Reforms
Needs for vastly increased social justice & environmental vitality
Introduction
It is apparent that – as illustrated at right/below – fields of STEM and STEM education are largely co-opted into collaborating, along with myriad other living, nonliving & symbolic entities, in support of ‘elite’ people & groups (mostly financially) in ways that appear linked to many risks &/or harms – like climate crises, species losses, privacy & autonomy losses from surveillance & artificial intelligences, cancers from commercial foods, etc. After elaborations of such claims, this page provides some possible solutions - albeit difficult, given current complex and problematic sociopolitical contexts.
Also see: my extensive & about this.
Rationale for Dispositif Reform
Pro-capitalist STEM Education
Analysts like , and suggest that fields often – in – appear (as ) to support goals of pro-capitalist dispositifs, by supplying (broadly): i) expert STEM workers and ii) compliant workers & consumers.
Also see
Science & Technology Education as a ‘Selection & Training Camp‘ for Potential ‘Producers’
Science/STEM education systems often seem prioritise identification & education of few possible knowledge producers (e.g., STEM professionals) while variably leaving most other students relatively illiterate in science/STEM.
Among mechanisms for such sorting, it seems that science/STEM education is like a – sorting students largely in terms of basic abilities (e.g., intelligence) and (Bourdieu, 1986). In that sense, science/STEM education often is a ‘survival of the richest‘ (e.g., in intelligence, sociocultural capital, gender, race, sexuality, etc.) process. A key mechanism, as elaborated , appears to be strong emphases on inquiry-based learning; i.e., expecting students to discover important & useful laws & theories and/or design solutions with minimal teacher supports.
Science & Technology Education as an ‘Apprenticeship for Consumership‘
For many students, science/STEM education often promotes consumerism like (e.g., as compliant labourers & rabid purchasers) – through at least the mechanisms listed here and elaborated below:
- conformity via standardization;
- consumerism via saturation;
- confusion via intensification;
- reverence via idealization;
- dependence via regulation;
- disempowerment via individualization.
Roles for Education in Ecojustice Reforms
Alternatives to Pro-capitalist Science & Technology (STEM) Education
Socioeconomic systems like those influenced by neoliberalism and authoritarianism are very resistant to change, as with . Their resilience appears due to abilities of elite to orchestrate most living & nonliving things into complex and vast cooperative networks (‘‘). Those (e.g., ) wanting societies oriented, instead, to ideologies like ecojustice (attacking ideologies like ) must, therefore, promote development of new, widely-accepted, dispositifs. That will not likely be easy. However, given that technoscience developments appear to co-affect societal zeitgeists (), technoscience education must be considered a main route to dramatic socioeconomic change.
Apparently, learners can only ‘construct’ new ASK if they possess (e.g., in their minds & bodies) ‘resources’ – such as new knowledge (e.g., about natural selection) that has been directly taught to them because they might struggle to construct them on their own. Because of such limits on constructions, the STEPWISE pedagogical schema prioritizes in terms of Lock’s (1990) control-of-learning framework at right/below. Choices made in this regard prioritize , like: direct teaching (TD/CE) about a plurality of perspectives and practices and opportunities for personal choices (SD/OE) – both of which seem compromised in many societies. Under influences of , for example, governments have cooperated with many supportive entities, including transnational ones like the , to prioritize values like competitive . In this paradigm, competitions appear unfair. For example, emphases on student self-discovery in and that appear largely due to neoliberalism can compromise many students’ democratic rights.
By using teacher-directed, closed-ended approaches in synchrony with more student-directed & open-ended application activities – about apparently and much more and sample RiNA projects, it is my hope that students may develop and implement sociopolitical actions that may disrupt and perhaps dramatically transform societies of control (see video here) in ways promoting greater . Drawing on concepts in , we may imagine students acting to promote replacement of hierarchical societies with those more like ; e.g., in eclectic ways. To help with this, as recommended , democratic educators must combine direct critical instruction with students’ independent opportunities for reflective practice (praxis) – which is reflected in STEPWISE emphases on Student-led RiNA Projects.
Also see: .