Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice

<p>In the United States, the disciplines of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (also widely known as STEM) attract very few African American, Latino, and Native (indigenous Alaskan, North American, and Pacific Islander) students. These underrepresented students might be more att...

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Main Author: Audrey Grace Bennett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2016-12-01
Series:Revista Teknokultura
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/TEKN/article/view/52843
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spelling doaj-f0173988ec8b46caaa18f6e77dd6f8a02020-11-25T02:33:11ZengUniversidad Complutense de MadridRevista Teknokultura1549-22302016-12-0113258761210.5209/rev_TEKN.2016.v13.n2.5284350868Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justiceAudrey Grace Bennett0Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute<p>In the United States, the disciplines of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (also widely known as STEM) attract very few African American, Latino, and Native (indigenous Alaskan, North American, and Pacific Islander) students. These underrepresented students might be more attracted to STEM disciplines if they knew STEM education’s extraordinary potential to circulate value back to their ethnic communities. For instance, underrepresented medical students, after graduation, are statistically more likely than white students to conduct research on health issues relevant to their ethnic communities. One of the most popular STEM reform movements that of STEAM (STEM + Arts) has done very little to help circulate the unalienated value of these ethnic communities. This paper describes “ethnocomputational creativity” as a generative framework for STEAM that circulates unalienated value in the arts back to underrepresented ethnic communities. We first will look at the dangers of extracting cultural capital without compensation, and how ethnocomputational creativity can, in contrast, help these communities to circulate value in its unalienated form, nurturing both traditional artistic practices as well as creating new paths for "heritage algorithms" and other forms of decolonized STEM education.</p><br />http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/TEKN/article/view/52843Agencia de diseñoprogramas educativoscomunidades étnicaspatrimonio cultural de los algoritmosSTEAM
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Audrey Grace Bennett
spellingShingle Audrey Grace Bennett
Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
Revista Teknokultura
Agencia de diseño
programas educativos
comunidades étnicas
patrimonio cultural de los algoritmos
STEAM
author_facet Audrey Grace Bennett
author_sort Audrey Grace Bennett
title Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
title_short Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
title_full Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
title_fullStr Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
title_full_unstemmed Ethnocomputational creativity in STEAM education: A cultural framework for generative justice
title_sort ethnocomputational creativity in steam education: a cultural framework for generative justice
publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
series Revista Teknokultura
issn 1549-2230
publishDate 2016-12-01
description <p>In the United States, the disciplines of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (also widely known as STEM) attract very few African American, Latino, and Native (indigenous Alaskan, North American, and Pacific Islander) students. These underrepresented students might be more attracted to STEM disciplines if they knew STEM education’s extraordinary potential to circulate value back to their ethnic communities. For instance, underrepresented medical students, after graduation, are statistically more likely than white students to conduct research on health issues relevant to their ethnic communities. One of the most popular STEM reform movements that of STEAM (STEM + Arts) has done very little to help circulate the unalienated value of these ethnic communities. This paper describes “ethnocomputational creativity” as a generative framework for STEAM that circulates unalienated value in the arts back to underrepresented ethnic communities. We first will look at the dangers of extracting cultural capital without compensation, and how ethnocomputational creativity can, in contrast, help these communities to circulate value in its unalienated form, nurturing both traditional artistic practices as well as creating new paths for "heritage algorithms" and other forms of decolonized STEM education.</p><br />
topic Agencia de diseño
programas educativos
comunidades étnicas
patrimonio cultural de los algoritmos
STEAM
url http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/TEKN/article/view/52843
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