emerging technologies which

higher educators engaged in

The dark side of care is an important consideration for

teaching and learning and democratic classrooms

● Useful framework to look at teaching in HE

● Some find it difficult to relinquish control

● Non-expert might have positive impact – particularly in deparochialising and

democratising the curriculum

● Cross-disciplinarity and multiple participants/facilitators also beneficial

● Choice of technology and affordances of tools is also important for democracy and

allowing student to take control of learning and collaborative work

● We may not be conscious of paternalism, parochialism, protectionism due to

current HE discourses of 'under- and unpreparedness’ – inadvertantly inhibit

responses from care receivers (students) due to superior knowledge

● Could use it to self-reflect and for professional development

Bozalek, V. & Boughey, C. (2012). (Mis)Framing Higher Education in South Africa. Social Policy & Administration, 46(6):688-703.

Department of Education. (1997). Education White Paper 3: A programme for the transformation of higher education. Pretoria: DoE .

Department of Education (2001a) The National Plan for Higher Education. Pretoria: Government Printer.

Department of Education (2001b) The Restructuring of the Higher Education System in South Africa. Pretoria: Government Printer.

Drakich, J., Taylor, M. and Bankier, J. (1995). Academic freedom is the inclusive university. In S. Richer and L. Weir (eds), Beyond Political Correctness: Towards the inclusive university. Toronto:

Toronto University Press. pp. 118-135.

Duflo, E. (2012). "Human Values and the Design of the Fight against Poverty" Tanner Lecture 1. May 2 2012 Harvard University.

Engeström, Y. (2005). Developmental Work Research - Expanding Activity Theory in Practice. Berlin: Lehmans Media.

Johnson, L., Adams Becker, S., Estrada, V., Freeman, A. (2014). NMC Horizon Report: 2014 Higher Education Edition. Austin, Texas: The NewMedia Consortium.

Henschke, J. A. (2010). Bringing Together Personal Learning, Higher Education Institutions Elements, and Global Support for a Re-Orientation towards a Focus on Lifelong Learning and Education. In

V. Wang (Ed.), Encyclopedia for Using Technology in Adult and Career Education, IGI Global, Hershey, June 2010.

Leontiev, A.N. (1981). The problem of activity in psychology. In J.V. Wertsch. (Ed.), The concept of activity in Soviet psychology. (pp.37-71).Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe.

Robinson, Fiona 1999. Globalizing care: Ethics, feminist theory and international relations. Oxford: Westview Books.

Robinson, F. (2011). The ethics of care: A feminist approach to human security. Philadelphia.

Tronto, J. (1993). Moral boundaries. A political argument for an ethic of care. London,:Routledge.

Tronto, J.( 2013). Caring democracy: Markets, equality and justice. New York: New York University Press.

Veletsianos, G. (2010). Emerging Technologies in Distance Education. Edmonton: AU Press.

● Bozalek, V., Ng’ambi, D. & Gachago, D. (2013) Transforming teaching with emerging technologies: Implications for Higher Education

Institutions, South African Journal of Higher Education, 27(2): 419-436.

● Bozalek, V., Gachago, D., Alexander, L., Watters, K., Wood, D., Ivala, E. & Herrington, J. (2013) The use of emerging technologies for

authentic learning: A South African study in Higher Education, British Journal of Educational Technology, 44,4:629-638.

● Bozalek, V. & Watters, K. (2014) The potential of authentic learning and emerging technologies for developing graduate

attributes, South African Journal of Higher Education, 28(3): 1069-1084.

● Bozalek, V. , Gachago, D. & Watters, K. (2015) Twenty First Century Pedagogies: Portraits of South African higher educators

using emerging technologies. In V. Bozalek, D. Ng’ambi, D. Wood, J. Herrington, J. Hardman & A. Amory (eds.) Activity Theory,

Authentic Learning and Emerging Technologies: Towards a Transformative Higher Education Pedagogy. London and New York:

Routledge.

● Bozalek, V., Ng’ambi, D., Wood, D., Herrington, J., Hardman, J. & Amory, A. (eds.) (in press) Activity Theory, Authentic Learning and

Emerging Technologies: Towards a Transformative Higher Education Pedagogy. London and New York: Routledge.

● Gachago, D., Ivala, E., Backhouse, J., Bosman, J.P, Bozalek, V. and Ng’ambi, D. (2013).Towards a shared understanding of

emerging technologies: Experiences in a collaborative research project in South Africa, The African Journal of Information

Systems (AJIS) Vol 5, Issue 3, Article 4 available at http://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/ajis/vol5/iss3/4

● Ng’ambi, D., Bozalek, V. & Gachago, D. (2013) Converging institutional expertise to model teaching and learning with emerging

technologies. Progressio, 35(2):19-36.

● Rowe, M., Frantz, J. & Bozalek, V. (2012). Physiotherapy students’ use of emerging online technology as part of their learning practices.

South African Journal of Physiotherapy, 68(1):29-34.

For more information on the project visit

www.emergingicts.blogspot.com