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The Digital University: Imaginations around the Pedagogic Space for the Marginalised

Authors :
Shivani Nag
Manasi Thapliyal Navani
Source :
Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies. 2024 22(1):188-212.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Higher education (HE) in India has seen an exponential growth phase over the last two decades. Challenges of meeting expansion demands along with goals of equity and quality have underpinned discussions on educational reforms as well. The dynamics of market-supported increased access have compromised on goals of equity, whereas the role of technology in assisting growth has been fraught with similar and greater social challenges. A new normal seems to have emerged into the HE landscape across the world in the form of legitimising and rationalising 'digital' as an equal alternative to the face to face. In the context of a developing postcolonial economy like India, this development has further highlighted the contradictory pulls within the emerging aims/purposes of HE. The digital divide even as it impacts or reflects the existing asymmetries in access to resources, also engenders a dilemma with respect to the desired aims of higher education. There appears to be a contingent shift in approach appropriating the discourse of democratisation of knowledge/educational institutions and materially undermining prospects for enhancing social capital of graduates essential for a critical participation in the social, political and economic realm. In this context, the paper aims to problematize the idea of inclusion of the marginalised through digitalisation of education with focus on the pedagogic space and the possibilities for a participatory, mediated, empathetic and empowering pedagogy. The paper begins by contextualising the digital emphasis in the neo-liberal imagination of higher education in India.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1740-2743
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1432792
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Descriptive