Symbolic Narratives and the Role of Meaning: Encountering Technology in South African Primary Education

This article draws on the results of a long-term, design-based research study with South African primary school teachers to discuss the role of subjectively assigned meanings and symbolisms of technology, as key factors affecting the adoption, appropriation and use of educational technology in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Izak Van Zyl, Amalia Sabiescu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM) 2016-12-01
Series:The African Journal of Information and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/21654
Description
Summary:This article draws on the results of a long-term, design-based research study with South African primary school teachers to discuss the role of subjectively assigned meanings and symbolisms of technology, as key factors affecting the adoption, appropriation and use of educational technology in urban poor and under-resourced environments. The paper examines how teachers’ engagements with technology are framed, conditioned, and embedded in multi-levelled “technology encounters”. These encounters give rise to meaningful representations of technology that ultimately transform both the teaching and learning process, and culminate in the emergence of “symbolic narratives”: complex assemblages of symbolisms, meanings and interpretations that arise through and therefore come to influence further technology engagements. We argue that a closer examination of teachers’ symbolic narratives can shed light on the motivations that underpin the appropriation, integration -- or conversely, rejection -- of educational technology in urban poor and under-resourced environments.
ISSN:2077-7205
2077-7213