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Education & New Technologies in China: The Politics of Visions & Strategies

Schulte, Barbara LU orcid (2017) Digital Culture & Society – International Conference on Chinese and European Developments
Abstract
In the Western hemisphere, the opposition of surveillance versus privacy appears to be common sense: any technology use with the potential risk of infringing upon personal integrity and privacy is in return expected to lead to substantial improvements in security in order to constitute a legitimate course of action. In China, the main problem of inhibiting the free flow of information is rarely seen in the potential violation of privacy rights but in the disadvantages that could emerge for China's innovative capacity.

These two different approaches towards digital control and surveillance are reflected in a number of fields, including education. Outside China, it is particularly the concept of critical digital literacy that has... (More)
In the Western hemisphere, the opposition of surveillance versus privacy appears to be common sense: any technology use with the potential risk of infringing upon personal integrity and privacy is in return expected to lead to substantial improvements in security in order to constitute a legitimate course of action. In China, the main problem of inhibiting the free flow of information is rarely seen in the potential violation of privacy rights but in the disadvantages that could emerge for China's innovative capacity.

These two different approaches towards digital control and surveillance are reflected in a number of fields, including education. Outside China, it is particularly the concept of critical digital literacy that has been focusing on how each individual can be equipped with the necessary tools to critically handle the infringing effects of digital technologies. In China, the relationship between education and technology is deeply intertwined with the nation-state project: new technologies are supposed to support the country's modernization, which in turn is considered of utmost importance for the economic well-being and sovereignty of the nation.
This paper investigates how the interaction between education and new technologies is framed in Chinese society, by focusing on the political visions and strategies that underlie potential uses of communication and information technologies (ICT) for educational and pedagogical purposes. It will be analyzed how official visions as articulated in strategy papers and guidelines portray the interrelationship of education and digital technologies, to then investigate how these items have been utilized by educators. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
ICT4E, China, innovation, education, surveillance
conference name
Digital Culture & Society – International Conference on Chinese and European Developments
conference location
Shanghai, China
conference dates
2017-10-19 - 2017-10-20
project
Nation state versus ethnicity: educating ethnic minorities in South-West China
Digital China
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7214fa6f-b94d-4435-b0df-9e7cf5226677
date added to LUP
2017-12-07 10:39:14
date last changed
2019-03-08 03:21:29
@misc{7214fa6f-b94d-4435-b0df-9e7cf5226677,
  abstract     = {{In the Western hemisphere, the opposition of surveillance versus privacy appears to be common sense: any technology use with the potential risk of infringing upon personal integrity and privacy is in return expected to lead to substantial improvements in security in order to constitute a legitimate course of action. In China, the main problem of inhibiting the free flow of information is rarely seen in the potential violation of privacy rights but in the disadvantages that could emerge for China's innovative capacity.<br/><br/>These two different approaches towards digital control and surveillance are reflected in a number of fields, including education. Outside China, it is particularly the concept of critical digital literacy that has been focusing on how each individual can be equipped with the necessary tools to critically handle the infringing effects of digital technologies. In China, the relationship between education and technology is deeply intertwined with the nation-state project: new technologies are supposed to support the country's modernization, which in turn is considered of utmost importance for the economic well-being and sovereignty of the nation.<br/>This paper investigates how the interaction between education and new technologies is framed in Chinese society, by focusing on the political visions and strategies that underlie potential uses of communication and information technologies (ICT) for educational and pedagogical purposes. It will be analyzed how official visions as articulated in strategy papers and guidelines portray the interrelationship of education and digital technologies, to then investigate how these items have been utilized by educators.}},
  author       = {{Schulte, Barbara}},
  keywords     = {{ICT4E; China; innovation; education; surveillance}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Education & New Technologies in China: The Politics of Visions & Strategies}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}