Parallel session 1 (26th May) Digital Education Governance Beyond International Comparative Assessment
From Claire Sowton
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are still to be reviewed. We anticipate this work being
complete by Aug 22*
Chair: Barbara Hof
How are Google and Microsoft Embedding Themselves in the Malaysian Education System?
Pravindharan Balakrishnan (Comparative and International Education initiative, Malaysia)
The Rise to Power of EdTech Brokers: New Ways of Governing through “What Works”
Carlos Ortegón (KU Leuven)
The ongoing digitization of education, enhanced by the pandemic shock suffered almost two years ago, has brought new actors into the educational landscape that are playing a central role in defining the type of education that is delivered at schools. This contribution aims to examine one of such actors, namely, the edtech brokers, and to critically explore the policy context in which they emerge, as well as the governing rationales they promote. Edtech brokers are broadly defined as the intermediary organizations that operate between the commercial industry (e.g. Google, Microsoft) and the schools. As it is portrayed by identified cases in Belgium (i.c. Flanders) and the U.K., brokers’ range of action includes the assistance on procurement processes, the recommendation of specific educational platforms, and digital skills training to teachers and staff. Brokers are “hidden” actors placed between the schools and the edtech industry, that nonetheless occupy a powerful position in guiding schools in the use of “what works” in edtech, and in promoting new types of professionality and expertise in practice settings. By analyzing locally embedded policy documents of Flanders and the U.K, and also transnational documents (e.g. World Bank, U.N.), we contend that the current policy landscape discursively constructs a space in which brokers are called to emerge as new type of educational professionals, strengthening and even actualizing overarching meta-policies of governing education through “evidence-based” solutions or though “what works”. A critical scrutiny will provide a richer idea of how these governing rationales can alter in novel ways the limits and boundaries between the (edtech) market and the schools.
Chair: Barbara Hof
How are Google and Microsoft Embedding Themselves in the Malaysian Education System?
Pravindharan Balakrishnan (Comparative and International Education initiative, Malaysia)
With the COVID-19 pandemic forcing prolonged physical school closures, this accelerated Google and Microsoft to embed themselves as key players in the global education system. Taking Malaysia as the case study, this study seeks to understand how Google and Microsoft influence the national education system. In June 2020, three months after nationwide school closures, the Ministry of Education (MOE) launched Digital Educational Learning Initiative Malaysia (DELIMa) through a partnership with Google, Microsoft, Apple and other EdTech organizations to boost online learning. Utilizing a technographic investigation, I attempt to outline how Google and Microsoft constitute and configure the Malaysian education system through the process of ‘making’, ‘distributed cognition’, and ‘construction of rules’ (Jansen & Vellema, 2011). Process of ‘making’ can be defined as the use of skills, knowledge, and techniques to transform materials. This can be exemplified through Google’s partnership with MOE by providing teachers with digital teaching skills through online webinars. Simultaneously, Microsoft provided short-term online courses, specifically aimed at Malaysian educators. Next, distributed cognition can be described as the collective action within a task group or network of actors. This can be observed through certification opportunities provided by both Google and Microsoft. By doing so, this creates a sustainable community of certified teachers who then initiate grassroots groups on social media that promote the use of Google or Microsoft tools. Finally, ‘construction of rules’ looks at how rules, protocols, routines, and rituals emerge from these activities. With the establishment of DELIMa, MOE had encouraged teachers to use Google Classroom as the official mode of online learning. Simultaneously, the use of Google Classroom is part of the online reporting system for teachers. All of these shows how these socio-technical systems are constituting and configuring the education system at a micro and local level.
The Rise to Power of EdTech Brokers: New Ways of Governing through “What Works”
Carlos Ortegón (KU Leuven)
The ongoing digitization of education, enhanced by the pandemic shock suffered almost two years ago, has brought new actors into the educational landscape that are playing a central role in defining the type of education that is delivered at schools. This contribution aims to examine one of such actors, namely, the edtech brokers, and to critically explore the policy context in which they emerge, as well as the governing rationales they promote. Edtech brokers are broadly defined as the intermediary organizations that operate between the commercial industry (e.g. Google, Microsoft) and the schools. As it is portrayed by identified cases in Belgium (i.c. Flanders) and the U.K., brokers’ range of action includes the assistance on procurement processes, the recommendation of specific educational platforms, and digital skills training to teachers and staff. Brokers are “hidden” actors placed between the schools and the edtech industry, that nonetheless occupy a powerful position in guiding schools in the use of “what works” in edtech, and in promoting new types of professionality and expertise in practice settings. By analyzing locally embedded policy documents of Flanders and the U.K, and also transnational documents (e.g. World Bank, U.N.), we contend that the current policy landscape discursively constructs a space in which brokers are called to emerge as new type of educational professionals, strengthening and even actualizing overarching meta-policies of governing education through “evidence-based” solutions or though “what works”. A critical scrutiny will provide a richer idea of how these governing rationales can alter in novel ways the limits and boundaries between the (edtech) market and the schools.
The Assemblage of the Inanimate Object in Education Research: Mapping Policy Networks and Venture Philanthropy
Emma E. Rowe (Deakin University)
This paper examines digital education governance via the frame of venture philanthropy in public education. Digital actors are frequently working alongside, or with, venture philanthropy—such as Facebook, Google, Amazon or Microsoft. Focusing on Australia and policy mobility in public education, the paper identifies a central hub (named Social Ventures Australia) to map a structural shift in the governance of education, identifying how policy networks steer education systems, and in the process mutating agency and authority of public education. Drawing on a metaphor of the dingo-proof fence, the longest structure in Australia, the paper conceptualises policy networks and how they are assembled as hybrid digital actors—tying this to the assemblage of major policy reform in public education, namely a national evidence broker. Australian Education Research Organisation (AERO) emerged in 2021, as modelled on the UK’s Education Endowment Foundation and the What Works Centre for Education. The logic of causation is publicly attributed to a government report, yet this omits a more complex policy network that lobbied for its establishment. Australia’s first national ‘evidence-broker’ is strategically assembled as an ‘inanimate object’ (Law and Singleton, 2005), and is reliant upon a range of governance technologies to uphold its scaffolding of impartiality, including tools and instruments, such as randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and public rubrics, or hierarchies of evidence. The evidence broker is tied to venture philanthropic networks, and these policy networks, as entangled with big banks, consultancies, and tech corporations, illuminate the heterarchical state, fundamentally affecting the materiality of public education.
Emma E. Rowe (Deakin University)
This paper examines digital education governance via the frame of venture philanthropy in public education. Digital actors are frequently working alongside, or with, venture philanthropy—such as Facebook, Google, Amazon or Microsoft. Focusing on Australia and policy mobility in public education, the paper identifies a central hub (named Social Ventures Australia) to map a structural shift in the governance of education, identifying how policy networks steer education systems, and in the process mutating agency and authority of public education. Drawing on a metaphor of the dingo-proof fence, the longest structure in Australia, the paper conceptualises policy networks and how they are assembled as hybrid digital actors—tying this to the assemblage of major policy reform in public education, namely a national evidence broker. Australian Education Research Organisation (AERO) emerged in 2021, as modelled on the UK’s Education Endowment Foundation and the What Works Centre for Education. The logic of causation is publicly attributed to a government report, yet this omits a more complex policy network that lobbied for its establishment. Australia’s first national ‘evidence-broker’ is strategically assembled as an ‘inanimate object’ (Law and Singleton, 2005), and is reliant upon a range of governance technologies to uphold its scaffolding of impartiality, including tools and instruments, such as randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and public rubrics, or hierarchies of evidence. The evidence broker is tied to venture philanthropic networks, and these policy networks, as entangled with big banks, consultancies, and tech corporations, illuminate the heterarchical state, fundamentally affecting the materiality of public education.
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