Education in a ‘neoliberalised’ online teaching and learning space : towards an affirmative ethics
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Date
2022Author
Le Grange, Lesley
Maistry, Suriamurthee
Simmonds, Shan
Visser, Anja
Ramrathan, Labby
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Show full item recordAbstract
The sudden mass migration of teaching, learning and assessment to the digital terrain
because of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the global proliferation of scholarship. This
scholarship ranges from romantic notions of the opportunity to revivify curriculum and
pedagogy in what was deemed an underutilised educational technology (online) resource space
to scholarship contemptuous of this newfound romance. This has exposed the potential
affordances of online teaching and its adjunctive exclusionary effects. Whilst the authors
recognise the short-term benefits of adapting advanced technology for educational purposes, they
provoke the question as to the obliterative potential of technology for the human (university
academics in this instance) and the non-human/more-than-human. It is, however, without
contention that the neoliberal university, driven by the economic viability and sustainability
imperative, gives precedence to curriculum delivery and student support to secure degree
completion targets even within academic timeframe (year) constraints. As such, it is
likely to neglect the cogent matter of the affective as it relates to both academics, students and the
non-human. In this conceptual article, Rosi Braidotti’s critical posthumanist perspective is
drawn upon, offering both critical and affirmative propositions for moving forward in engagement
with technologies in emerging educational online spaces. Firstly, critical perspectives are offered
on some challenges of the neoliberal contouring and new regimes of accountability and
surveillance that appear to have become more efficacious in the digital space. Secondly, it is
acknowledged that humans live in a technologically mediated world and need to navigate this
world in productive ways. Braidotti’s philosophy of affirmative ethics helps us to invigorate
affordances of educational technology that are hopeful. This article’s contribution lies in
alternative imaginings of educational technology, so that technology can be used in ways that
advance pedagogical lives and social relations.
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