Premium
Reality bytes: examining the rhetoric of widening educational participation via ICT
Author(s) -
Selwyn Neil,
Gorard Stephen
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
british journal of educational technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.79
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1467-8535
pISSN - 0007-1013
DOI - 10.1111/1467-8535.00318
Subject(s) - rhetoric , information and communications technology , rhetorical question , government (linguistics) , public relations , sociology , educational technology , political science , politics , higher education , public administration , pedagogy , social science , law , philosophy , linguistics
Information and communications technology (ICT) has fast become the rhetorical foundation of the UK government's attempts to transform adult education radically and to establish a ‘learning society’. Central to this rhetoric are a series of largely untested assumptions about the potential of ICT to increase and widen levels of educational participation to include those groups of learners who have previously been excluded. With this in mind, the present paper contrasts recent government rhetoric concerning post‐compulsory ‘e‐learning’ with an analysis of data from the 2002 National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE) survey of 5,885 households. With these data suggesting that access to ICT does not, in itself, make people any more likely to participate in education and (re)engage with learning, the paper concludes by considering how ICT might be more realistically re‐approached by the educational and political communities.