1st Edition

Education in the Age of the Screen Possibilities and Transformations in Technology

Edited By Nancy Vansieleghem, Joris Vlieghe, Manuel Zahn Copyright 2020
    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge





    This edited volume brings together experts from across the field of education to explore how traditional pedagogic and didactic forms and processes are changing, or even disappearing, as a result of new technologies being used for education and learning.





    Considering the use, opportunites and limitations of technologies including interactive whiteboards, tablets, smart phones, search engines and social media platforms, chapters draw on primary and secondary research to illustrate the wide-reaching and often salient changes which new digital technologies are introducing into educational environments and learning practices around the world. Neither claiming that traditional forms of learning must be replaced, nor calling for a restoration of the school, Education in the Age of the Screen offers a nuanced exploration of the implications of digitization for education. Taking a broad view on education as a social and cultural phenomenon, the volume focuses on three major dimensions: the wider conditions against the background of which we educate and are educated today, detailed examples of aesthetic practices and educational initiatives in the current media culture, and concrete answers to the challenges that come our way.





    A comprehensive and timely consideration of the state of education in the digital age, this will be of interest to researchers, academics and post-graduate students in the fields of education and pedagogy, media and cultural studies, as well as teacher educators and trainee teachers.

    Introduction

    Joris Vlieghe, Nancy Vansieleghem, Manuel Zahn

    SECTION ONE: CONDITIONS

    Chapter 1: The Academic Lecture (1800-Present): Subject, Medium & Performance

    Norm Friesen

    Chapter 2: Education and world-disclosure in the age of the screen: On screens, hands and owning the now

    Joris Vlieghe

    Chapter 3: Screening the classic: A case of re-mediation? The new chronotope and some possible educational consequences

    Stefano Oliverio

    SECTION TWO: MAPPINGS

    Chapter 4: Classroom spaces in the making: A Sociomaterial account of digital screens in BYOD schools

    Samira Alirezabeigi, Mathias Decuypere

    Chapter 5: Beyond the Screen: Hatsune Miku in the Context of Post-Digital Culture

    Annemarie Hahn, Kristin Klein

    Chapter 6: Beyond Digital Screens – Media ecological perspectives on artistic practices in the digital media culture

    Manuel Zahn

    Chapter 7: Next School’s Art Education

    Torsten Meyer

    SECTION THREE: INTERVENTIONS

    Chapter 8: Looking at Ourselves Looking Through a Screen. A Case Study of Media Education

    Anna-Caterina Dalmasso

    Chapter 9: Digital literacy in the Age of the Screen? Re-imagining the social pedagogy of the archive

    Maria Fannin, D-M Withers

    Chapter 10: Scholastic practices in digital education: on grammatization and poetization in bMOOC

    Nancy Vansieleghem

    Chapter 11: Reframing the making of school in digital times: How art can(not) change digitisation

    Frank Maet

    Epilogue

    Joris Vlieghe, Nancy Vansieleghem, Manuel Zahn

    Biography



    Nancy Vansieleghem is Head of the teacher training programme in audio-visual and fine arts at LUCA School of Arts, Belgium, and of the research group Art, Practices and Education.





    Joris Vlieghe is Assistant Professor in Philosophy and Theory of Education at the University of Leuven, Belgium.





    Manuel Zahn is Professor for Aesthetic Education with a focus on contemporary media culture at University of Cologne, Germany.