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dc.contributor.authorDron, Jon
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-04T17:16:54Z
dc.date.available2021-04-04T17:16:54Z
dc.date.issued2021-04-03
dc.identifier.urihttps://auspace.athabascau.ca/handle/2149/3653
dc.description.abstractThis is the submitted version of the paper, published with corrections in AI&Society. This theoretical paper elucidates the nature of educational technology and, in the process, sheds light on a number of phenomena in educational systems, from the no-significant-difference phenomenon to the singular lack of replication in studies of educational technologies. Its central thesis is that we are not just users of technologies but coparticipants in them. Our participant roles may range from pressing power switches to designing digital learning systems to performing calculations in our heads. Some technologies may demand our participation only in order to enact fixed, predesigned orchestrations correctly. Other technologies leave gaps that we can or must fill with novel orchestrations, that we may perform more or less well. Most are a mix of the two, and the mix varies according to context, participant, and use. This participative orchestration is highly distributed: in educational systems, coparticipants include the learner, the teacher, and many others, from textbook authors to LMS programmers, as well as the tools and methods they use and create. From this perspective, all learners and teachers are educational technologists. The technologies of education are seen to be deeply, fundamentally, and irreducibly human, complex, situated and social in their constitution, their form, and their purpose, and as ungeneralizable in their effects as the choice of paintbrush is to the production of great art.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherSpringeren_US
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/*
dc.subjectTechnology, distributed cognition, coparticipation, Educational technology, participation, designen_US
dc.titleEducational technology: what it is and how it worksen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US


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  • Dr. Jon Dron
    Associate Professor, Computing & Information Systems

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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