Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education
Technology education in North America has been almost exclusively a male phenomenon. Technology education continues to be taught by males to predominantly males. In addition to excluding females, technology education excludes students from various ethnic, cultural, social and academic groups. Re...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-30512018-01-05T17:31:12Z Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education O’Riley, Patricia Ann Technology education in North America has been almost exclusively a male phenomenon. Technology education continues to be taught by males to predominantly males. In addition to excluding females, technology education excludes students from various ethnic, cultural, social and academic groups. Recent revisions of technology education curricula have attempted to address these Inequities. The resulting curricula are purported to be relevant to all students and appropriate to the needs of society. This thesis analyzes the extent to which curricular revisions address the inequities and appropriateness of technology education curricula. My analysis shows that the revised curricula are neither suitable for nor relevant to the needs of most students. Revised curricula support a hegemonic devotion to the 'device paradigm' which permeates much of North American culture, and such hegemony Is a barrier to the development of a form of technological literacy which may empower students to influence rather than simply participate in technological developments. The curricula examined do not explicate the paradigms In which they are situated, nor do they address fundamental questions such as: What purpose should education serve in society? and. What role should technology education play in education generally? Paradigms of traditional and current technology education curricula are identified and elements of critical, Freirian and feminist pedagogy are proposed as promising ways of countering hegemony in education. Since other academic areas may well suffer from similar inequities, and may share the hegemony of technology education, the issues raised In this thesis may be generalizable to other subject areas in education. Education, Faculty of Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of Graduate 2008-12-17T22:03:35Z 2008-12-17T22:03:35Z 1992 1992-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3051 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 5722949 bytes application/pdf |
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Technology education in North America has been almost exclusively a
male phenomenon. Technology education continues to be taught by males to
predominantly males. In addition to excluding females, technology education
excludes students from various ethnic, cultural, social and academic groups.
Recent revisions of technology education curricula have attempted to address
these Inequities. The resulting curricula are purported to be relevant to all
students and appropriate to the needs of society. This thesis analyzes the
extent to which curricular revisions address the inequities and appropriateness
of technology education curricula. My analysis shows that the revised
curricula are neither suitable for nor relevant to the needs of most students.
Revised curricula support a hegemonic devotion to the 'device paradigm' which
permeates much of North American culture, and such hegemony Is a barrier to
the development of a form of technological literacy which may empower
students to influence rather than simply participate in technological
developments. The curricula examined do not explicate the paradigms In
which they are situated, nor do they address fundamental questions such as:
What purpose should education serve in society? and. What role should
technology education play in education generally?
Paradigms of traditional and current technology education curricula are
identified and elements of critical, Freirian and feminist pedagogy are proposed
as promising ways of countering hegemony in education. Since other academic
areas may well suffer from similar inequities, and may share the hegemony of
technology education, the issues raised In this thesis may be generalizable to
other subject areas in education. === Education, Faculty of === Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of === Graduate |
author |
O’Riley, Patricia Ann |
spellingShingle |
O’Riley, Patricia Ann Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
author_facet |
O’Riley, Patricia Ann |
author_sort |
O’Riley, Patricia Ann |
title |
Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
title_short |
Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
title_full |
Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
title_fullStr |
Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
title_full_unstemmed |
Contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
title_sort |
contextualizing the gendered and industrial bias of technology education |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3051 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT orileypatriciaann contextualizingthegenderedandindustrialbiasoftechnologyeducation |
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