ISBN-13: 9781681234380 / Angielski / Twarda / 2016 / 266 str.
ISBN-13: 9781681234380 / Angielski / Twarda / 2016 / 266 str.
This book serves as a platform for educators and researchers to unite educational technology andsocial justice. While educational technology is a rapidly changing and progressive field of researchand practice, it remains largely separate from education for social justice. Current literature abouteducational technology is often approached from a technical, how-to perspective that emphasizesways to implement technology into the classroom. Technology is often viewed as inevitable, yetneutral and value-free. Educational technology, however, is anything but neutral. The contributorscollectively advance a hopeful discourse by exploring the potential of technology as a vehicle to transform and emancipate, whilenot forgoing a critically reflective measure of self-conscious critique of our own role as educators, students, or scholars inoppressive silences, constraints and conditions. This edited collection makes an important and unique contribution to the field, as itwill be the first published volume to detail research, theory, and practice regarding student use of technology in achievingliberatory aims since IAPs 2009 publication, ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice.The fields of educational technology and social justice are vast and applicable in many domains, including teacher education,graduate programs, and K-12 education. This work is intended to appeal to a diverse academic and professional audience of K-12teachers, teacher educators, educational technology and social justice scholars, and policy makers. Scholars and academicsinstructing graduate-level educational technology courses can reference this edited collection as the most current text on sociallyjust educational technology. Educational practitioners from teacher education programs and the K-12 sector may use this book as asource of ideas and inspiration to incorporate student use of technology toward emancipatory aims. This title could be adopted as acourse text for both undergraduate and graduate education courses in: media literacy, digital literacy, distance education, educationfor social justice, and teacher preparation, and educational technology courses. Readers will also be able to use the book as a guidewhen critically analyzing their own professional practice, whether it is in research, working with K-12 students, or preparing futureeducators or scholars.