Tschaepe Mark
Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, TX USA.
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX USA.
Postdigit Sci Educ. 2020;2(3):757-771. doi: 10.1007/s42438-020-00156-x. Epub 2020 Jul 7.
This paper addresses a particular area of concern regarding our habits that pertains to embodied experience and education through the Covid-19 pandemic: the shift from comfort to discomfort regarding face-to-face social interaction within the same physical space. To explore this transition, I use the related concepts of seeing and viewing from Isaac Asimov's novel, (1957), which are useful tools for investigating a probable collateral effect of rapid social distancing for the sake of avoiding contagion and includes replacing physically proximate interaction and procedures with a scopic mediation. Seeing and viewing provide concepts for understanding how values change in the midst of fears concerning contagion through physical contact that are mollified through the use of technology analogous to video conferencing. Postdigital education and the concepts of we-think, we-learn, and we-act provide critical tools for helping us understand this transition of perspective regarding educational and social practices in the midst of a pandemic.
本文探讨了我们的习惯中一个特别令人关注的领域,该领域涉及通过新冠疫情所带来的身体体验和教育:即在同一物理空间内,从面对面社交互动的舒适状态转变为不适状态。为了探究这一转变,我运用了艾萨克·阿西莫夫1957年小说中的“看见”和“观看”这两个相关概念,它们是用于调查为避免传染而迅速保持社交距离可能产生的附带影响的有用工具,其中包括用视觉中介取代身体上的近距离互动和程序。“看见”和“观看”为理解在对通过身体接触传播疾病的恐惧中价值观如何变化提供了概念,而这种恐惧通过类似于视频会议的技术得到缓解。后数字时代的教育以及“我们思考”“我们学习”和“我们行动”的概念为帮助我们理解在疫情期间教育和社会实践方面这种视角的转变提供了关键工具。