e-Learning Ecologies MOOC’s Updates

Can ubiquitous learning spaces free students from control?

Ubiquitous learning is a new model of learning that removes teaching and learning from the spatial and temporal constraints that both teachers and learners had in the modern type of schooling, such as lectures in classrooms.

Students can choose to watch the videos and read online materials and using their personal computers anytime they want to and share their ideas about the topics discussed in those materials with other participants and instructors.

This new type of learning change teacher-student relationships. Teachers are no longer the sole possessor of knowledge who disseminates knowledge one directionally to their students at the same time. Students can interact with each other and with their teachers in more non-linear and complex ways. Such intellectual interactions often result in generating a new understanding of the given topic or even new interpretations, new knowledge collaboratively through interactions.

The type of learning and teaching become more non-hierarchical and non-synchronous. Rather, education and relationships in classrooms become organic.

In the modern era, schools like hospitals, mental institutions, military, and prison served as the way to construct subjective and obedient citizens (Foucault, 1979). Non-ubiquitous learning through 12 years of public school education contributed significantly in making such “docile” “obedient” bodies as students had to sit within the confine meant of the class and synchronize their body movements in response to the command of their teachers. In that sense, placing ubiquitous learning at the core of education starting from the first grade, could potentially change not only the way how we learn or interact with teachers but also what citizens we become.

Stateville Prison (2002)
Students Taking Standardized Test

At the same time, I believe that online space is not necessarily an utterly liberating space. There are different forms of surveillance and control in this space. I am curious to know how governance of mind and body operate in ubiquitous learning spaces.

Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Vintage.

  • Suzanne Harrison
  • Almendra Espinoza
  • Reena Sonigrah