This paper diffracts a curriculum design workshop via online collaboration of a collective emerging from that event. Through the workshop, involving theory, conceptual art, writing, photography and curriculum planning, and the subsequent sharing of words and images, we move beyond interrogating designs for future subjects to asking how the pedagogical imagination composes both the material and immaterial, the corporeal and incorporeal, within ecologies continually transforming in the process of making. We complicate ‘delivery’ or ‘conduit’ metaphors of education and perceive ‘design’ in co-compositions of human and nonhuman elements, resisting stasis, resisting closure. This workshop paper positions design in the realm of the artist–activist, rather than that of the bureaucrat–technician, and shifts intentionality beyond the invisible and controlling hand of humanism, as curriculum design we might do in the afterwards, rejecting instrumentalism.
Journal article
The invisible hand: designing curriculum in the afterward
International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Vol.30(7), pp.635-655
2017
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- The invisible hand: designing curriculum in the afterward
- Creators
- Lucinda McKnight - Deakin UniversityDavid Rousell - Southern Cross UniversityJennifer Charteris - University of New EnglandKat Thomas - University of AucklandGeraldine Burke - Monash University
- Publication Details
- International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Vol.30(7), pp.635-655
- Identifiers
- 2767; 991012820543002368
- Academic Unit
- School of Education; Faculty of Education
- Resource Type
- Journal article