On the expression of hegemony in the field of educational technology

- a case study of editorials in a Norwegian academic journal

Authors

  • Geir Haugsbakk Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences
  • Yngve Troye Nordkvelle Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7577/seminar.4044

Keywords:

educational technology, historical perspectives, academic journals, editorials, hegemonic discourses, discourse analysis

Abstract

This article has emerged from a project aiming at gaining an overview of actors and key figures, their perspectives and results after more than 30 years of ambitious governmental efforts to introduce computer technology in school. The main focus of the article is on what we consider to be dominant arguments, discourses and issues related to the hegemonization of meaning formation. Our line of reasoning is based primarily on a case study of the leading journal in the field of educational technology in Norway over the last fifteen years, the Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy. This is a mainstream research journal, which publishes peer-reviewed articles. However, being subject to the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, it represents a rather interesting case for interrogating the issue of hegemony. Placing the journal’s policy at the forefront, the focus of our analysis will be on the editorials. The main findings, based on issues of the journal over the first ten years are that the editorials are in keeping with what can be regarded as the political priorities and the prevailing political discourses in the field. They contain relatively few, if any, critical perspectives and scant reference is made to the research articles and research area it claims to serve. The method used is document analysis, inspired by discourse-analytic approaches.

Geir Haugsbakk and Yngve Troye Nordkvelle

Downloads

Published

2020-12-17

How to Cite

Haugsbakk, G. ., & Nordkvelle, Y. T. (2020). On the expression of hegemony in the field of educational technology : - a case study of editorials in a Norwegian academic journal. Seminar.net, 16(2), 19. https://doi.org/10.7577/seminar.4044

Issue

Section

Articles