Results for 'Technology in Education'

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  1.  18
    Reflections on technology for educational practitioners: philosophers of technology inspiring technology education.John R. Dakers, Jonas Hallström & Marc J. de Vries (eds.) - 2019 - Boston: Brill Sense.
    Reflections on Technology for Educational Practitioners describes the main ideas of fourteen philosophers of technology and how these ideas are used or can be used in technology education.
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  2.  96
    Technology and education: Challenges and opportunities.Anita L. Cloete - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (4):1-7.
    This article seeks to contribute to the continuous reflection on the integration of technology into education. In order to accomplish this aim, the use of technology in the form of blended learning and online education will be utilised to illustrate how technology plays a central role in education today. It is argued that technology should not merely be viewed as a tool, but rather as a medium that shapes culture. Therefore, the integration of (...)
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  3.  9
    Islam, Technology, and Education: The Case for Culturally Grounded Design.Michael K. Thomas - 2016 - Routledge.
    Based in a global array of case studies - Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Turkey, and Islamic education in the United States - this volume shows how the discourse concerning educational technology in the Islamic world has emphasized neoliberal and neofundamentalist themes, and argues that the design and implementation of educational technologies in schools would be better accomplished by taking a culturally grounded approach. This approach would be rooted in the context and local needs of learners, with implications and (...)
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  4. Educational Technology: From Educational Anarchism to Educational Totalitarianism.Mikhail Bukhtoyarov & Anna Bukhtoyarova - 2021 - In Igor Cvejić, Predrag Krstić, Nataša Lacković & Olga Nikolić, Liberating Education: What From, What For? Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory, University of Belgrade. pp. 185-204.
    In the paper, the authors explore the relations between educational technology and educational ideology through the lens of philosophical inquiry. The optics of critical analysis is applied to review the instructional tools, services and systems which compose the complex picture of contemporary educational technology. The authors claim that even when initially established in the ideological domain of educational anarchism most educational technologies when being applied systemically can end up on the more oppressive side of the ideological spectrum close (...)
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  5.  43
    For Technological Literacy Education: Comparing the Asymmetrical View of Heidegger and Symmetrical View of Latour on Technology.Eun Ju Park - 2022 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (5):551-565.
    Students today are habitual users of digital technology. However, they do not examine the nature of their relationship with technology. Even though we are all enduring severe environmental crises including the COVID-19 pandemic, our students do not appear to see the interrelated connections between the environmental crisis and themselves. A case in point is that they have difficulty drawing a connection between environmental crises and their participation in industrial civilization. This is why it is necessary to consider technological (...)
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  6. Emerging Technologies & Higher Education.Jake Burley & Alec Stubbs - 2023 - Ieet White Papers.
    Extended Reality (XR) and Large Language Model (LLM) technologies have the potential to significantly influence higher education practices and pedagogy in the coming years. As these emerging technologies reshape the educational landscape, it is crucial for educators and higher education professionals to understand their implications and make informed policy decisions for both individual courses and universities as a whole. -/- This paper has two parts. In the first half, we give an overview of XR technologies and their potential (...)
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  7.  79
    Extended cognition, assistive technology and education.Duncan Pritchard, Andrea R. English & John Ravenscroft - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):8355-8377.
    Assistive technology is widely used in contemporary special needs education. Our interest is in the extent to which we can conceive of certain uses of AT in this educational context as a form of extended cognition. It is argued that what is critical to answering this question is that the relationship between the student and the AT is more than just that of subject-and-instrument, but instead incorporates a fluidity and spontaneity that puts it on a functional par with (...)
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  8.  1
    Postphenomenology and technologies within educational settings.Markus Bohlmann & Patrizia Breil (eds.) - 2025 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This volume explores the human-technology relations that both shape modern educational settings and have a decisive influence on what education is and will be in the future. The contributors present empirical evidence to challenge and reframe the goal of education in relation to technology.
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  9.  11
    Toward Technology-Based Education and English as a Foreign Language Motivation: A Review of Literature. [REVIEW]Yi Wei - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    This review examined the studies on the role of technology-based English as a foreign language academic motivation. A significant positive correlation between academic motivation and educational technology use has been approved in related studies. However, there is a dire need for studying the effect of Mobile-Assisted Language Learning and Computer-Assisted Language Learning on learners’ motivation. The literature showed that purposeful attractiveness, effectiveness, and usefulness of digital instruments can positively affect learner motivation. There are also some reasons for increasing (...)
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  10.  68
    Reading Science, Technology and Education: A Tradition Dating back to Science into the History and Historiography.Raffaele Pisano, Rémi Franckowiak & Abdelakader Anakkar - 2017 - Transversal: International Journal for the Historiography of Science 3:77-97.
    In this paper, we present an interdisciplinary discussion on the relations between Science–Technology Education and Culture both historical standpoint and nowadays. The idea that a human mind can produce an intellectual revolution within science and its approaches strongly crossed like a paradigm both in the history of sciences and disciplines–literatures : but what about its social impact and science mission, as well? To describe the impact of the disseminated knowledge is a consequent aim. A case study on energy (...)
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  11.  9
    Reflections on Technology for Educational Practitioners: Philosophers of Technology Inspiring Technology Education.John R. Dakers, Jonas Hallström & Marc J. De Vries (eds.) - 2019 - Brill | Sense.
    _Reflections on Technology for Educational Practitioners_ describes the main ideas of fourteen philosophers of technology and how these ideas are used or can be used in technology education.
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  12.  24
    Discovering earth and the missing masses—technologically informed education for a post-sustainable future.Pasi Takkinen & Jani Pulkki - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (10):1148-1158.
    Climate change education (CCE) and environmental education (EE) seek ways for us humans to keep inhabiting Earth. We present a thought experiment adopting the perspective of Earth-settlers, aiming to illuminate the planetary mass of technology. By elaborating Hannah Arendt’s notion of ‘earth alienation’ and Bruno Latour’s notion of technology as ‘missing mass’, we suggest that, in the current Anthropocene era, our relation to technology should be a crucial theme of CCE and EE. We further suspect (...)
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  13. Transition 2.0: Digital technologies, higher education, and vision impairment.Edgar Pacheco, Lips Miriam & Pak Yoong - 2018 - The Internet and Higher Education 37:1-10.
    This article introduces Transition 2.0, a paradigm shift designed to study and support students with disabilities' transition to higher education. Transition 2.0 is the result of a qualitative study about how a group of young people with vision impairments used digital technologies for their transition to university. The findings draw from observations, a researcher diary, focus groups, individual interviews, and data from social media. The article discusses a conventional view of transition, referred to here as Transition 1.0, which has (...)
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  14.  37
    Short Cuts and Extended Techniques: Rethinking relations between technology and educational theory.Kurt Thumlert, Suzanne de Castell & Jennifer Jenson - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (8):786-803.
    Building upon a recent call to renew actor-network theory (ANT) for educational research, this article reconsiders relations between technology and educational theory. Taking cues from actor-network theorists, this discussion considers the technologically-mediated networks in which learning actors are situated, acted upon, and acting, and traces the novel positions of creative capacity and participation that emerging media may enable. Whereas traditional theories of educational technology tend to focus on the harmonization of new technologies with extant curricular goals and educational (...)
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  15.  17
    The Risky Promises and Promising Risks of New Information Technologies for Education.Thomas A. Callister & Nicholas C. Burbules - 1999 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (2):105-112.
    Most discussions of the potential of new information technologies (IT) for education have taken one of two forms: enthusiastic proclamations of the revolutionary impact that IT can have for teaching and learning in school and nonschool settings, or dire warnings of the terrible fraud being perpetrated on society about the educational potential of IT. This essay attempts to avoid exaggerated optimism and pessimism about IT and education, while avoiding the trite oversimplification that technology is “neutral” and can (...)
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  16.  9
    Information Technology and the Language of Education.Maggie McBride & Kathryn Ross Wayne - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (5):365-373.
    In this article, the authors explore the interaction of language and culture through a metaphorical analysis of the ideas written of in Gregory Stock's book, Metaman, as well as explain how education shares the implicit assumptions of Metaman, thus perpetuating and strengthening a modern-day discourse that embeds a technological manifest destiny enveloped in deficiency as a guiding metaphor.
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  17.  10
    The theory of educational technology: towards a dialogic foundation for design.Rupert Wegerif - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge. Edited by Louis Major.
    Educational technology is controversial - some see it as essential to providing free global learning, others view it as a dangerous distraction that undermines good education. In both instances, most theories that have previously been applied to educational technology do not account for the distinctive nature and vast potential of technology. This book addresses this issue, exploring how education has been bound up with technology from the beginning, and recognising that educational aims have already (...)
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  18.  4
    The Educational Digital Ecosystem: A MICMAC Decomposition of the Reciprocal Influences Between Technological Platforms and Evaluation Methods.Piedad Mary Martelo Gómez, Raúl José Martelo Gómez & David Antonio Franco Borré - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:588-600.
    This study focuses on analyzing the interactions between technological platforms and evaluation methods in the educational digital ecosystem. The main objective is to identify the key variables that influence this environment and offer recommendations to improve the online educational experience. This is an exploratory study with a mixed approach, using the MICMAC technique to analyze the influence and dependence of the identified variables. The results reveal the importance of aspects such as the quality of content and technological infrastructure, as well (...)
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  19.  49
    Literary Education and Digital Learning: Methods and Technologies for Humanities Studies ed. by Willie van Peer, Sonia Zyngier, and Vander Viana (review).Anna Chesnokova - 2013 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 47 (3):120-121.
    The times of restricting reading to just sitting with a book in a cozy armchair are gone. If you ask a modern teenager or university student how they would prefer to do it, the chances are fairly high that the answer you’ll get is a computer screen or an iPad. Digital technologies have become an ordinary tool for everybody dealing with literature, including common readers, students in the field, and professional scholars who have dedicated their lives to literary research. This (...)
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  20.  53
    Technology and Political Education.Leah Bradshaw - 2005 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 9 (1):8-26.
  21.  63
    Heidegger on Ontotheology: Technology and the Politics of Education.Iain D. Thomson - 2005 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Heidegger is now widely recognized as one of the most influential and controversial philosophers of the twentieth century, yet much of his later philosophy remains shrouded in confusion and controversy. Restoring Heidegger's understanding of metaphysics as 'ontotheology' to its rightful place at the center of his later thought, this book demonstrates the depth and significance of his controversial critique of technology, his appalling misadventure with Nazism, his prescient critique of the university, and his important philosophical suggestions for the future (...)
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  22.  14
    Education as gift: challenging markets and technology and celebrating the spirit of education.Damian Ruth - 2024 - Boston: Brill.
    Education is about human flourishing and explores meaning, purpose and values. As a holistic and integral practice for developing sustained attention and concentration, education is profoundly antithetical to the market and it is not a technological domain. The combination of markets and technology in the pursuit of efficiency destroys the potential of education to help societies nurture well-being. This book dives deeply into the overlapping crises of education today. The author draws on decades of experience (...)
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  23.  39
    Buber, educational technology, and the expansion of dialogic space.Rupert Wegerif & Louis Major - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):109-119.
    Buber’s distinction between the ‘I-It’ mode and the ‘I-Thou’ mode is seminal for dialogic education. While Buber introduces the idea of dialogic space, an idea which has proved useful for the analysis of dialogic education with technology, his account fails to engage adequately with the role of technology. This paper offers an introduction to the significance of the I-It/I-Thou duality of technology in relation with opening dialogic space. This is followed by a short schematic history (...)
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  24. ChatGPT and the Technology-Education Tension: Applying Contextual Virtue Epistemology to a Cognitive Artifact.Guido Cassinadri - 2024 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (14):1-28.
    According to virtue epistemology, the main aim of education is the development of the cognitive character of students (Pritchard, 2014, 2016). Given the proliferation of technological tools such as ChatGPT and other LLMs for solving cognitive tasks, how should educational practices incorporate the use of such tools without undermining the cognitive character of students? Pritchard (2014, 2016) argues that it is possible to properly solve this ‘technology-education tension’ (TET) by combining the virtue epistemology framework with the theory (...)
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  25.  44
    Handbook of Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (Tpck) for Educators.Matthew J. Koehler & Punya Mishra (eds.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    _Published by Taylor & Francis Group for the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education_ This _Handbook_ addresses the concept and implementation of technological pedagogical content knowledge -- the knowledge and skills that teachers need in order to integrate technology meaningfully into instruction in specific content areas. Recognizing, for example, that effective uses of technology in mathematics are quite different from effective uses of technology in social studies, teachers need specific preparation in using technology in each (...)
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  26.  72
    Technological Metaphors and Moral Education: The Hacker Ethic and the Computational Experience.Bryan R. Warnick - 2004 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 23 (4):265-281.
    This essay is an attempt to understand how technological metaphors, particularly computer metaphors, are relevant to moral education. After discussing various types of technological metaphors, it is argued that technological metaphors enter moral thought through their functional descriptions. The computer metaphor is then explored by turning to the hacker ethic. Analysis of this ethic reveals parallels between the experience of computer programming and the moral standards of those who are enmeshed in computer technology. This parallel suggests that the (...)
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  27. Adult education as a technology of the self.Mark Tennant - 2009 - In Knud Illeris, Contemporary Theories of Learning: Learning Theorists -- In Their Own Words. Routledge.
  28.  66
    Educational technology: what it is and how it works.Jon Dron - 2022 - AI and Society 37 (1):155-166.
    This theoretical paper elucidates the nature of educational technology and, in the process, sheds light on a number of phenomena in educational systems, from the no-significant-difference phenomenon to the singular lack of replication in studies of educational technologies. Its central thesis is that we are not just users of technologies but coparticipants in them. Our participant roles may range from pressing power switches to designing digital learning systems to performing calculations in our heads. Some technologies may demand our participation (...)
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  29.  72
    Can information and mobile technologies serve to close the economic, educational, digital, and social gaps and accelerate development?Yiannis Laouris & Romina Laouri - 2008 - World Futures 64 (4):254 – 275.
    The emergence of information, and more recently, mobile broadband telecommunication technologies, was accompanied by the hype that they could serve to close the economic, educational, digital, and social gaps of our planet among the rich and the poor regions. The hopes, which were based on a number of assumptions, were partly dismissed at the dawn of the new millennium for a number of reasons exemplified in this article. The authors propose a repertoire of pathways through which technology may still (...)
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  30.  46
    Session – Philosophy of Education Emerging Pedagogies, Enabling Technologies.Isabelle Sabau - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 37:251-258.
    The exponential growth of digital and communication technologies coupled with the rising need for continuing education have resulted in a proliferation of distance learning opportunities on a global scale. The most common and preferred option for the delivery of flexible education is online learning which relies oncomputers and the Internet to enable collaboration, participation and instruction. This new modality of learning requires novel pedagogical approaches and the seamless and transparent integration of technology. This paper proposes to discuss (...)
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  31.  80
    Educational Occupations and Classroom Technology.Larry A. Hickman - 2016 - European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 8 (1).
    Despite the fact that John Dewey had a great deal to say about education and technology, many of his insights have yet to be understood or appropriated. A close reading of Democracy and Education offers support for the view that Dewey was prescient in proposing a pedagogy that was friendly to current initiatives in innovative classroom technology including inverted or “flipped” classroom projects in the United States and elsewhere and the Future Classroom Lab project of the (...)
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  32. Technology as ideology : clearing an educational path between "reason and experience".Carol E. Harris - 2016 - In Eugénie Angèle Samier, Ideologies in Educational Administration and Leadership. New York: Routledge.
     
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  33. Technologies, éducation et formation.Bruno Ollivier & Francoise Thibault - 2004 - Hermes 38:191.
    Les liens entre éducation et technique, bien antérieurs à l'apparition des «technologies de l'information et de la communication» , relèvent de plusieurs disciplines: informatique, sciences de l'éducation, sciences de la cognition et Sic... Les Sic ont des atouts: leurs approches interdisciplinaires permettent d'articuler les niveaux technique, social, sémiotique, politique et les objets et méthodes des sciences de l'information rejoignent pleinement ceux des sciences de la communication.The links between education and technology had existed for a long time before the (...)
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  34.  42
    Educational Technology and Academic Freedom.Jack Simmons - 2001 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 5 (3):158-166.
  35.  47
    Educational Technology along with the Uncritical Mass versus Ethics.Alireza Sayadmansour & Mehdi Nassaji - 2013 - British Journal of Educational Studies 61 (3):289 - 300.
    This paper considers the ethics of educational technology in terms of whether or not selected media and methods are beneficial to the teacher and student, or whether other motives and criteria determine the selection. Communications media have proven themselves to be powerful and efficient tools, used like ?dynamite? for getting the most out of a ?quarry?, but the vast scope of their applicability and flexibility may notoriously neglect the unprecedented risks to the user of current online methods ? as (...)
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  36.  23
    Cognition, education, and communication technology.Peter Gardenfors, Petter Johansson & N. J. Mahwah (eds.) - 2005 - Erlbaum Associates.
    Cognition, Education, and Communication Technology presents some of the recent theoretical developments in the cognitive and educational sciences and implications for the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in the organization of school and university education. Internationally renowned researchers present theoretical perspectives with proposals for and evaluations of educational practices. Each chapter discusses different aspects of the use of ICT in education, including: *the role of perceptual processes in learning; *external cognition as support for (...)
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  37.  23
    Education for Technological Threats to Democracy.Eric Thomas Weber - 2023 - Contemporary Pragmatism 20 (1-2):38-52.
    This paper examines Larry A. Hickman’s warnings about the dangers of algorithmic technologies for democracy and then considers educational policy initiatives that are important for combatting such threats over the long term. John Dewey’s philosophy is considered both in Hickman’s work and in this paper’s review of what Dewey called the “Supreme Intellectual Obligation.” Dewey’s insights highlight crucial tasks necessary and called for with respect to education to value and appreciate the sciences and what they can do to serve (...)
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  38.  21
    Interdisciplinary Educational Technology based on the Concept of Human Brain Functional Asymmetry.Alexander Voznyuk, Sergey Gorobets, Serhii Kubitskyi, Victoriia Domina, Natalia Gutareva, Maxim Roganov & Ihor Bloshchynskyi - 2021 - Postmodern Openings 12 (2).
    The main aspects of interdisciplinary ICT technology of educational process based on the concept of functional asymmetry of the cerebral hemispheres, which reflect space-time asymmetry of the Universe and constitute a certain psychophysiological focus of human organism, are presented in the article. Its urgency stems from the tendencies of contemporary world, evolving towards the information society and influencing the development of modern education, becoming increasingly multimedia-rich and psychologised. The authors consider the major peculiarities of cognitive strategies of brain’s (...)
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  39.  11
    Educational Technology and the National Information Infrastructure: Critically Historicizing Policy Pasts and Presents.Sousan Arafeh - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (2):96-101.
    In U.S. national policy, K-12 education is slated to play a significant role in the development and deployment of the National Information Infrastructure (NII). Analysis of legislation, policy documents, and histori cal narratives about attempts to use communications technologiesfor K-12 education shows, that these texts and discourses construct knowledge about, and allowable domains for, education in communications and national policy contexts such as the NII. This article fashions a counternarrative of policy pasts and presents that constructs new (...)
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  40.  15
    Technological Transparency: A Myth of Virtual Education.Yolanda Gayol - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (3):180-186.
    In this article, the idea of technological transpar ency refers to the setting of computer artifacts to make them invisible. Transparency is treated as a mythology because it hides the tremendous social impact that computer-mediated communication has in contempo rary societies. This argument is supported by Ellul's assertion that technology has a systemic, rather than an instrumental, relation with society; therefore, it has to be explored as La Technique. La Technique is a systemic connection of human-artifacts-knowledge that reconstitutes society (...)
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  41.  36
    Values Education and Technology: The Ideology of Dispossession. [REVIEW]Mark Wegierski - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (4):884-885.
    Peter Emberley is one of Canada's leading scholars writing on issues linking education and philosophy. This dense, very erudite work could be seen as the high counterpart to his two more popular books on similar themes, Bankrupt Education: The Decline of Liberal Education in Canada and Zero Tolerance: Hot Button Politics in Canada's Universities.
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  42.  14
    Ethics and educational technology: reflection, interrogation, and design as a framework for practice.Stephanie L. Moore - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge. Edited by Tillberg Webb & Heather Kyrsten.
    Ethics and Educational Technology explores the creation and implementation of learning technologies through an applied ethical lens. The success of digital tools and platforms in today's multifaceted learning and performance contexts is dependent not only on effective design and pedagogical principles but, further, on an awareness of these technologies' interactions with and implications for users and social systems. This first-of-its-kind book provides an evidence-based, process-oriented model for ethics in technology-driven instructional design and development, one that necessitates intentional reflective (...)
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  43.  58
    Philosophy, Education, and the History of Communication Technologies.J. C. Nyìri - 1999 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 3:185-192.
    The emergence and development of the humanities were initially bound up with the spread of alphabetic writing, and subsequently with the development of printing; the original task of the nascent humanities disciplines was a thoroughly practical one: that of building up our knowledge about the characteristics of the new media with the aim of exploiting this knowledge in everyday life—for the sake of economic, educational, or political benefits. In particular, the beginnings of philosophy lead us back to the times of (...)
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  44.  56
    Idiocy-Dominated Communities: Trivial Education and Ineffectual Technology.Abdulrahman Essa Al Lily, Ahmed Ali Alhazmi & Saleh Alzahrani - 2019 - Social Epistemology 33 (6):538-554.
    This article examines the nature and reproduction of ‘institutional idiocy’, seen as a form of collective cognitive incapacity generated by cultural conditions. It shows idiocy to be active in numerous paths, wearing different clothes and taking dissimilar forms, spreading to the extent that it dominates communities. An empirically driven framework is established for idiocy-dominated communities – communities with access to futile education and fruitless technology. It demonstrates how idiocy-dominated communities disguise and protect their shared idiocy and handle non-idiotic (...)
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  45.  80
    Heidegger and the technology of further education.Paul Standish - 1997 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 31 (3):439–459.
    The new further education, characterised by managerialism, accounting systems and the packaging of learning, has brought about far-reaching changes for staff and students, changes that can broadly be understood in terms of technology. This paper seeks to gain a new perspective on this through a consideration of Heidegger’s exploration of techne and of the pathologies of technology. The various responses that Heidegger advocates in the face of technology are then related to possibilities of good practice in (...)
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  46.  12
    Educational Technologies, Expertise, and Decentered Knowledge.Stephen P. Gance - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (3):187-193.
    The World Wide Web is often touted as a way to distribute expertise, thus decentering knowledge creation and dissemination. However, conceptualizing ex pertise as multiple does not sufficiently problematize the unitary expertise model that considers expertise as something held by someone (the "expert") and trans ferred to someone else (the "novice "). The author makes the claim that expertise has been primarily theorized by various psychologicalframeworks; these ways of conceptualizing expertise are largely ignorant of the ways that they position the (...)
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  47.  21
    Impact of Virtual Imaging Technology on Film and Television Production Education of College Students Based on Deep Learning and Internet of Things.Chengye Du, Chijiang Yu, Tingting Wang & Fengrui Zhang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    More and more schools begin to design simulation technology based on virtual imaging technology and virtual reality in their course contents. In particular, among these technical courses, there is a need to first strengthen the Film and Television Production education in higher institutions. This article aims to study the impact of VRT, VR, and Internet of things technology on FTP courses and audience psychology in higher institutions under the era of intelligent multimedia. How to use emerging (...)
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  48.  14
    The Influence of Science Technology Engineering Arts Mathematics-Based Psychological Capital Combined With Ideological and Political Education on the Entrepreneurial Performance and Sports Morality of College Teachers and Students.Ying Jin - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    This study aims to alleviate the current tense employment situation and study the entrepreneurial situation of teachers and students in colleges and universities. Firstly, based on the educational concept of Science Technology Engineering Arts Mathematics, Ideological and Political Education is added to psychological capital to explore the effect of the combination of the two on entrepreneurial performance. An entrepreneurial performance impact model is constructed, and the questionnaire is set. Secondly, the influence of psychological capital combined with IPE on (...)
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  49.  40
    Nanoethics and Policy Education: a Case Study of Social Science Coursework and Student Engagement with Emerging Technologies.Jessica Smith Rolston, Skylar Huzyk Zilliox, Corinne Packard, Carl Mitcham & Brian Zaharatos - 2014 - NanoEthics 8 (3):217-225.
    The article analyzes the integration of a module on nanotechnology, ethics, and policy into a required second-year social science course at a technological university. It investigates not simply the effectiveness of student learning about the technical aspects of nanotechnology but about how issues explored in an interdisciplinary social science course might influence student opinions about the potential of nanotechnology to benefit the developing world. The authors find a correlation between student opinions about the risks and benefits of nanotechnology for the (...)
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  50.  21
    The Effects of Technological Developments on Work and Their Implications for Continuous Vocational Education and Training: A Systematic Review.Patrick Beer & Regina H. Mulder - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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