This commentary responds to claims Eugene Matusov makes about a student's right to the use of certain technologies in his or her education. We argue that the use, in particular, of adaptive technologies actually has the potential to inhibit a student's free choice (rather than facilitate it) and that through restricting certain technologies, genuine dialogic pedagogy may more successfully be promoted. We also engage Matusov's concept of the radical freedom necessary for education
This article is a response to Matusov's argument for a student's right to define the limits of their...
While it is often argued that technology could act as a change agent and transform educational pract...
I feel honored to receive so many deep, critical, supportive, expanding, and thought-provoking comme...
This commentary responds to claims Eugene Matusov makes about a student's right to the use of certai...
This essay is a commentary on Dr. Matusov’s article “A Student’s Right to Freedom of Education”, and...
Dr. Eugene Matusov’s article “A Student’s Right to Freedom of Education,” promotes a system of educa...
This article is a response to Matusov's argument for a student's right to define the limits of their...
This conceptual essay, which opens the special issue, examines why a student’s right to freedom of e...
Open peer commentary on the article “A Cybernetic Approach to Contextual Teaching and Learning” by P...
I feel honored to receive so many deep, critical, supportive, expanding, and thought-provoking comme...
Technological determinism has been driving conceptions of technology enhanced learning for the last ...
Learning with digital technologies, at least when framed by moral commitments, requires lifting up s...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this re...
Learning technologies are endorsed though government and university agendas through a discourse of e...
The role of technology in education is continually changing. As technology enables us to record whol...
This article is a response to Matusov's argument for a student's right to define the limits of their...
While it is often argued that technology could act as a change agent and transform educational pract...
I feel honored to receive so many deep, critical, supportive, expanding, and thought-provoking comme...
This commentary responds to claims Eugene Matusov makes about a student's right to the use of certai...
This essay is a commentary on Dr. Matusov’s article “A Student’s Right to Freedom of Education”, and...
Dr. Eugene Matusov’s article “A Student’s Right to Freedom of Education,” promotes a system of educa...
This article is a response to Matusov's argument for a student's right to define the limits of their...
This conceptual essay, which opens the special issue, examines why a student’s right to freedom of e...
Open peer commentary on the article “A Cybernetic Approach to Contextual Teaching and Learning” by P...
I feel honored to receive so many deep, critical, supportive, expanding, and thought-provoking comme...
Technological determinism has been driving conceptions of technology enhanced learning for the last ...
Learning with digital technologies, at least when framed by moral commitments, requires lifting up s...
ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this re...
Learning technologies are endorsed though government and university agendas through a discourse of e...
The role of technology in education is continually changing. As technology enables us to record whol...
This article is a response to Matusov's argument for a student's right to define the limits of their...
While it is often argued that technology could act as a change agent and transform educational pract...
I feel honored to receive so many deep, critical, supportive, expanding, and thought-provoking comme...