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Thursday, October 1, 2020

Audrey Watters: Hack Education: Selling the Future of Ed-Tech (& Shaping Our Imaginations) | National Education Policy Center

Hack Education: Selling the Future of Ed-Tech (& Shaping Our Imaginations) | National Education Policy Center

Hack Education: Selling the Future of Ed-Tech (& Shaping Our Imaginations)




 I have volunteered to be a guest speaker in classes this Fall. It's really the least I can do to help teachers and students through another tough term. I spoke briefly tonight in Anna Smith's class on critical approaches to education technology (before a really excellent discussion with her students). I should note that I talked through my copy of  The Kids' Whole Future Catalog rather than, as this transcript suggests, using slides. Sorry, that means you don't get to see all the pictures...
Thank you very much for inviting me here today. (And thank you for offering a class on critical perspectives on education and technology!)
In the last few classes I've visited, I've talked a lot about surveillance technologies and ed-tech. I think it's one of the most important and most horrifying trends in ed-tech — one that extends beyond test-proctoring software, even though, since the pandemic and the move online, test-proctoring software has been the focus of a lot of discussions. Even though test-proctoring companies like to sell themselves as providing an exciting, new, and necessary technology, this software has a long history that's deeply intertwined with pedagogical practices and beliefs about students' dishonesty. In these class talks, I've wanted to sound the alarm about what I consider to be an invasive and extractive and harmful technology but I've also wanted to discuss the beliefs and practices — and the history of those beliefs and practices — that might prompt someone to compel their students to use this technology in the first place. If nothing else, I've wanted to encourage students to ask better questions about the promises that technology companies make. Not just "can the tech fulfill these promises?", but "why would we want them to?"
In my work, I write a lot about the "ed-tech imaginary" — that is, the ways in which our beliefs in ed-tech's promises and capabilities tend to be governed as much by fantasy as by science or CONTINUE READING: Hack Education: Selling the Future of Ed-Tech (& Shaping Our Imaginations) | National Education Policy Center