Abstract

For many years there have been well-funded project opportunities for developing educational innovations, both pedagogical and technological, to fulfil the educational ambitions of national governments and European agencies. Projects have been funded on the basis of competitive bidding against themes identified by funders. Calls for funding typically exhibit bold rhetoric as to their ambition and consequently bold claims are made in response. It is not untypical for the results of these projects to fall short of their rhetoric. During the process of project delivery, there can arise what is termed “unintended functionalism” where the fulfilment of the project contract through the regulatory instruments of project management overrides critical challenge of the objectives and rhetorical claims, or reflection about theoretical assumptions. Two contrasting projects are examined to explore this: ITEC, a large-scale technological innovation and implementation project involving schools throughout Europe; and INCLUD-ED, a research project to describe successful educational practice around inclusion. An analysis is presented which draws on Searle’s concept of ‘status functions’ to explain anomalies between the declarations concerning the objectives, technologies and concepts of a project and the evidence of project outcomes. It is argued that unintended functionalism arises as a result of common constraints of project regulation which bear upon all project stakeholders. The contrast between ITEC and INCLUD-ED presents an opportunity to ask whether and how, in the light of better knowledge about the dynamics of constraints, the pathology of unintended functionalism might be avoided.

Highlights

  • Projects and Status Any theory, technology or pedagogic design is a declaration of the kind “this x counts as a theory/learning design/ technology within context c”, where x is an assemblage of concepts, propositions or artefacts, and c is the community for whom the declaration is intended

  • The analysis suggests that coordinated action between different stakeholder groups occurs when there are identifiable shared constraints between different groups

  • To make the widget store more attractive we introduced it as tool to include their own content into the shell, and to share it with other iTEC teachers who are using shells as well.” (ITEC National Coordinator (NC) Interview, n.d., p1)

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Summary

JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE MEDIA IN EDUCATION

M W 2016 Learning Design, Social Ontology and Unintended Functionalism in Education Projects. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2016(1): 5, pp.

Mark William Johnson*
Introduction
Conclusions and Recommendations

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