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The Hidden Curriculum of Online Learning: Discourses of Whiteness, Social Absence, and Inequity.

机译:在线学习的隐藏课程:关于白人,社会缺席和不平等的论述。

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摘要

Local and federal governments, public school boards, and higher education institutions have been promoting online courses in their commitment to accommodating public needs, widening access to materials, sharing intellectual resources, and reducing costs. However, researchers of education needs to consider the often ignored yet important issue of equity since disregarding the issue of inequity in online education may create suboptimal consequences for students. This dissertation work, therefore, investigates the issues of social justice and equity in online education.;I argue that equity is situated between the tensions of various social structures in a broader cultural context and can be thought of as a fair distribution of opportunities to participate. This understanding is built upon the idea that individuals have different values, goals, and interests; nevertheless, the online learning context may not provide fair opportunities for individuals to follow their own learning trajectories. Particularly, online learning environments can reproduce inequitable learning conditions when the context requires certain individuals to assimilate mainstream beliefs and values at the expense of their own identities. Since identifications have certain social and political consequences by enabling or constraining individuals' access to educational resources, individuals may try to be identified in line with culturally-hegemonic perspectives in order to gain or secure their access to educational resources or to legitimize their learning experiences.;In this interview study, I conceptualize online courses within their broader socio-historical context and analyze how macro-level social structures, namely the concept of whiteness, can reproduce inequity in micro-level online learning practices. By questioning who has control over the conditions for the production of knowledge, values, and identification, I investigate how socially accepted bodies of thoughts, beliefs, values, and feelings that give meaning to individuals' daily-practices may create inequitable learning conditions in day-to-day online learning practices. In specific, I analyze how those who are identified as non-White experience "double-bind" with respect to stereotypification on one hand, anonymity on the other. Building on this analysis, I illustrate how those who are identified as non-White have to constantly negotiate their legitimacy and right to be in the online environment.
机译:地方和联邦政府,公立学校董事会和高等教育机构一直致力于推广在线课程,以适应公共需求,扩大获取资料的范围,共享知识资源并降低成本。但是,教育研究人员需要考虑经常被忽视但又很重要的公平问题,因为忽略在线教育中的不公平问题可能会对学生造成次优的后果。因此,本论文研究了在线教育中的社会正义和公平问题。;我认为,公平是在更广泛的文化背景下,各种社会结构之间的紧张关系,可以认为这是参与机会的公平分配。这种理解建立在个人具有不同的价值观,目标和利益的观念之上;但是,在线学习环境可能无法为个人提供遵循其学习轨迹的公平机会。特别是,当情境要求某些个人以牺牲自己的身份为代价吸收主流信仰和价值观时,在线学习环境可能会重现不平等的学习条件。由于身份认证会通过使个人获得或限制个人获得教育资源而产生一定的社会和政治后果,因此为了获得或确保他们获得教育资源或使他们的学习经历合法化,可以尝试根据文化霸权的观点对个人进行识别。 ;在本访谈研究中,我将在线课程的概念纳入其更广泛的社会历史背景下,并分析宏观社会结构(即白色概念)如何在微观在线学习实践中重现不平等现象。通过询问谁对知识,价值和认同的产生条件有控制权,我研究了社会认可的对个人日常实践有意义的思想,信念,价值和感觉如何可能在一天中创造不平等的学习条件。日常在线学习实践。具体而言,我分析了那些被识别为非白人的人如何一方面在刻板印象方面,另一方面在匿名方面经历“双重约束”。在此分析的基础上,我说明了那些被识别为非白人的人如何不断地协商其合法性和在网络环境中的权利。

著录项

  • 作者

    Oztok, Murat.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Toronto (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Toronto (Canada).;
  • 学科 Educational technology.;Cultural anthropology.;Curriculum development.;Ethnic studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 242 p.
  • 总页数 242
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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