Abstract National strategies play a crucial role in framing how digital technologies are enacted in Higher Education (HE). This paper draws on some of the findings of a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) of thirteen digital teaching and learning strategies issued by government departments and non-departmental public bodies in the UK between 2003 and 2013. It demonstrates that, across the strategies, digital technologies are depicted as tools for advancing the marketisation of UK HE. Rather ironically, the strategies are also fraught with contradictions and paradoxes with respect to the claimed relationships between digital technologies, learning, and markets. I argue that this problematic portrayal of digital technologies makes them complici...
The publication of institutional strategies for learning, teaching and assessment in UK higher educa...
International audienceABSTRACT This paper has two objectives, firstly, to identify the three basic l...
Three decades into the ‘digital age’, the promises of emancipation of the digital ‘revolution’ in ed...
National strategies play a crucial role in framing how digital technologies are enacted in Higher E...
In this paper I argue that National strategy relating to digital learning and teaching in Higher Edu...
This chapter opens by re-visiting the social and economic context of UK higher education, a context ...
In this chapter, the way in which varied terms such as Networked learning, e-learning and Technology...
Two closely related and over-determining myths have shaped government inspired policy towards Inform...
Higher education is a key pillar in constructing new knowledge economies for the 21st century, and t...
Focusing on the UK context, and drawing on freely available information about online learning and th...
This article explores powerful, constraining representations of encounters between digital technolog...
The role of the academic, both inside and beyond the University, is under scrutiny across global hig...
The recent Translit report on media and information literacy policies in the UK calls for more resea...
I have argued that there is a power struggle going on in Higher Education that exemplifies the ideol...
This paper uses Bolter and Grusin’s remediation approach in investigating the manner in which new fo...
The publication of institutional strategies for learning, teaching and assessment in UK higher educa...
International audienceABSTRACT This paper has two objectives, firstly, to identify the three basic l...
Three decades into the ‘digital age’, the promises of emancipation of the digital ‘revolution’ in ed...
National strategies play a crucial role in framing how digital technologies are enacted in Higher E...
In this paper I argue that National strategy relating to digital learning and teaching in Higher Edu...
This chapter opens by re-visiting the social and economic context of UK higher education, a context ...
In this chapter, the way in which varied terms such as Networked learning, e-learning and Technology...
Two closely related and over-determining myths have shaped government inspired policy towards Inform...
Higher education is a key pillar in constructing new knowledge economies for the 21st century, and t...
Focusing on the UK context, and drawing on freely available information about online learning and th...
This article explores powerful, constraining representations of encounters between digital technolog...
The role of the academic, both inside and beyond the University, is under scrutiny across global hig...
The recent Translit report on media and information literacy policies in the UK calls for more resea...
I have argued that there is a power struggle going on in Higher Education that exemplifies the ideol...
This paper uses Bolter and Grusin’s remediation approach in investigating the manner in which new fo...
The publication of institutional strategies for learning, teaching and assessment in UK higher educa...
International audienceABSTRACT This paper has two objectives, firstly, to identify the three basic l...
Three decades into the ‘digital age’, the promises of emancipation of the digital ‘revolution’ in ed...