An ethnographic study of information and communication technologies in European schools
Rossella Magli
Laboratoire d'Anthropologie de la Communication
University of Liège
"When we talk about computers in education, we should not talk about a machine having an effect. We should be talking about the opportunity offered us, by this computer presence, to rethink what learning is all about, to rethink education".
(Seymour Papert)
The idea behind MAILBOX was initially the product of two people who extensively
attended the European arena of R&D in communication and information
technologies in school environments. These two people were often puzzled
and somehow disappointed with the dominant approach, which seemed to be
largely inspired by a lot of wishful thinking supported by implicitly prescriptive
questions. These questions could not but lead to pre-formatted answers ("yes,
by using computers, learning is more effective"; "certainly, computers
make learning cost-effective"; "space and time barriers are overcome";
"wider access = extended democracy"... Or the contrary, it does
not matter).
We felt we could not be alone in our uneasiness in front of this awkward
research: a research so miraculous, that it could produce results even before
any implementation in real settings had taken place. We formed a European
team, grouping people from different backgrounds: anthropology, psychology,
economics, political sciences. The challenge was clear: to come out of the
deadlock that self-referential approaches had generated and to open a breach
in the consensus developed around computers and schools, be it glorification
or demonization. The task was difficult: to formulate new questions which
would allow to have a better understanding on the short and long term dynamics
implied by the use of ICT in specific school environments and in specific
cultural contexts. We felt that the people concerned, the teachers and the
children, should not be excluded from the process negotiating the priorities
in the domain. School has been for too long an abstract concept, a flag
waved for opportunistic reasons, a misconceived world.
We felt that it was time for the implicitly prescriptive questions to leave the floor to an explicitly descriptive approach. Only an ethnographic method could bring some fresh air to the stagnating domain: going to the field, observing the activities and the interactions taking place, participating to them, reporting them, eliciting the subjective perspective of the observer, trying to restore the liveliness of the real context. Almost a literary work. And then, sharing the data in our composite, multi-cultural and multi-national partnership, in spite of the difficulties derived from comparing culturally different settings observed by "indigenous" researchers.
There are a few questions we would like to share with the audience. To us, they seem to have a relevance for the decision-making platform concerning ICT in school. These questions presuppose the awareness that school is first and foremost a place of socialisation and that there are learning achievements that transcend the explicit curriculum. In school, children learn not only to read, write, count. They not only learn practical skills for the labour market, as a new trend would like to stress. They also learn how to become individuals and members of society, they learn behaviours, they learn values. This is what we call implicit learning (and what John Dewey called collateral learning). Do technologies affect this latent process? And, if so how? That was the starting point of our investigation. It led us into new vistas, and new challenges for the field: the relationship of the child with the self and others; learning "generating schemes of practices", as opposed to learning contents; the status of error and uncertainty; the question of trust between teachers and children; the status of pleasure and play in school; the functions of ritual in electronic communication; the relationship between magic and real; and, finally, the power relations between actors in school.
My presentation will focus on two statements commonly raised when computers in school are at stake and on the way our observations can change the perspective. Our data show that the way these assumptions were formulated actually concealed the essence of the experience and the complexity underlying it:
Commonplace 1
E-mail correspondence is good for learning foreign languages and intercultural communication.
Commonplace 2
Teachers are the main vectors of the resistance to change and therefore
to computer implementation in schools. They need to be trained technologically
in order to become willing supporters of change.
These common assumptions share a vision of the computer in school as the
primum movens of the pedagogical and organisational changes taking place.
That is: you put a computer in a classroom and someone able to operate it
and everything will change: pupils will become motivated, parents will become
partners, knowledge will circulate, intercultural communication will flow,
social differences will be abolished... Or, the symmetrical belief: computers
will bring isolation, moral turpitude, disturb family relations, upset the
balance of powers between teachers and pupils...
What we see here at work is what we might call an essentialist vision
of the computer: it is as if the computer had magical properties in itself,
either divine or satanic. The computer thus enters the realm of the supernatural
and is best attended by priests in specific temples.
Needless to say, our observations make us doubt of the intrinsic qualities
of computers. We are prone to suggest what we might call a contextualist
conception of computers in education: in order to understand what computers
are all about, we need to look at them in the very many contexts of their
very many uses. Computers are never by themselves: they are always to be
seen in relationship not only with the user they face, but also within their
social, organisational and ideological settings. To illustrate with a very
basic example: when computers are locked up in a special room and require
either a permit or an authorised supervisor to be accessed, the relationship
that students will entertain with them (and with their teacher, and with
the school, and with their peers, and with the adults' world, and with the
"forbidden", and...) will most probably be very different from
those which can be developed when they are freely accessible.
In our research, we did not try so much to assess the effects of the introduction
of computers into schools, than we were observing the actual usage and gratification
allowed by computers. It happens that most present day usage of computers
in schools are far ahead of the intellectualised questions we ask about
them. There is a gap between the fluid experiences run by trials and errors
in schools across Europe today and the usual theoretical and pragmatic questions
addressed to computers in school. The gap is so big that only a major leap
in conceptual imagination combined with a very focused (and modest) empirical
attitude will allow us to understand the game.
Text presented at the :
19th Annual Ethnography in Education Research Forum, Philadelphia, March
6-7 1998.
Work in Progress session: abstract of the presentation
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