Books I’m currently reading

Following up on the list of graphic novels I am planning on reading in 2021, I thought I would post what I’m currently reading. There’s no graphic novels in this post. The last graphic novel I read was Not Funny Ha-Ha by Leah Hayes. In no particular order, I’m at various stages of reading (which shouldn’t be taken to mean “endorsing”) the following:

  • The Manifesto for Teaching Online, by Siân Bayne, Peter Evans, Rory Ewins, Jeremy Knox, James Lamb, Hamish Macleod, Clara O’Shea, Jen Ross, Philippa Sheail and Christine Sinclair
  • Failure to Disrupt: Why Technology Alone Can’t Transform Education, by Justin Reich
  • Alternative Universities: Speculative Design for Innovation in Higher Education, by David J. Staley (rereading)
  • Narrative Economics: How Stories Go Viral and Drive Major Economic Events, Robert J. Shiller
  • Your Day, Your Way: The Fact and Fiction Behind Your Daily Decisions, by Tim Caulfield
  • Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity—and Why This Harms Everybody, by Helen Pluckrose and James A. Lindsay
  • Living a Feminist Life, by Sara Ahmed (re-reading)

2021 reading list of graphic novels

 

Photo by Miika Laaksonen

I’ve been reading more and more graphic novels over the years, and as 2020 finally winds down, I thought I would post which ones I am tentatively planning on reading in 2021. Some of these come from Graphic Mundi, which is a new collection by Penn State University Press publishing “both fiction and nonfiction narratives on subjects such as health and human rights, politics, the environment, science, and technology.” I might not read all of these, and I’ll probably read more, but I like looking forward to the new year rather than looking back to what I read in 2020.

Below is the list of books. I generated this list by placing a hold on each book at my local library. Most of these books are not yet available, and some already have plenty of holds ahead of me, which means that I won’t be getting them early. And that becomes part of the fun of this reading plan: I don’t know what I’m getting when until I receive the email that a book (or multiple books!) are ready for pickup.

TitleAuthor
1984 : The Graphic NovelOrwell, George.
7 Good Reasons Not to Grow UpGownley, Jimmy.
Algériennes : the forgotten women of the Algerian RevolutionMeralli, Swann,
And Now I Spill the Family Secrets : An Illustrated MemoirKimball, Margaret.
Barely Functional Adult : It'll All Make Sense EventuallyNg, Meichi.
Be More Chill : The Graphic NovelVizzini, Ned.
Billie Holiday : The Graphic NovelGilbert, Ebony.
BillionairesCunningham, Darryl.
Cocaine CoastCarretero, Nacho.
COVID Chronicles : A Comics AnthologyBoileau, Kendra.
Crude : A MemoirFajardo, Pablo.
Desperate PleasuresHarkness, M. S.
Drawing Lines : An Anthology of Women CartoonistsOates, Joyce Carol.
FatHofer, Regina.
Flash Forward : An Illustrated Guide to Possible (and Not So Possible) TomorrowsEveleth, Rose.
For Justice : The Serge & Beate Klarsfeld StoryBresson, Pascal.
Freiheit! : The White Rose Graphic NovelCiponte, Andrea Grosso.
GirlsplaningKlengel, Katja.
Heaven No HellDeForge, Michael.
I Never Promised You a Rose GardenMurphy, Mannie.
I NinaChmielewski, Daniel.
I Survived the Nazi Invasion, 1944Tarshis, Lauren.
I'm a Wild Seed : A Graphic Memoir on Queerness and Decolonizing the WorldCruz, Sharon Lee De La.
In Love & Pajamas : A Collection of Comics about Being Yourself TogetherChetwynd, Catana.
Infinitum : An Afrofuturist TaleFielder, Tim.
Join the FutureKaplan, Zack.
Kimiko Does Cancer : A Graphic MemoirTobimatsu, Kimiko.
MaidsSkelly, Katie.
Martian Ghost CentaurHeagerty, Mat.
Measuring UpLaMotte, Lily.
Menopause : a comic treatmentCzerwiec, MK (MaryKay),
MudfishPiskor, Ed.
My Body in PiecesHebert, Marie-Noelle.
My Life in Transition : A Super Late Bloomer CollectionKaye, Julia.
Oak Flat : a fight for sacred land in the American WestRedniss, Lauren,
Okay, Universe : Chronicles of a Woman in PoliticsPlante, Valerie.
Onion SkinCamacho, Edgar.
OrwellChristin, Pierre & Sebastian Verdier.
Our Work Is Everywhere : An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans ResistanceRose, Syan.
ParenthesisDurand, Elodie.
Paul at HomeRabagliati, Michel.
Run Home If You Don't Want to Be Killed : The Detroit Uprising of 1943Williams, Rachel.
Save It for Later : Promises, Parenthood, and the Urgency of ProtestPowell, Nate.
Seen : Rachel CarsonWillis, Birdie.
Slaughterhouse-five : or the children's crusade : a duty-dance with deathNorth, Ryan, 1980-
SylvieKantorovitz, Sylvie.
The Black Panther Party : A Graphic Novel HistoryWalker, David F.
The Butcher of ParisPhillips, Stephanie.
The City of BelgiumEvens, Brecht.
The Great Gatsby : A Graphic Novel AdaptationFitzgerald, F. Scott.
The Incredible Nellie Bly : Journalist, Investigator, Feminist, and PhilanthropistCimino, Luciana.
The Minamata Story : An EcoTragedyWilson, Sean Michael.
The ThudRoss, Mikael.
To Know You're AliveMcFadzean, Dakota.
Tokyo Love Story : A Manga Memoir of One Woman's Personal Journey in the World's Most Exciting CityFujita, Julie Blanchin.
Travesia : A Migrant Girl's Cross-Border JourneyGerster, Michelle.
Vulnerability Is My Superpower : An Underpants and Overbites collectionDavis, Jackie.
We Hereby Refuse : Japanese American Acts of Resistance During World War IIAbe, Frank.
We Should Meet in Air : A Graphic Memoir on Reading Sylvia PlathEisenberg, Lisa Rosalie.
Whistle : A New Gotham City HeroLockhart, E.

On experiencing being a student

Today I was putting the final touches on a paper focusing on the professional development opportunities that Canadian institutions of higher education provide to faculty members, and was reminded of the central argument in my recent book: “people involved in online education…need to better understand the needs and experiences of our students… We need to understand students as people, as individuals who have agency, desires, mishaps, dreams, life-changing accidents; as individuals who face the daily minutiae of life; and as people who may even have instructive and insightful ideas about the future of education. The purpose of this book, therefore, is to examine online learning through the lens of student experience and help us narrow our distance from the online students we serve.”

There’s much to say about reading/hearing/watching about other people’s experiences of being a student. It can be powerful. But actually experiencing being a student – not “back when I was a student,” but in the present – can be instrumental in recognizing, truly recognizing, what it is like to face the decisions that faculty and institutions make for you. Decisions such as whether your course is synchronous or not; whether you need to buy expensive textbooks or not; whether you need to engage in collaborative learning activities; and so on. I was also reminded of this today because I read Martin Weller’s post where he writes the following: “there would be a lot to be gained in experiencing the online provision from a student’s perspective. I genuinely think that intrusive exam proctoring for instance would be less readily adopted if staff had to experience it.”

Inside Higher Ed’s 2019 Survey of Faculty Attitudes on Technology notes that faculty who had various experiences with online courses reported encouraging outcomes: more than 60% of faculty who converted a face-to-face course to an online or hybrid course reported that their online courses included “decreased lecture time and increased use of active learning techniques;” more than 75% of those who have taught online courses reported that the experience “helped them develop pedagogical skills and practices that have improved their teaching…[including in helping them think] more critically about ways to engage students with content.”

This is not to say that experiencing something will necessarily enable one to experience it from the subject position of others. To put it in terms of an example: Sure, I can take a test using proctoring software, but my education doesn’t depend on it, my degree and perceived future aren’t dependent on how I do on an exam.

What’s the takeaway here? Perhaps it boils down to something simple, something about experiencing it yourself before expecting others to do so. Or perhaps something about the authenticity of professional development, and striving to make those experiences as authentic as can be. Or, perhaps, this is a critique of the endless array of educational technology products whose developers never quite experience the tech not just as a student, but as a student who is facing different realities that them. It’s probably all of this, and then some.

Open educational resources: expanding equity or reflecting and furthering inequities?

Educational Technology Research and Development (ETR&D) is in the process of finalizing its publication of the special issue Shifting to digital: Informing the rapid development, deployment, and future of teaching and learning. The issue only includes brief multiple-perspective responses (~1000 words) on the implications of recent ETR&D publications in addressing current challenges related to an increased focus on digital learning.

One of the papers that the journal invited responses to was Hilton (2016), a paper in which the author synthesized the existing literature to examine outcomes and perceptions associated with instances in which OER replaced commercial textbooks. Hilton also published an updated review in 2020.

I wrote a response to this paper from a social justice perspective, and it is now available online. In Open educational resources: expanding equity or reflecting and furthering inequities? I argue that open educational resources (OER), such as open textbooks, are an appropriate and worthwhile response to consider as colleges and universities shift to digital modes of teaching and learning. However, without scrutiny, such efforts may reflect or reinforce structural inequities. Thus, OER can be a mixed blessing, expanding inclusion and equity in some areas, but furthering inequities in others. One interesting part of this paper is its engagement with the politics of citation literature in the context of OER.

Other responses to Hilton in this special issue include those from Hodges, Wiley, Kılıçkaya & Kic-Drgas, Lee & Lee, and Tang.

Extended Call for Chapter Proposals – intersections of Feminist Pedagogy & Critical Digital Pedagogy

Extended Call for Chapter Proposals for the open access book: Critical Digital Pedagogy – Broadening Horizons, Bridging Theory and Practice

Edited by Suzan Koseoglu, George Veletsianos, Chris Rowell

The original call for proposals yielded more than enough chapters to fill this book, but we now would like to extend the call to invite women scholars to write on the following topic:

The intersection of Feminist Pedagogy and online, blended or open learning (in the context of Higher Education)

We particularly welcome submissions from women scholars from/in the Global South.

We invite submissions which explore this topic in context through case studies and/or reflective accounts of practice.

Language and style should be accessible to a broad range of readers.

Final submissions are between 3500-4000 words including references.

Chapter proposals will go through an expedited review process – please contact the editors at s.koseoglu@gold.ac.uk for more information.

Important Dates

22 October 2020: One page proposal submission (Please feel free to contact the editors before the submission via s.koseoglu@gold.ac.uk).

25 October 2020: Notification of acceptance (chapter guidelines will be provided)

16 Jan 2021: Full chapter submission (max 3500-4500 words including references)

31 Jan 2021: New chapters are reviewed and the full book manuscript is sent to Athabasca University Press.

Final proposals should be submitted to the editors via email (s.koseoglu@gold.ac.uk). For further inquiries, please feel free to contact any of the editors.

Athabasca University Press

The final manuscript will be submitted to the Distance Education series at Athabasca University Press. Books in this series offer informative and accessible overviews, research results, discussions and explorations of current issues, technologies and services used in distance education. Its current focus is on digital learning and education, with each volume examining critical issues, emerging trends, and historical perspectives in the field. The series is targeted at a wide group of readers that study and practice digital and online learning. Book published under this series are available at http://aupress.ca/index.php/books/series#DistanceEducation

Radical Flexibility and Relationality as Responses to Education in Times of Crisis

I am excited to share a new paper with you. I’m excited because it draws together themes from work Shandell Houlden and I have been doing over the last year and which now seems increasingly important. I’m also excited because the paper is part of a special issue of Postdigital Science and Education, which the Editor reports including “more than 50 articles, authored by nearly 200 people from more than 30 countries and all continents.” I’ve been reading many of these – they are currently posted here as Online First but should appear in an issue soon.

I thought I’d share a couple of snippets here, but I’d love to hear your feedback on this work. The paper is available as Open Access here: Radical Flexibility and Relationality as Responses to Education in Times of Crisis.

Our abstract summarizes the main ideas well:

As educational institutions negotiate numerous challenges resulting from the current pandemic, many are beginning to wonder what the future of education may look like. We contribute to this conversation by arguing for flexible education and considering how it can support better—more equitable, just, accessible, empowering, imaginative—educational futures. At a time of historical disorder and uncertainty, we argue that what we need is a sort of radical flexibility as a way to create life-sustaining education, not just for some, but for all, and not just for now, but far into the future. We argue that such an approach is relational, and centers justice and trust. Furthermore, we note that radical flexibility is systemic and hopeful, and requires wide-ranging changes in practices in addition to the application of new technologies.

We end the paper with this:

Solnit (2020) urges us to remember that ‘[o]rdinary life before the pandemic was already a catastrophe of desperation and exclusion for too many human beings, an environmental and climate catastrophe, an obscenity of inequality’, and this was in many ways as true in the halls of education as anywhere else. But she further reminds us that hope ‘offers us clarity that, amid the uncertainty ahead, there will be conflicts worth joining and the possibility of winning some of them’. If, out of this struggle, we ground our hope in attention to the relational nature of the many worlds in which we all live together, then perhaps we can achieve the radical flexibility truly liberatory education deserves.

 

Veletsianos, G., & Houlden, S. (2020). Radical Flexibility and Relationality as Responses to Education in Times of Crisis. Postdigital Science and Education, 2(3), 849-862. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42438-020-00196-3

 

How should we respond to the life-altering crises that education is facing?

Below is the the pre-published version of a short reflection I wrote for Distance Education, published here for posterity. The paper is Veletsianos, G. (2020). How should we respond to the life-altering crises that education is facing? Distance Education, 41(4), 1-3. https://doi.org/10.1080/01587919.2020.1825066

Abstract

Prior literature suggests that to address the problems facing education, researchers and practitioners of online and flexible learning should avoid placing too much emphasis on the potential of technology and consult the history and literature of the field. In this reflective article, I argue that in addition to these activities, we should expand our efforts to broaden the reach and impact of our field and engage in speculative work that asks: What should the future of digital, online, and flexible education look like?

Introduction

“In this increasingly unstable world, crises potentially impact our education systems. This will be true whether the crisis is caused by the circulation of a new pathogen, or something else entirely: hurricanes, flooding or wildfire, now more common due to climate change. We have before us a stark reminder that we should approach the promises of technological solutions with caution. Flexible and resilient educational systems require more than tools. They demand collaboration, care, preparation, expertise, resources and learning lessons from the past. (Houlden & Veletsianos, 2020)”

We wrote the sentences above in March 2020, 2 weeks before educational institutions in North America transitioned to remote education in an attempt to influence practitioners’ and researchers’ responses to the life-altering crises that education is facing. We were hoping to convince readers that even though technology may enable institutions of education to engage in some semblance of educational continuity, technology will not fix the crises facing our educational systems. Such reasoning flows from a long line of scholarship that details the problems of technological determinism and solutionism in our field (e.g., Bayne, 2015; Oliver, 2011; Tennyson 1994), urges researchers and practitioners to avoid placing too much emphasis on the potential of technology (e.g., Selwyn, 2011), and encourages us to heed the lessons embedded in the history of the field (e.g., Watters, 2014; Weller, 2020). Similar arguments are included in this issue of Distance Education as well. Baggaley, for instance, argues that “the surest way to make online learning effective is to consult the decades of practical experience in the distance education literature.” But what may be some additional responses to such life-altering crises as COVID-19 and climate change?

One possible response may include efforts to broaden the reach and impact of the distance and flexible education literature, as well as literature present in related fields, such as instructional design and technology, learning analytics, and the learning sciences. Such efforts may address limitations that restrict the literature’s helpfulness, applicability, and accessibility. For instance, the literature suffers from a problem of access. Much of our literature, like the literature of other fields, is written for researchers rather than practitioners, and much of it is locked behind paywalls (like this reflection). One set of responses, therefore, may be to refine and rethink the ways our own scholarship is accessed. For instance, at an individual level, we might strive to make our own articles available in open ways, expand our public outreach, engage in more practice-oriented scholarship, write for broader audiences, and address inequities in knowledge production, dissemination, and consumption (cf Czerniewicz, 2013; Scharber et al., 2019). At a systemic level, we may question practices like top-tier publishing, rankings, impact factors, and the various practices that sustain and encourage these, such as institutional policies on promotion and advancement and grant-funding decisions.

A second possible response may involve reflecting on our own scholarship and the scholarship we support, reward, and encourage. Reeves and Lin (2020) argue that to make a real difference in the lives of learners we should be studying and solving problems, rather than studying tools and technologies. In effect, these authors urge us to ask whether our particular work, the work of our students, and the work of our colleagues contributes to better educational futures. My intent here is not to draw demarcation lines between appropriate and inappropriate scholarship. Instead, if higher education is facing the very real possibility that the post-pandemic era may be radically different than our earlier “normal” (Cox et al., 2020), this may be a good time to ask: What should the future of digital, online, and flexible education look like?

This is not a call for more hopeful writing of the possibilities of online education or educational technology. Instead, it is a call for more critical and speculative writing and practice. Such critical efforts are gaining broader visibility and interest and can be found in recent work in both this journal (e.g., Valcarlos et al., 2020) and elsewhere (e.g., Lambert, 2018). To imagine possible educational futures, some researchers are turning to speculative methods as “research approaches that explore and create possible futures under conditions of complexity and uncertainty” (Ross, 2018, p. 197). Envisioning such futures does not solely mean employing fiction in our writing. Rather, speculative methods “inform us about what matters now in the field, what issues and problems we have inherited, and what debates define what can or cannot be currently thought about or imagined” (Ross, 2017, p. 220). Considering that the current state of education, at all levels, is situated within a context of ever-evolving social, cultural, political, and technological shifts, we face an urgent need to engage with uncertainty on multiple levels.

The use of speculative methods, therefore, may enable us to offer guidance when making current decisions related to the future of higher education, and to explore what may or may not be possible in different contexts. In a special issue of Learning, Media and Technology (Selwyn et al., 2019) for example, colleagues examined near-future educational scenarios and critically contemplated the use of technology in education. To use an example of present activities to speculate about desirable and undesirable educational futures, consider the now-broader use of proctoring tools, which were largely adopted to maintain the continuity of such familiar practices as invigilated exams. Now consider a future in which proctoring tools are as pervasive as the use of learning management systems or even email. Are proctoring tools consistent with desirable future educational systems? Asking this question forces us to deal with the ethics of our work. What if, in the process of asking this question, we realize that adopting proctoring software may not only become a barrier to alternative assessments but may also foster a culture of surveillance and mistrust (e.g., Fawns & Ross, 2020; Swauger, 2020)?

Conclusion

Clearly, technology alone will be unable to provide a solution to such a complicated problem as responding to the complex challenges that educational systems worldwide are facing. The two possible responses I offer—broadening the reach and impact of our scholarship and engaging in more imaginative, speculative, and critical work—are not panaceas either. Unlike technological solutionism though, these actions respond to calls by Facer and Sanford (2010), Ross (2017), Staley (2019), and Alexander (2020) to develop scenarios for the future of higher education as a way to address current challenges and work toward desirable outcomes. I imagine such futures to be inclusive, equitable, and just; to serve all of our learners; to prioritize collaboration over competition; to be flexible to learners’ needs; to exhibit care and trust for our students; and to be free of systems of oppression and injustice that operate within our own institutions.

References

Alexander, B. (2020). Academia next: The futures of higher education . Johns Hopkins University Press. 

Bayne, S. (2015). What’s the matter with ‘technology-enhanced learning’? Learning, Media and Technology , 40(1), 5–20. 

Cox, R. , Slick, J. , & Dixon, T. (2020). Surviving, thriving, or radical revisioning: Scenarios and considerations for pandemic recovery and response planning . Royal Roads University. 

Czerniewicz, L. (2013, April 29). Inequitable power dynamics of global knowledge production and exchange must be confronted head on. Impact of Social Science. https://press.rebus.community/openatthemargins/chapter/repost-inequitable-power-knowledge/  

Facer, K. , & Sandford, R. (2010). The next 25 years? Future scenarios and future directions for education and technology. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning , 26(1), 74–93. 

Fawns, T. , & Ross, J. (2020, June 3). Spotlight on alternative assessment methods: Alternatives to exams. Teaching Matters . https://www.teaching-matters-blog.ed.ac.uk/spotlight-on-alternative-assessment-methods-alternatives-to-exams/  

Houlden, S. , & Veletsianos, G. (2020, March 13). COVID-19 pushes universities to switch to online classes—but are they ready? The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/covid-19-pushes-universities-to-switch-to-online-classes-but-are-they-ready-132728  

Lambert, S. R. (2018). Changing our (dis)course: A distinctive social justice aligned definition of open education. Journal of Learning for Development , 5(3), 225–244. https://jl4d.org/index.php/ejl4d/article/view/290/334  

Oliver, M. (2011). Technological determinism in educational technology research: some alternative ways of thinking about the relationship between learning and technology. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning , 27(5), 373–384.

Reeves, T. C. , & Lin, L. (2020). The research we have is not the research we need. Educational Technology Research and Development , 68(4), 1991–2001.

Ross, J. (2017). Speculative method in digital education research. Learning, Media and Technology , 42(2), 214–229.

Ross, J. , (2018). Speculative method as an approach to researching emerging educational issues and technologies. In L. Hamilton & J. Ravenscroft (Eds,), Building research design in education (pp. 197–212). Bloomsbury. 

Scharber, C. , Pazurek, A. , & Ouyang, F. (2019). Illuminating the (in)visibility of female scholars: A gendered analysis of publishing rates within educational technology journals from 2004 to 2015. Gender and Education , 31(1), 33–61.

Selwyn, N. (2011). In praise of pessimism—the need for negativity in educational technology. British Journal of Educational Technology , 42(5), 713–718.

Selwyn, N. , Hillman, T. , Eynon, R. , Ferreira, G. , Knox, J. , Macgilchrist, F. , & Sancho-Gil, J. M. (Eds.). (2019). Education and technology into the 2020s: Speculative futures [Special issue]. Learning, Media and Technology , 45(1). 

Staley, D. J. (2019). Alternative universities: Speculative design for innovation in higher education . Johns Hopkins University Press.  

Swauger, S. (2020). Our bodies encoded: Algorithmic test proctoring in higher education. In J. Stommel, C. Friend, & S. M. Morris (Eds.), Critical digital pedagogy: A collection. Pressbooks. https://cdpcollection.pressbooks.com/chapter/our-bodies-encoded-algorithmic-test-proctoring-in-higher-education/  

Tennyson, R. D. (1994). The big wrench vs. integrated approaches: The great media debate. Educational Technology Research and Development , 42(3), 15–28.

Valcarlos, M. M. , Wolgemuth, J. R. , Haraf, S. , & Fisk, N. (2020). Anti-oppressive pedagogies in online learning: A critical review. Distance Education , 41(3), 345–360. 

Watters, A. (2014). The monsters of education technology. Tech Gypsies Publishing. http://monsters.hackeducation.com   

Weller, M. (2020). 25 years of ed tech . Athabasca University Press.

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