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[ecrea] CFP: Politics of On-line Education
Mon Jan 26 12:28:52 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue: Politics of On-line Education
SUBMISSION DUE DATE: 01 May 2015
PUBLICATION: International Journal of E-Politics
OBJECTIVE OF THE THEMED ISSUE:
This special issue invites submissions on the Political Aspects of
On-line Education. For this special issue, online education generally
references any
web-based learning, including for profit and not for profit, public and
private. Thus, it includes online, hybrid and free offerings such as MOOCs,
and specialized training as well as accredited university offerings.
Regardless of the specific offering, it is a disruptive technology that
impacts the Higher Education industry. Higher Education is integral to
productivity
and innovation, at individual and collective levels. Thus, it affects
the differential influence, or power, of individuals, organizations,
governments and
alliances. Online education impacts (push), and is impacted by (pull),
such shifting power structures (c.f., Brown and Adler, 2008). It also
amplifies,
and is amplified by, globalization’s disruptive forces.
This special issue’s objective is to explore online education’s impact
and its shifting political implications on various levels and scales,
including individual,
regulatory, social and cultural. These implications are on and between
individuals, within and between organizations, and within and between
governments,
and combinations of these.
SUGGESTED TOPICS:
We are interested in topics that include (but are not limited to) the
following:
* Accreditation, Regulation, Federal Financial Aid
* Impact on organizational and industry structure within the Higher
Education industry
* Strategic implications/ opportunities/ challenges/ prescriptions for
traditional and online, public and private Higher Education organizations
* Shifting higher education business models’ impacts (e.g., economic,
social, psychological) on administrator, faculty, staff and student
roles and power, e.g., adjunctification’s un-bundling of work (course
design, seminars, grading, mentoring, advising, governance, research,
service, etc.).
* Implications from shifting cross-subsidies associated with new models
(e.g., large lower-level introduction courses subsidize small
upper-level specialized courses –what happens when the introductory
courses are waived in competency-based scenarios or MOOCs are accepted
for credit?).
* Power issues associated with shifting models of education, e.g.,
competency based degrees, MOOCs, hybrid programs, etc. Who wins, who
loses? What potential strategies exist?
* “The next billion”—i.e., Online education’s potential to efficiently
educate financially- and/or technologically-challenged students, both in
developed and developing regions. What are the political implications of
this? What policies/ strategies can enhance or diminish this potential?
* Online education’s colonialization and resulting potential for
cultural homogenization. Transplanting developed regions’ educational
models and resources to other cultures may cause the latter
(colonialized) to resemble the former (colonial). What strategies are
used to resist this colonialization and homogenization?
* Gender issues—Are women more highly represented as online students and
faculty? Why or why not? What are the political and performance
implications?
* Political issues associated with globalization and online learning
* Religious issues associated with online learning, possibly combined
with globalization aspects.
* Virtual workers’ political issues in dealing with each other, with
supervisors and subordinates. What happens when information is
un-bundled from people and places, and flows more freely? Who wins and
who loses? What games inhibit and lubricate these information flows?
* Politics of Open Source materials –Who owns, who uses, who benefits,
who loses, who controls, etc.
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Researchers from any field of enquiry that deals with the politics of
online education broadly defined are invited to submit papers for this
themed issue. All submissions are due by May 1, 2015.
All queries to
Kristina Setzekorn (ksetzekorn /at/ kaplan.edu)
Full papers to be submitted electronically, and please reference this
special issue
http://www.igi-global.com/IJEP/
Editors-in-Chief:
Celia Romm Livermore, School of Business Administration, Wayne State
University, Detroit, USA
Yasmin Ibrahim, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary,
University of London, https://qmul.academia.edu/yasminibrahim
Published: Quarterly (both in Print and Electronic form)
PUBLISHER:
The International Journal of E-Politics is published by IGI Global
(formerly Idea Group Inc.), publisher of the “Information Science
Reference” (formerly Idea Group Reference) and “Medical Information
Science Reference” imprints. For additional information regarding the
publisher, please visit www.igi-global.com.
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