ON THE TECHNOLOGY FETISH IN EDUCATION: ELLUL,
BAUDRILLARD, AND THE END OF HUMANITY
Deron Boyles
Georgia State University
Kip Kline
Lewis University
Schools continue to purchase and install machines
and practices from the world of communications technology. In turn, students
and teachers are purported to be more “connected,” and this connectivity is
widely viewed as having a positive influence on teaching and learning. In this
essay, however, we argue that not only are these claims about better teaching
and learning specious, but that the largely unreflective and zealous pursuit of
new technologies by schools amounts to an acceptance of technological
determinism and an adoption of a set of non-neutral ontological assumptions.
Human interaction is always interpreted, but the mitigation of technology
raises important questions about the
assumed neutrality of “technological innovation.”
Evan
Williams, a founder of Twitter, recently claimed that “the internet is broken.”
His chief concerns include the degree to which
Facebook live streams suicides, Twitter trolls attack people with abandon, and
“news links” lead to falsehoods. The assault on truth, we argue, is a direct
result of one of Williams's other inventions: the blog. Blogs allowed
narcissistic posting of virtually anything, resulting, on Williams’s own admission,
in a culture of “extremes.”
The solution, for Williams, is not to reposition
humanity as central to deliberation, but to shift reality to a consumer-pay
model for content access. Ashe puts it:Ad-driven systems can only reward
attention.
They can't reward the right answer. Consumer-paid
systems can. They can reward value. The inevitable solution: People will have to
pay for quality content.
Per Liam Mitchell, the preponderance of new
communications technology has as a central belief the confluence of capitalism,
collectivism, and technological determinism. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg said in
2013 that “The real goal is to connect everyone in the world and help people
map out everything that there is.” According to Mitchell, “At best, this ideology
is naive. At worst, it is helping to create a transnational, colonial,
capitalist subject who is alienated from the product of their
production/consumption, disillusioned with their mode of self – representation, and ironically disconnected
from their friends.”
More recently, in a twist on Mitchell’s concern, The
New York Times highlighted a North Dakota
teacher, Kayla Delzer, who enacts Silicon
Valley’s penchant for all things techno-education.
She is a “teacher influencer” who has her own
brand and financially benefits from referrals to high-tech firms and education entrepreneurs. Education start-ups like Seesaw give her their premium classroom technology as well as swag like T-shirts or freebies for the
teachers who attend her workshops. She agrees to use their products in her
classroom and give the companies feedback. And she recommends their wares to
thousands of teachers who follow her on social media.
As she puts it, “I will embed it [new
technologies] in my brand every day.” The
commercial and ethical issues this raises are
only indicative of the (logical?)consequences that follow from technophilia run
amok.While it would be easy for us to critique the mercantile elements pervading
technological “innovations,” they are not the focus of this paper.
Instead, we utilize Williams’assumptions and
Zuckerberg’s ontology as indicative of the most recent instantiation of
what Jacques Ellul called “technique”and what Jean Baudrillard considered
simulated communication and the death of the real.
The paper proceeds in three parts: 1) elucidating
Ellul’s seven necessary conditions of and for “technique;” 2) reconsidering
Baudrillard’s simulation theory; and 3) positioning both theorists’ arguments in
a revised claim about the role of humanity in a world of ubiquitous technology.
Implications for a more critical understanding of education are explored to
develop counter narratives to challenge the overwhelming influence of technique
and simulation
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