ETEC 531: Curriculum Issues in Cultural and New Media Studies

Description

This course explores the role new media technologies play in education and curriculum development with the purpose of “jamming” current curriculums with an imperative focus being given to equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization, and anti-racism frameworks. From oral to text-based communication and content consumption to content creation, media has done much to shape the way we live, learn, and engage in formal and informal educative spaces. In an ever-expanding media-driven society, change is ubiquitous, and literacies are emergent. Digital media, then, presents strategic opportunities for educators to engage with and ask critical questions about curriculum. Specifically, we question how curriculum informs the ways knowledge is produced, taken up, mediated, and remediated in educational spaces. Examining the lenses and inherent biases with which curriculum is written and designed, this course will question long-withstanding Westernized colonial focused curriculum development. In a digital age of reconciliation and inclusivity, many curriculums need to be debunked and reworked to shatter stereotypes and dismantle systemic racism, marginalization, and oppression in education.

This course will examine new media and technology and its implications from a knowledge production perspective. What are the social and cultural effects and impacts of media for current educational practices? What is the nature of technological innovation and change in educative spaces? How can equity, diversity, inclusivity, decolonized, and anti-racist frameworks guide and jam current curriculums to move education from talking about the “issue” to acting on the ”issue”. Together, we will examine media representation and its uses to gain perspective on its political, economic, material, and cultural significance in contemporary society. ETEC 531 asks students to consider:

  • The relationship between education, technological innovation, and change.
  • How curriculum shapes our understandings of self, society, and the world around us.
  • How we might engage media to foster anti-oppressive frameworks used for teaching and learning.

Reflecting upon the pedagogical and curricular possibilities created through new media, we will examine a selection of media platforms, tools, and artifacts. Utilizing theoretical and innovative engagements, we will explore the cultural affordances of new media in relation to knowledge mobilization and curriculum development to “jam” current curriculums to evoke change for a equitable and inclusive future. Such explorations include the role of new media in changing and/or maintaining social and cultural inequities and its implications for education. For example, what does it mean to “ask” and to “answer” in a world of algorithmic research? What are our relationships to “truth,” “ethics,” and “representation?” How might we shape educational contexts that encourage critical engagement and inclusive practices alongside the social practices of new media?

Course Objectives

  • Develop a framework for understanding the role of curriculum as related to and impacted by new media and technology.
  • Apply theoretical, conceptual, and methodological frameworks to anti-oppressive approaches for curriculum development and pedagogical practices.
  • Understand equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization, anti-racism (EDIDA) frameworks for implementation within curriculums
  • Examine ethics, fair use, data politics, and demographic inequities in the context of learning and new media.
  • Practice curricular and pedagogical integrations of new media technologies.
  • Engage in curriculum jamming and cultural jamming

Example Readings & Resources

This course uses a selection of readings available online via the Library Online Course Reserves (LOCR) as well as select videos, social media spaces, and digital artifacts.

  • Benjamin, R. (2019). Race after technology: Abolitionist tools for the new Jim code. Polity Press.
  • Bigo, D., Isin, E., & Ruppert, E. (Eds.). (2019). Data politics. Routledge.
  • Buckingham, D. (2019). The media education manifesto. John Wiley & Sons.
  • Shahjahan, R. A., Estera, A. L., Surla, K. L., & Edwards, K. T. (2022). “Decolonizing” curriculum and pedagogy: A comparative review across disciplines and global higher education contexts. Review of Educational Research, 92(1), 73-113.
  • Tuck, E. & Gaztambide-Fernandez, R. (2013). Curriculum, replacement, and settler futurity. Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, 29(1), 72-89.

Assignments & Assessment

Assignment Weight
Curriculum jamming: Digital learning resource assignment proposal

Small group collaboration to develop a proposal for the resources the group will create for the final assignment.

15%
Curriculum jamming: Digital learning artifact

Individual development of a digital learning artifact that reflects your group’s theme.

20%
Curriculum jamming: Digital learning artifact peer feedback

Feedback on two of your classmates’ digital artifacts.

5%
Curriculum jamming: Podcast!

Group recording of a podcast episode discussing the curriculum jamming assignment.

10%
Curriculum jamming: Digital learning resource

Group development of a digital learning resource that reflects the outcomes and themes of the course.

30%
Critical discussions

Your engagement with discussion forum questions, dilemmas and activities related to curriculum issues in culture and new media.

20%

Minor course topic, activity, reading/resource, and assignment details may change from year to year.