some tentative provocations on #highered and social justice: caught between the curriculum as...
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Paul PrinslooUniversity of South Africa (Unisa)
@14prinsp
Invited presentation in the Doctor of Distance Education Program (EDDE 804), Athabasca University, 23 February 2017
Some tentative provocations on #highered and social justice:
Caught between the curriculum as Prozac, protest, pontification and performance
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/lost-places-old-decay-ruin-factory-1549096/
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
• I don’t own the copyright of any of the images used and hereby acknowledge their original copyright and licensing regimes. All the images used in this presentation have been sourced from Google Images or Pixabay and were labeled for non-commercial re-use
• This work (excluding the licencing regimes of the images from Google) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Confessions of a scepticThe notion of ‘sceptic’ does not refer to those who doubt, but to them who investigate or research, as
opposed to those who assert and think that they have found
Miguel de Unamuno(29 September 1864 – 31 December 1936)
I have not found what I’m looking for (with apologies to U2)
Not all the…Tentative points of departures for thinking about the role of #highered and social justice
Image credit – John Gray: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gray_(philosopher)Image credit – Heresies –https://www.amazon.com/Heresies-Against-Progress-Other-Illusions/dp/1862077185
An imaginary conversation with John Gray – Author of ‘Heresies’ (2004)
Not all the…
may be
“Belief in progress is the Prozac of the thinking classes” (Gray, 2004, p. 3)
“History is not an ascending spiral of human advance, or even an inch-by-inch crawl to a better world. It is an unending cycle in which changing knowledge interacts with unchanging human needs. Freedom is recurrently won and lost in an alternation that includes long periods of anarchy and tyranny, and there is no reason to suppose this cycle will ever end” (Gray, 2004, p. 3)
Image credit –https://www.amazon.com/Heresies-Against-Progress-Other-Illusions/dp/1862077185
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
“In ethics and politics, however, no gain is irreversible. Human knowledge grows, but the human animal stays much the same. Humans use their growing knowledge to promote their conflicting goals – whatever they may be. Genocide and destruction of nature are as much products of scientific knowledge as antibiotics and increasing longevity ”
(Gray, 2004, p. 4)
Image credit –https://www.amazon.com/Heresies-Against-Progress-Other-Illusions/dp/1862077185
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
“The lesson of the century that has just ended is that humans use the power of science not to make a new world but to reproduce the old one – sometimes in hideous ways. This is only to confirm a truth known in the past, but forbidden today: knowledge does not make us free” (Gray, 2004, p. 6; emphasis added)
Image credit –https://www.amazon.com/Heresies-Against-Progress-Other-Illusions/dp/1862077185
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
“The core of the belief in progress is that human values and goals converge in parallel with our increasing knowledge. The twentieth century shows the contrary. Human beings use the power of scientific knowledge to assert and defend the values and goals they already have. New technologies can be used to alleviate suffering and enhance freedom. They can, and will, also be used to wage war and strengthen tyranny”
(Gray, 2004, p. 106)Image credit –https://www.amazon.com/Heresies-Against-Progress-Other-Illusions/dp/1862077185
If we accept, for now, that progress is not inevitable and that increases in knowledge
and understanding do not, necessarily, result in a more just and equal society,
where does it leave teaching and learning?
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/lost-places-old-decay-ruin-factory-1549096/
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
Overview of the presentation• Curricula as the stories we (don’t or/and are not
allowed to) tell our children, our students, and each other
• The curriculum as contested and contesting space: a brief history
• The curriculum as Prozac• The curriculum as protest• The curriculum as performance/agency• The curriculum as multiple and intersecting
narratives• The curriculum as fragile• (In)conclusions
If we see curricula as the stories we tell, are allowed to tell, don’t tell, forget to tell…
… where are the stories from …
…folks that live outside the norm? Where are the feminist theories of …? Where are the queer theories of …? Where are the not-able-bodied theories of …? Where are the immigrants to Canada theories of …? Why do folks that do not occupy the 'norm' have to subscribe to largely white-patriarchal theories of …, as reported by largely questionnaire-based studies of … theories, on largely white male leaders [scholars][scientists] [politicians][activists]?
(Adapted from a student question - David)
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
The Fight Between Carnival and Lent, Pieter Bruegel 1559, Den Bosch. Image credit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnival
In considering the nexus between higher education and social justice, we need to
consider…
What are the “absences and silences” (Morley, 2012) in our curricula and staff and student
profiles? And why?Who/what is ‘visible’ and
who/what is ‘invisible’ in our curricula and institutions?
“…how do you make people look at you when they can’t even see you? How do you
make them take notice in the first place?”
(Murphy, 2016, par. 11)
Image credit: https://samanthaburgoyne.wordpress.com/2014/06/15/the-invisible-man-book-cover-design/
Not all the…
may be
If “Belief in [a particular notion of?] progress is the Prozac of the thinking classes” (Gray, 2004,
p. 3) – where does it leave the role of #highered in service of social justice?
(Adapted from a student question - Rita Prokopetz)
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kapsula.png
Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the
present controls the past. George Orwell
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/vaulted-cellar-tunnel-arches-keller-247391/
The ‘what’, the silences and absences in curricula and higher education institutions are determined by those who lay claim to own the future …
… and they will protect their claims at all cost
Image credit: https://www.amazon.com/Who-Owns-Future-Jaron-Lanier/dp/1451654979
Higher education and its curricula are therefore a “contested space” (Prinsloo, 2007) and “an arena of
struggle” (Shay, 2015)
Image credit: Canadian Gunners in the Mud, Passchendaele by Lieutenant Alfred Bastien, 1917, oil on canvas. Retrieved from, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_art
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
The curriculum as contested and contesting space: a brief history
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Throughout the ages, what was considered to be “legitimate” knowledge depended on the context; the societal value added by
the knowledge; as well as the validation of the knowledge by persons/organisations who claimed the power to legitimate or declare some knowledge as worthy or illegitimate/unworthy
There is no evidence or examples of instances where knowledge production and its
dissemination were not controlled, regulated and legitimised, whether in the early Academy
of Plato (385 BCE), the Buddhist Nalanda University in Bihar, India ( 5th century BCE), the
University of Constantinople, established in 425 BCE, or the medieval Madrasahs founded in the
9th century CE.
Craft associations and guilds, whether the mask carving association in Benin, or weavers in India – all had the same basis, namely:
• the celebration and acknowledgement of expertise (the so-called master craftsmen and craftswomen);
• exercising the monopoly on their craft in a particular geographical area; and
• regulating and sanctioning access to the specific expertise base
(See Davenport and Pruzak, 2000)
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Novgorod_torg.JPG
“Guilds protected their special knowledge; governments prohibited the export of
economically important skills. France, for instance, made exporting lace-making
expertise a capital crime: Anyone caught teaching the skill to foreigners could be put to
death”
(Davenport and Pruzak, 2000). (Also see Belfanti, 2004) Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lace_Panel,_16th_century,_Italy,_Linen,_needlepoint_lace,_punto_in_aria,_Reticelli_pattern,_buttonhole_stitch.JPG
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
There is a gradual move of power away from the knowledge producers to those who have the power
or standing to classify knowledge as legitimate, as profane or sacred
(also see Bernstein 1996, Bourdieu & Passeron 1977)
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
1. The curriculum/higher education as Prozac
A show/pill a day…• Homo economicus – Consuming/amusing
ourselves to death…• The constant need to ‘fit’ in to the demands
of the market• The neoliberal prescription of lifelong learning
– always falling short, always lacking, always defective, always in need of more training, more development, more skills, always facing obsolescence and joining those classified as the “collateral casualties of progress” (Bauman, 2004, p. 15)
Image credit: https://mytwocents.wordpress.com/2009/03/25/what-im-reading-amusing-ourselves-to-death-2/
Image credit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choice
What is the potential of higher education as the ‘red pill’?
Image credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/stevetroughton/17072638696
Not all the…
may be
Page credit: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/02/27/why-facts-dont-change-our-minds
Houston, we have a problem…
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
2. The curriculum/higher education as
protest/counter-narrative
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
What is the potential for higher education to formulate counter-narratives,
alternative visions of a more just future?
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/hand-arm-fist-outreach-protest-1482801/
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Page credit: http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/02/protesters-hang-refugees-welcome-banner-from-lady-liberty.html?mid=twitter-share-di
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
3. The curriculum/higher education
performance/agency
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/isolated-transparent-white-1513515/
From pontification to agency: tentative pointers
Research by Stamm, Clark and Eblecas (2000)
COVERAGE UNDERSTANDING ACTION
The problem-path model (Stamm et al., 2000)
Stage 0Unaware of situation
Stage 1Heard about situation, but can’t say if it is a problem or not
Stage 2aSituation is NOT a problem
Stage 2bSituation IS a problem
Stage 3Thinking about solutions
Stage 4Identification of solutions
Critique of the problem-path model
Stage 0Unaware of situation
Stage 1Heard about situation, but can’t say if it is a problem or not
Stage 2aSituation is NOT a problem
Stage 2bSituation IS a problem
Stage 3Thinking about solutions
Stage 4Identification of solutions
Disengagement
A future-oriented impact model
Stage 0Unaware of situation
Stage 1Heard about situation, but can’t say if it is a problem of not
Stage 2aSituation is NOT a problem
Stage 2bSituation IS a problem
Disengagement
Stage 3Thinking about solutions
Stage 4Identifi-cation of solutions
Stage 5ACTION
Armchair pontificators Change
agents
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
3. The curriculum/higher
education as multiple and intersecting
narratives
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A social cartography of higher education
Neoliberal
CriticalLiberal
de Oliveira Andreotti, V., Stein, S., Pashby, K., &
Nicolson, M. (2016). Social cartographies as
performative devices in research on higher education. Higher
Education Research & Development, 1-16.
Spaces for deviance, disruption, anger and
hope
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Liberal
• Serving the public good – defined by those in power• Increasing equality and access to individual freedoms• A strong state role in welfare and re-distribution• Higher education as key in achieving national development
goals• Increasing access and the massification of higher education• Economic growth as driver • Everyone can be a success – from poverty to riches and the
individual as an autonomous, rational agent
• Let-us-forget-the-past-and-go-on-with-our-lives-the-future-is-bright-just-take-off-your-glasses-and-pull-up-your-socks
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Neoliberal• Austerity measures and defunding of higher education• Commodification of the curriulum and the
rationalisation of the PQM• Students and industry as customers• Increasing administrative, well-paid staff and the
outsourcing of teaching to contract and adjunct faculty
• Institutional prestige and global university rankings• “In this orientation, the role of the nation-state is to enable and to
protect, with military force if necessary, the rights of capital and the smooth functioning and expansion of markets” (p. 91).
• Faculty have become “individualist strivers competing for grants, publications, promotions, salary increases, better jobs elsewhere according to a set of rules as market driven as anything dreamed up by administrators” (Jemielniak & Greenwood, 2015, p. 73).
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Critical
• It explores and exposes the inherent epistemological power and patterns of violence in curricula
• It highlights capitalist exploitation, processes of racialization and colonialism and other forms of oppression at work in seemingly benevolent and normalised patterns of thinking and behavior (p. 91)
• The inclusion of more diverse voices but contrary to the production of a singular and homogenous narrative of a nation-state, it “aims to transform, pluralise, or replace these narratives through historical and systemic analyses of patterns of oppression and unequal distributions of power, labour and resources” (p. 91)
• This orientation contests and confronts the notion of the university as “an elitist space, and ivory tower” (p. 91)
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Federation,_Map_of_the_World_Showing_the_Extent_of_the_British_Empire_in_1886_(levelled).jpg
4. The curriculum/higher education as fragile,
potentially deviant space for alternative futures
Not all the…
may be
Image adapted from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_persons_fictitious_disclaimer_English.PNG
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/fragile-text-wood-brown-antique-354606/
Handle with care
Soft-reform space
Radical-reform space Beyond-reform space
Modernity’s life support Modernity’s palliative care
Reco
gniti
on o
f epi
stem
olog
ical
heg
emon
y
Never have been
happier, healthier, wealthier
Problems addressed
through personal
transformation
Problems addressed
through institutional
change
The game is awesome! Everyone can win once we know the rules
The game is rigged, so if we want to win we need to change
the rules
The game is harmful and makes us immature, but we’re
stuck playing
Playing the game does not make sense
Reco
gniti
on o
f ont
olog
ical
heg
emon
y
Reco
gniti
on o
f met
aphy
sica
l ent
rapm
ent
Racism
Capitalism
Colonialism
Heteropatriarchy
Nationalism
Race, capital, heteropatriarchy
as modernity (unfixable)
Alte
rnati
ves
with
gu
aran
tees
Hack
ing
Hosp
icin
g Other modes of existence
based on different
cosmologies
? ?
(Adapted from de Oliveira Andreotti, Stein, Ahenakew, & Hunt, 2015,p. 25)
FOUR SPACES OF ENUNCIATION
(In)conclusions
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/stairs-architecture-secret-curve-1636573/
Deviance, disruption and hope are conscious but always incomplete, till-further-notice, compromised
and compromising decisions
47
The curriculum as fragile, deviant hope
‘Maybe’ comes with no guarantees, only a chance. But ‘maybe’ has always been the best odds the world has offered to those who set out to alter its course – to find a new land across the sea, to end slavery, to enable women to vote, to walk on the moon, to bring down the Berlin Wall. ‘Maybe’ is not a cautious word. It is a defiant claim of possibility in the face of a status quo we are unwilling to accept…
(Young in the Foreword to Westley, Zimmerman & Patton, 2006)
Image credit: https://pixabay.com/en/key-stump-nature-forest-1683108/
THANK YOU
Paul Prinsloo Research Professor in Open Distance Learning (ODL)College of Economic and Management Sciences, Office number 3-15, Club 1, Hazelwood, P O Box 392Unisa, 0003, Republic of South Africa
T: +27 (0) 12 433 4719 (office)
prinsp@unisa.ac.za Skype: paul.prinsloo59Personal blog: http://opendistanceteachingandlearning.wordpress.comTwitter profile: @14prinsp
REFERENCESBauman, Z. (2004). Wasted lives. Modernity and its outcasts. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.Belfanti, C.M. (2004). Guilds, patents, and the circulation of technical knowledge. Northern Italy
during the early modern age. Technology and Culture, 45(3), 569–589.Bernstein, B. (1996). Pedagogy, symbolic control and identity: theory, research, critique. London:
Taylor & Francis.Bourdieu, P., & Passeron, J.C. (1977). Reproduction in education, society, and culture. Beverly
Hills, Calif: Sage. Carrington, V. & Luke, A. (1997). Literacy and Bourdieu’s sociological theory: a reframing.
Language and Education, 11(2), 96-112.Davenport, T.H., & Prusak, L. (2000). Working knowledge: how organisations manage what they
know. Ubiquity, (August 1 - August 31). Retrieved from http://ubiquity.acm.org/article.cfm?id=348775
de Oliveira Andreotti, V., Stein, S., Ahenakew, C., & Hunt, D. (2015). Mapping interpretations of decolonization in the context of higher education. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 4(1), 21-40.
de Oliveira Andreotti, V., Stein, S., Pashby, K., & Nicolson, M. (2016). Social cartographies as performative devices in research on higher education. Higher Education Research & Development, 1-16
Gray, J. (2004). Heresies. London, UK: Granta Books.
REFERENCES (cont.)Jemielniak, D., & Greenwood, D. J. (2015). Wake up or perish: Neo-liberalism, the social sciences,
and salvaging the public university. Cultural Studies? Critical Methodologies, 15(1), 72-82.Murphy, M. (2016, January 9). The costs of being invisible. Social Theory Applied. Retrieved from
http://socialtheoryapplied.com/2016/01/09/the-invisible-man/ Prinsloo, P. (2007). The curriculum as contested space: An inquiry. In Contesting spaces: The
curriculum in transition (pp. 44–59). A monograph containing selected papers from the African Conference on Higher Education held in September 2006, Pretoria, Republic of South Africa. University of South Africa.
Shay, S. (2015). Curriculum reform in higher education: a contested space. Teaching in Higher Education, 20(4), 431-441.
Stamm, K.R., Clark, F., & Eblacas, P.R. (2000). Mass communication and public understanding of environmental problems: the case of global warming. Public Understanding of Science, 9, 219–237.
Westley, F., Zimmerman, B. & Patton, M.Q. (2006). Getting to maybe: how the world is changed. Canada: Random House.
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