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[Commlist] New Book: Bring the World to the Child: Technologies of Global Citizenship in American Education
Sat Feb 08 09:44:11 GMT 2020
Published this week by The MIT Press:
Bring the World to the Child: Technologies of Global Citizenship in
American Education
By Katie Day Good (Miami University)
Available for order here: https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/bring-world-child
Summary:
How, long before the advent of computers and the internet, educators
used technology to help students become media-literate, future-ready,
and world-minded citizens.
Description:
Today, educators, technology leaders, and policy makers promote the
importance of “global,” “wired,” and “multimodal” learning; efforts to
teach young people to become engaged global citizens and skilled users
of media often go hand in hand. But the use of technology to bring
students into closer contact with the outside world did not begin with
the first computer in a classroom. In this book, Katie Day Good traces
the roots of the digital era's “connected learning” and “global
classrooms” to the first half of the twentieth century, when educators
adopted a range of media and materials—including lantern slides,
bulletin boards, radios, and film projectors—as what she terms
“technologies of global citizenship.”
Good describes how progressive reformers in the early twentieth century
made a case for deploying diverse media technologies in the classroom to
promote cosmopolitanism and civic-minded learning. To “bring the world
to the child,” these reformers praised not only new mechanical
media—including stereoscopes, photography, and educational films—but
also humbler forms of media, created by teachers and children, including
scrapbooks, peace pageants, and pen pal correspondence. The goal was a
“mediated cosmopolitanism,” teaching children to look outward onto a
fast-changing world—and inward, at their own national greatness. Good
argues that the public school system became a fraught site of global
media reception, production, and exchange in American life, teaching
children to engage with cultural differences while reinforcing hegemonic
ideas about race, citizenship, and US-world relations.
Endorsements:
“The internet was hardly the first classroom technology of
‘connectedness.’ In this history of educational media, Katie Day Good
traces earlier claims about technology and global citizenship, and
reminds us that as much as these devices were supposed to show students
the world, so too were they about extending American power and influence.”
– Audrey Watters, founder of Hack Education; author of The Monsters of
Education Technology
“This history of educational media offers a vivid, fascinating, and at
times sobering, picture of teachers, industry, and NGOs coming together
a century ago to engage children in America’s emerging and presumed
moral leadership on a global stage. The reverberations continue to be
felt, as Katie Day Good also makes clear, in today’s media-saturated
classrooms.”
-John Willinsky, Khosla Family Professor of Education, Stanford
University; author of//The Intellectual Properties of Learning
“/Bring the World to the Child /is an original and compelling history of
school media use in the first half of the twentieth century. Through
deft and thoughtful readings of pageants, stereoscopes, and other
neglected forms of media, Good provides a brilliant new interpretation
of schools’ efforts to promote global citizenship through media. This
book is a unique contribution to our understanding of the intertwined
histories of media technology and education in the United States.”
-Victoria Cain, Associate Professor, Northeastern University; coauthor
of Life on Display: Revolutionizing US Museums of Science and Natural
History in the Twentieth Century
“Katie Day Good radically expands our understanding of educational
technology, tracing its history back to the early twentieth century, and
broadening its definition to include lantern slides, scrapbooks, pen
pals, pageants, and toy exchanges. In the retelling, Good uncovers
omissions and anxieties that continue to plague the introduction of new
media to schools, from fears of children being rendered passive by too
much staring at screens, to the prejudice embedded in Eurocentric ideas
about tolerance and diversity.”
-Alexandra Lange, author of The Design of Childhood: How the Material
World Shapes Independent Kids
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