Lingering on Aoki’s bridge: Conceptualizing curriculum as techno-theological text

Authors

  • Yu-Ling Lee University of British Columbia

Keywords:

curriculum, technology, spirituality, theology

Abstract

Ted Tetsuo Aoki (1919-2012) was a Japanese-Canadian educator who spoke compellingly against the technological-instrumental implementation of curriculum found within the business-consumer model of education. In his greater mission of understanding curriculum and instruction, Aoki has tried new modes of interpretation, seeing curriculum as currere, praxis, ideology, as plan, as lived. One possibility implied in Aoki’s work is inhabiting the space in-between materiality and spirituality, more specifically between technology and theology. As Aoki might ask: how we can linger on the bridge between technology and theology? The purpose of using the bridge metaphor, is to discern lines of movement in Aoki’s writings which bridges technology and theology. We are asked to pause, delay ourselves in true conversations and discern Aoki as a possible curricular techno-theologian. Within this reconceptualization, we may understand the way Aoki’s curricular possibilities allow us to dwell in a technological world which does not default into instrumentalization.

 

Author Biography

Yu-Ling Lee, University of British Columbia

Ph.D. Candidate

Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy

Downloads

Published

2017-03-06