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Democracy
Brenda Laurel links technology and
democracy through the development of Internet users’ skills as both
consumers and originators of web content. She emphasizes the critical
skills needed for citizenship and the potential of the Internet for
democratic self-expression and dialogue. Learning to read the Web
critically allows users to examine media, the news and government sites
for bias. Reading news from multiple, and non-U.S. sources, informs our
understanding and participation in the political process. Creation of
websites that invite dialogue and participation teaches active, not
passive, citizenship, particularly for voices outside the official media
and government that claim to speak for our society. Laurel encourages
the use of technology as means of activism and a refusal to accept the
political and social status quo.
Links to Brenda Laurel’s writing on
democracy
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People, communities, and service: Shaping the future of the Internet
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Activism for a New World
Chip Bruce presents a double assessment
of the possibilities we, as citizens, enjoy to effect change on the
large scale. On the one hand, he outlines a process of participatory
inquiry aimed at responding to human needs through democratic processes.
This process recognizes the diversity of learners and trusts them in
their own learning. It places in the hands of learners the initiation
of questions to be investigated and the means of carrying out their
inquiries. It places equitable relations first, ahead of the
accomplishment of tasks. Bruce proposes a critical and methodic
examination of problems and their solutions as a means to democratic
inclusion. On the other hand, in brief comments at the end of his talk,
he expresses concern about the degree to which government and large
institutions control Internet content in the name of security and
protection.
Links to Bertram (Chip) Bruce’s writing
on democracy
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Literacy in the
information age
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New technologies and social change:
Learning in the global cyberage. In Liora Bresler and Alexandre
Ardichvili (Eds.), Research in international education. New
York: Peter Lang. (In Press)
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How worldwide is the Web?. Bruce,
Bertram C. Journal of Adolescent & Adult
Literacy v. 42 no5 (Feb.
'99) p. 382-5
Links to Nicholas Burbules’ writing on
democracy
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Globalization and education: An introduction
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Who Lives Here? Access to and Credibility Within Cyberspace
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