编辑第29卷,第4期

IF 1.8 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Mind Culture and Activity Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10749039.2023.2188222
Karlyn R. Adams-Wiggins, S. Choudry, Arturo Cortez, B. Ferholt, Ivana Guarrasi, Alfredo Jornet, Monica Lemos, M. W. Mahmood, B. Nardi, Antti Rajala, A. Stetsenko, J. Williams
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Meixi’s “Toward gentle futures: Co-developing axiological commitments and alliances among humans and the greater living world at school” considers ways of “deepening human responsibilities with plant, animal, and celestial nations, lands, waters, and the spirt world” through “relational becoming.” The case study concerns a student and teacher in an urban Indigenous school in Thailand. Through dialog, student and teacher explore ethical ways to fish for food (a human need) yet not lose sight of the fishes’ being. Rather than a “rights” framework in which humans grant rights and therefore retain supremacy, the student and teacher consider alliances (emphasis added) that move toward “consensual interdependency between humans and fish.” This is a novel and important way to think about how humans can radically transform relations with non-human subjects, something we must do as we encounter planetary resource limits. Sepehr Vakil and Maxine McKinney de Royston’s “Youth as philosophers of technology” turns “computing” on its design-coding-tinkering head by exploring how youth can conduct artistic, moral, and humanistic inquiry into what technology is by considering its fundamental political, social, and economic aspects. The authors use the philosophy of pragmatism to encourage youth to become “pragmatic philosophers of technology,” in particular extending pragmatism to account for dynamics of race and power that shape learning. The authors note that technology debates have fossilized into it’s-good or it’s-bad, while the youthful philosophers were able to adopt a critical stance “embrac[ing] multiplicity, contingency, and complexity.” STEM is burdened by the belief that computing is about coding and building. It lacks sufficient attention to what is being built and for whom. This paper signposts the moral, the aesthetic, and the political as imperatives in designing and deploying technology. 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Joe Curnow’s “Restating situated learning within radicalized and colonial social relations” acknowledges the influence of Lave and Wenger’s situated learning theory while observing that within the situated learning perspective, “social relations of racialization and colonialism are largely overlooked.” Curnow notes that her work builds on large, deep literatures that examine these processes, and she is bringing them into situated learning and community of practive frameworks. These frameworks have had a vast reach, even entering corporate training curricula, so Curnow’s expansion and development of racialization and colonialism within this purview is timely and productive. Meixi’s “Toward gentle futures: Co-developing axiological commitments and alliances among humans and the greater living world at school” considers ways of “deepening human responsibilities with plant, animal, and celestial nations, lands, waters, and the spirt world” through “relational becoming.” The case study concerns a student and teacher in an urban Indigenous school in Thailand. Through dialog, student and teacher explore ethical ways to fish for food (a human need) yet not lose sight of the fishes’ being. Rather than a “rights” framework in which humans grant rights and therefore retain supremacy, the student and teacher consider alliances (emphasis added) that move toward “consensual interdependency between humans and fish.” This is a novel and important way to think about how humans can radically transform relations with non-human subjects, something we must do as we encounter planetary resource limits. Sepehr Vakil and Maxine McKinney de Royston’s “Youth as philosophers of technology” turns “computing” on its design-coding-tinkering head by exploring how youth can conduct artistic, moral, and humanistic inquiry into what technology is by considering its fundamental political, social, and economic aspects. The authors use the philosophy of pragmatism to encourage youth to become “pragmatic philosophers of technology,” in particular extending pragmatism to account for dynamics of race and power that shape learning. The authors note that technology debates have fossilized into it’s-good or it’s-bad, while the youthful philosophers were able to adopt a critical stance “embrac[ing] multiplicity, contingency, and complexity.” STEM is burdened by the belief that computing is about coding and building. It lacks sufficient attention to what is being built and for whom. This paper signposts the moral, the aesthetic, and the political as imperatives in designing and deploying technology. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期包括一期特刊,主题为“在复杂的社会政治环境中打开学习的迹象”,由Jennifer D. Adams, Jrene Rahm, Shakhnoza Kayumova和Carol Brandt客座编辑,以及两篇常规研究文章。特刊的编辑提供了一个全面的介绍主题和观点的论文。关系是贯穿这期论文的一个基本概念。Joe Curnow的“重申激进和殖民社会关系中的情境学习”承认Lave和Wenger情境学习理论的影响,同时观察到在情境学习的视角下,“种族化和殖民主义的社会关系在很大程度上被忽视了。”Curnow指出,她的工作建立在大量深入的文献基础上,这些文献研究了这些过程,她正在将它们带入情境学习和实践框架社区。这些框架具有广泛的影响力,甚至进入了企业培训课程,因此Curnow在这一范围内对种族化和殖民主义的扩展和发展是及时而富有成效的。梅溪的《走向温柔的未来:在学校里共同发展人类和更大的生命世界之间的价值论承诺和联盟》考虑了通过“关系成为”来“加深人类对植物、动物和天体国家、土地、水和精神世界的责任”的方法。本案例研究涉及泰国一所城市土著学校的一名学生和一名教师。通过对话,学生和老师探讨以道德的方式捕捞食物(人类的需要),但不忽视鱼的存在。在“权利”框架中,人类授予权利并因此保持至高无上的地位,而学生和教师考虑的是朝着“人与鱼之间自愿相互依赖”的方向发展的联盟(强调添加)。这是一种新颖而重要的方式来思考人类如何从根本上改变与非人类主体的关系,这是我们在遇到地球资源限制时必须做的事情。Sepehr Vakil和Maxine McKinney de Royston的《作为技术哲学家的青年》一书通过探索青年如何通过考虑其基本的政治、社会和经济方面来对技术进行艺术、道德和人文探索,从而将“计算”的设计-编码-修复的头脑转变为“计算”。作者使用实用主义哲学来鼓励年轻人成为“技术的实用主义哲学家”,特别是将实用主义扩展到解释影响学习的种族和权力的动态。作者注意到,关于技术的争论已经僵化为好与坏,而年轻的哲学家们能够采取一种批判的立场,“拥抱多样性、偶然性和复杂性”。STEM被一种信念所拖累,即计算就是编码和构建。它缺乏对正在建造什么和为谁建造的足够关注。本文指出,在设计和部署技术时,道德、美学和政治是必不可少的。另外两篇研究文章补充了本期的版面。Karlyn Adams-Wiggings和Julia S. Dancis在他们的文章《基于探究的科学学习环境中的边缘性:排斥级联的作用》中,与Curnow在特刊上的文章非常一致,谈到了协作学习实践方法社区的潜力和局限性。更具体地说,作者警告说,不加批判地将实践社区方法应用于边缘化的风险,这可能导致“去历史化”它旨在研究和强化“适应主义精神……”的背景。权力在协作学习中的作用。”为了使这种风险可见,并提供更好地将参与者置于其历史背景中的理论化的替代方法,作者提出了一个微观遗传学案例研究,研究了7年级探究科学背景下的身份和动机过程。为了更好地将边缘化、能力和归属感的概念历史化,作者借鉴了劳动分工和异化的概念,因为这些概念适用于教育背景。这涉及到,首先,将学校教育理解为资本主义社会再生产的一部分,《思想、文化与活动2022》,第29卷,第2期。4,293 - 294 https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2188222
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Editorial Volume 29, Issue 4
The present issue includes a Special Issue on the topic Unpacking Signs of Learning in Complex Sociopolitical Environments, guest edited by Jennifer D. Adams, Jrene Rahm, Shakhnoza Kayumova, and Carol Brandt, as well as two regular research articles. The editors of the Special Issue provide a comprehensive introduction to the themes and perspectives of the papers. Relationality is a grounding notion running through the papers in the issue. Joe Curnow’s “Restating situated learning within radicalized and colonial social relations” acknowledges the influence of Lave and Wenger’s situated learning theory while observing that within the situated learning perspective, “social relations of racialization and colonialism are largely overlooked.” Curnow notes that her work builds on large, deep literatures that examine these processes, and she is bringing them into situated learning and community of practive frameworks. These frameworks have had a vast reach, even entering corporate training curricula, so Curnow’s expansion and development of racialization and colonialism within this purview is timely and productive. Meixi’s “Toward gentle futures: Co-developing axiological commitments and alliances among humans and the greater living world at school” considers ways of “deepening human responsibilities with plant, animal, and celestial nations, lands, waters, and the spirt world” through “relational becoming.” The case study concerns a student and teacher in an urban Indigenous school in Thailand. Through dialog, student and teacher explore ethical ways to fish for food (a human need) yet not lose sight of the fishes’ being. Rather than a “rights” framework in which humans grant rights and therefore retain supremacy, the student and teacher consider alliances (emphasis added) that move toward “consensual interdependency between humans and fish.” This is a novel and important way to think about how humans can radically transform relations with non-human subjects, something we must do as we encounter planetary resource limits. Sepehr Vakil and Maxine McKinney de Royston’s “Youth as philosophers of technology” turns “computing” on its design-coding-tinkering head by exploring how youth can conduct artistic, moral, and humanistic inquiry into what technology is by considering its fundamental political, social, and economic aspects. The authors use the philosophy of pragmatism to encourage youth to become “pragmatic philosophers of technology,” in particular extending pragmatism to account for dynamics of race and power that shape learning. The authors note that technology debates have fossilized into it’s-good or it’s-bad, while the youthful philosophers were able to adopt a critical stance “embrac[ing] multiplicity, contingency, and complexity.” STEM is burdened by the belief that computing is about coding and building. It lacks sufficient attention to what is being built and for whom. This paper signposts the moral, the aesthetic, and the political as imperatives in designing and deploying technology. Two additional research articles complete the pages of this issue. Very much in line with Curnow's article in the special issue, Karlyn Adams-Wiggings and Julia S. Dancis, in their article “Marginality in inquiry-based science learning contexts: The role of exclusion cascades,” speak to the potentials and limitations of communities of practice approaches to collaborative learning. More specifically, the authors warn about the risks of uncritically applying a communities of practice approach to marginality, which may result in “dehistoricizing” the contexts it aims to study and reinforce “an adaptationist ethos in . . . accounts of power’s role in collaborative learning.” To make this risk visible, and to offer alternative ways of theorizing that better situate participants in their historical contexts, the authors present a microgenetic case study examining identity and motivation processes in a 7 grade inquiry science context. With the goal to better historicize notions of margintality, competence, and belonging, the authors draw upon the concepts of division of labor and alienation, as these apply to educational contexts. This involves, first, understanding schooling as part of capitalist social reproduction, and MIND, CULTURE, AND ACTIVITY 2022, VOL. 29, NO. 4, 293–294 https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2188222
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来源期刊
Mind Culture and Activity
Mind Culture and Activity EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
15.80%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Mind, Culture, and Activity (MCA) is an interdisciplinary, international journal devoted to the study of the human mind in its cultural and historical contexts. Articles appearing in MCA draw upon research and theory in a variety of disciplines, including anthropology, cognitive science, education, linguistics, psychology, and sociology. Particular emphasis is placed upon research that seeks to resolve methodological problems associated with the analysis of human action in everyday activities and theoretical approaches that place culture and activity at the center of attempts to understand human nature.
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