Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Lakind, Alexandra
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2017
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1183632
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1867181902608203776
author Lakind, Alexandra
author_facet Lakind, Alexandra
Lakind, Alexandra
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Public Libraries as Sites of Collision for Arts Education, the Maker Movement, and Neoliberal Agendas in Education Lakind, Alexandra Public Libraries Conflict Art Education Shared Resources and Services Neoliberalism Politics of Education Discourse Analysis Learning Theories Alignment (Education) Librarian Attitudes Ethnography Faculty Development Workshops Data Analysis Semi Structured Interviews In recent years, the concept "making" has been claimed by "The Maker Movement." While making offers great potential (and resources) for art integration in informal learning sites, maker discourse is often intertwined with a neoliberal mission. For example, movement leaders glorify Steve Jobs and hark on the myth that hobbies can be transformed into wealth-generating endeavors. As art-making activities in informal learning setting across the U.S. intersect with the maker movement, prominent learning theories that contradict this neoliberal philosophy may be repurposed or disremembered. Constructionist learning will require a continued commitment to a notion of learning by doing, "rather than acquiring theoretical precepts for subsequent application" (Ingold, 2013, p. 52). This article examines research from a multi-year empirical study of a Public Library system's arts-based maker program. It provides a rich example of how discourse around making fits into learning in arts education, showcasing instances when neoliberal ideology collides with contradictory theories regarding how and why people learn and make. First, this paper will introduce the reader to the maker movement in education and review literature on making, learning, and neoliberalism. Secondly, I analyze the discourse of public librarians who implement the arts programming and suggest possible implications for how learning through the arts can be undermined by neoliberalism. And, finally, this article proposes a view of making that does align with arts education that embraces dispositional, constructionist, and post-modern/new materialist approaches to learning: Making as the reciprocal relationship between maker, material, tools, skill, and intention.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1183632
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2017
record_format eric
spellingShingle Public Libraries as Sites of Collision for Arts Education, the Maker Movement, and Neoliberal Agendas in Education
Lakind, Alexandra
Public Libraries
Conflict
Art Education
Shared Resources and Services
Neoliberalism
Politics of Education
Discourse Analysis
Learning Theories
Alignment (Education)
Librarian Attitudes
Ethnography
Faculty Development
Workshops
Data Analysis
Semi Structured Interviews
Public Libraries as Sites of Collision for Arts Education, the Maker Movement, and Neoliberal Agendas in Education Lakind, Alexandra Public Libraries Conflict Art Education Shared Resources and Services Neoliberalism Politics of Education Discourse Analysis Learning Theories Alignment (Education) Librarian Attitudes Ethnography Faculty Development Workshops Data Analysis Semi Structured Interviews In recent years, the concept "making" has been claimed by "The Maker Movement." While making offers great potential (and resources) for art integration in informal learning sites, maker discourse is often intertwined with a neoliberal mission. For example, movement leaders glorify Steve Jobs and hark on the myth that hobbies can be transformed into wealth-generating endeavors. As art-making activities in informal learning setting across the U.S. intersect with the maker movement, prominent learning theories that contradict this neoliberal philosophy may be repurposed or disremembered. Constructionist learning will require a continued commitment to a notion of learning by doing, "rather than acquiring theoretical precepts for subsequent application" (Ingold, 2013, p. 52). This article examines research from a multi-year empirical study of a Public Library system's arts-based maker program. It provides a rich example of how discourse around making fits into learning in arts education, showcasing instances when neoliberal ideology collides with contradictory theories regarding how and why people learn and make. First, this paper will introduce the reader to the maker movement in education and review literature on making, learning, and neoliberalism. Secondly, I analyze the discourse of public librarians who implement the arts programming and suggest possible implications for how learning through the arts can be undermined by neoliberalism. And, finally, this article proposes a view of making that does align with arts education that embraces dispositional, constructionist, and post-modern/new materialist approaches to learning: Making as the reciprocal relationship between maker, material, tools, skill, and intention.
title Public Libraries as Sites of Collision for Arts Education, the Maker Movement, and Neoliberal Agendas in Education
topic Public Libraries
Conflict
Art Education
Shared Resources and Services
Neoliberalism
Politics of Education
Discourse Analysis
Learning Theories
Alignment (Education)
Librarian Attitudes
Ethnography
Faculty Development
Workshops
Data Analysis
Semi Structured Interviews
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1183632