Subject: Feminist Pedagogy – Online
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Combining Feminist Pedagogy and Transactional Distance to Create Gender-Sensitive Technology-Enhanced Learning
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Women’s Studies on Television? It’s Time for Distance Learning
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Technology Policy, Gender, and Cyberspace
Author(s): Kramarae, C. Date: 1997 Publication: Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy Citation: Kramarae, C. (1997). Technology Policy, Gender, and Cyberspace. Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy 4(1), 149–58. https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/djglp/vol4/iss1/7/. Section on webpage: Feminist Pedagogy – Online Tenets: Uncovering the causes of inequality and leveraging resources toward undoing power structures. Cultivating self-care and boundaries. Humanizing online teaching/learning. Creating cultures of care in online classrooms. Examining (dis)embodiment in virtual teaching/learning. Using technology intentionally to build communities and enhance learning. Annotation: The author discusses various aspects and strategies of online learning that are important for feminist pedagogy. These include making cyberspace hospitable, participatory education, and inclusion of women’s knowledge in electronic education. -
Access as Pedagogy: A Case for Embracing Feminist Pedagogy in Open and Distance Learning
Author(s): Koseoglu, S. Date: 2020 Publication: Asian Journal Distance Education Citation: Koseoglu, S. (2020). Access as Pedagogy: A Case for Embracing Feminist Pedagogy in Open and Distance Learning. Asian Journal Distance Education, 15(1), 277–90. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3893260. Section on webpage: Feminist Pedagogy – Online Tenets: Promoting reflexivity. Promoting cooperative learning. Examining how gender, intersecting with other social categories, structures our lives, learning, and knowledge production, access to resources and information. Examining the “why” in addition to the “what”. Humanizing online teaching/learning. Creating cultures of care in online classrooms. Examining (dis)embodiment in virtual teaching/learning. Using technology intentionally to build communities and enhance learning. Annotation: In this article, the author argues for a greater embracing of feminist pedagogy in distance education. She states that she views “feminist pedagogy as an ethical position as well as a pedagogical position that calls attentive ways of looking into structuring educational services, methods, policies, and legislations that create an inclusive learning space not just for women, but for all students who are disadvantaged in their education. Within this context, student participation can be framed as a means for transformation, contributing to one’s well-being, agency and sense of power.” -
Integrating Feminist Pedagogy with Online Teaching: Facilitating Critiques of Patriarchal Visual Culture
Author(s): Lai, A. and Lu, L. Date: 2009 Publication: Visual Culture & Gender Citation: Lai, A., and Lu, L. (2009). Integrating Feminist Pedagogy with Online Teaching: Facilitating Critiques of Patriarchal Visual Culture. Visual Culture & Gender 4, 58–68. https://vcg.emitto.net/index.php/vcg/article/view/43/42. Section on webpage: Feminist Pedagogy – Online Tenets: Promoting reflexivity. Promoting cooperative learning. Presenting knowledge as constructed. Examining how gender, intersecting with other social categories, structures our lives, learning, and knowledge production, access to resources and information. Uncovering the causes of inequality and leveraging resources toward undoing power structures. Honoring diversity and lived experiences through intersectional approaches. Humanizing online teaching/learning. Using technology intentionally to build communities and enhance learning. Annotation: In this article, the authors explore the intersectionality of asynchronous online discussion, feminist visual culture pedagogy, and online pedagogy. Specifically, the Interaction Analysis Model (IAM) as example of a quality online feminist pedagogy. As the authors discuss, IAM, “recognizes five cognitive activities involved in construction of knowledge through online discussions: (a) sharing and comparing of ideas, (b) cognitive dissonance, (c) co-constructing knowledge, (d) assessing proposed constructions, and (e) applying newly constructed knowledge.” They also bring up several problems in this model and how to overcome them such as, ” the lack of women’s voices, dearth of resources to understand women’s creativity, gender stereotypes in classical mythology, gender inequality in the art world, and learning about women’s lives through their creative works rather than the written records promoting male dominance.” -
A Feminist Pedagogy through Online Education
Author(s): Ai, C.Y. Date: 2016 Publication: Asian Journal of Women’s Studies Citation: Ai, C. Y. (2016). “A Feminist Pedagogy Through Online Education.” Asian Journal of Women’s Studies 22(4), 372–91. https://doi.org/10.1080/12259276.2016.1242939. Section on webpage: Feminist Pedagogy – Online Tenets: Promoting cooperative learning. Presenting knowledge as constructed. Humanizing online teaching/learning. Creating cultures of care in online classrooms. Examining (dis)embodiment in virtual teaching/learning. Using technology intentionally to build communities and enhance learning. Annotation: This paper explores “the current practice of online education from a gender perspective,” and, “how it can serve both as an opportunity and a limitation for women, particularly in Asia.” The author also looks into an example of gender education in a Korean online university, and uses this to offer suggestions to, “substantively and systematically supplement and activate online gender education not only in Korea but elsewhere in Asia as well.” -
Transforming Higher Education with Distributed Open Collaborative Courses (DOCCs): Feminist Pedagogies and Networked Learning
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Blending In: Reconciling Feminist Pedagogy and Distance Education Across Cultures
Author(s): Aneja, A. Date: 2017 Publication: Gender and Education Citation: Section on webpage: Feminist Pedagogy – Online Tenets: Connecting to the personal and to communities outside of academia. Promoting cooperative learning. Humanizing online teaching/learning. Creating cultures of care in online classrooms. Examining (dis)embodiment in virtual teaching/learning. Using technology intentionally to build communities and enhance learning. Annotation: In this article, the author discusses distance education’s possible outreach to non-traditional women scholars and the pedagogy of a successful hybrid classroom teaching feminism. She mentions the benefits this type of learning has in developing countries and the challenges that many such pedagogies face such as subversions and transgressions and the ways to overcome them. -
A Black Feminist Pedagogy