What, if anything, about Joseph is natural?  What might the storyteller have had in mind in blending Joseph’s special  and “natural” abilities?

What, if anything, about Joseph is natural?  What might the storyteller have had in mind in blending Joseph’s special  and “natural” abilities?.

Questions For Our Final Sessions re Joseph

Once the prisoner whose dream Joseph interprets recalls his promise to recommend him to the Pharoah, the core of the story (that will eventually end with both Jacob and Joseph’s deaths) begins.

Although there are numerous details and issues in the story worthy of our consideration, I offer the following that I mentioned at the end of the podcast we heard in Tuesday’s session.  Let these be at least some of our topics for discussion during our last two sessions next week.  There will be both a quiz and a discussion board posted early next week.  Be prepared to offer your notes re the following next Tuesday.

These are not to be answered on Thursday, necessarily, just addressed.  Bring your notes to Tuesday’s class.

  1. What, if anything, about Joseph is natural?  What might the storyteller have had in mind in blending Joseph’s special  and “natural” abilities?
  2. How much, if any, of his “success” is the result of his “free will,” his personal decision to act in a certain way?
  3. How do you react to the actions of Tamar?  How about the actions of Judah?
  4. Does Joseph actually “give” his brothers anything?  How charitable is the “tenant farmer” arrangement?
  5. What does the storyteller have in mind in having Jacob deliberately bless Joseph’s sons “incorrectly”?
  6. What are we to make of the decision to “forgive” his brothers?  Is forgiveness (always) a positive/good action?

Find the time to examine the story critically and make notes re these questions before our next class meeting.

 

Outline of the Joseph Story

Chapters

37   Introduction to the initial conflict:  Joseph, his father Jacob, his brothers actions

38   Judah and Tamar: the Levirate Law, Tamar’s actions, the ambiguous birth of twin boys

39   Joseph’s encounters with the wife of Potiphar: Joseph imprisoned

40   Joseph placed in charge of the prison and interprets the dreams of two prisoners

41   Joseph interprets the dream of the Pharoah/King: predicts famine: Joseph made governor of Egypt

42   Joseph’s brothers come to Egypt to purchase grain: brothers return to their home in Canaan

43   Brothers return to Egypt with their brother Benjamin

44   Joseph’s “game”: the missing cup, the confession of the brothers; brothers bow down to Joseph

45   Joseph reveals his identity

46   Godly intervention to Jacob/Israel

47   Acceptance by Pharoah: basic economics: supply and demand – business, not charity – Jacob’s final request

48   Jacob’s blessing of Joseph sons: deliberate break with tradition

49  Jacob’s final vision and prophecy

50   Joseph’s Request to bury his father: the brothers’ fear, restatement of his destiny

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Given what you know about philosophy, what position within society do you think a philosopher occupies?

Given what you know about philosophy, what position within society do you think a philosopher occupies?.

Philosophy

Topic #1: What is love? How would you define love? How does love manifest in your life? What does it mean for love to be a core value that influences how we live? Love is often difficult to capture through words, thus do your best to be as clear, precise, and specific as possible in your explanation, and if appropriate provide a concrete real-life example that illustrates your position.

Topic #2: Given what you know about philosophy, what position within society do you think a philosopher occupies? Do they seem like the sort of person that goes along with social conventions and the social order? Are they a sort of cultural critic, pointing out the ethical problems that arise from social conventions and the social order? Or are they someone that lives away from society, as a hermit? As you articulate your position, clearly explain your reasoning for your position, and if appropriate provide a concrete real-life example that illustrates your position.

Topic #3: Do your best insights about yourself, life, and the world around you come through solitary thinking? Or by thinking with others (such as conversation) with similar concerns as yourself? Thinking about these questions with respect to school, should our education be focused more on solitary learning or group learning? As you articulate your position, clearly explain your reasoning for your position, and if appropriate provide a concrete real-life example that illustrates your position.

Topic #4: When we have discussions with people whose worldview differs from our own, what goal(s) do we often seek to achieve through discussion with them? What intentions should we have for such discussions? Do we seek to arrive at a point of agreement or consensus? Or, if we think it is acceptable “to agree to disagree,” then what good comes from us having discussions with folks who disagree with us? As you articulate your position, clearly explain your reasoning for your position, and if appropriate provide a concrete real-life example that illustrates your position.

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Given what you know about philosophy, what position within society do you think a philosopher occupies?

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Explain your answers to the “believing” questions about the three (3) premises opposing your position from the Procon.org website

Explain your answers to the “believing” questions about the three (3) premises opposing your position from the Procon.org website.

Believing

First read a book excerpt about critical thinking processes: “The Believing Game and How to Make Conflicting Opinions More Fruitful” at http://www.procon.org/sourcefiles/believinggame.pdf. Next, you will review the Procon.org Website in order to gather information. Then, you will engage in prewriting to examine your thoughts.
Note: In Part II of the assignment (due Week 4), you will write an essay geared towards synthesizing your ideas.

Part I – Prewriting: Follow the instructions below for this prewriting activity. Use complete sentences and adhere to standard rules of English grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and spelling.
1. Select one (1) of the approved topics from the www.procon.org Website and state your position on the issue. PLEASE PICK SOCIAL MEDIA TOPIC THIS IS  THE TOPIC I PICKED

2. From the Procon.org Website, identify three (3) premises (reasons) listed under either the Pro or Con section – whichever section opposes your position.
3.For each of the three (3) premises (reasons) that oppose your position on the issue, answer these “believing” questions suggested by Elbow:

a. What’s interesting or helpful about this view?

b. What would I notice if I believed this view?

c. In what sense or under what conditions might this idea be true?”

The paper should follow guidelines for clear and organized writing:

· Include an introductory paragraph and concluding paragraph.

· Address main ideas in body paragraphs with a topic sentence and supporting sentences.

· Adhere to standard rules of English grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and spelling.

Assignment 1.2: Conflicting Viewpoints Essay – Part II
Synthesizing and Writing

In Part II of the assignment  you will write a paper to synthesize your ideas.
Part II – Writing
Write at three to four (3-4) page paper in which you:
1. State your position on the SOCIAL MEDIA topic you selected for Assignment 1.1.
2. Identify (3) three premises (reasons) from the Procon.org website that support your position    and explain why you selected these specific reasons.
3. Explain your answers to the “believing” questions about the three (3) premises opposing your position from the Procon.org website.
4. Examine at least two (2) types of biases that you likely experienced as you evaluated the premises for and against your position.
5. Discuss the effects of your own enculturation or group identification that may have influenced your biases.
6. Discuss whether or not your thinking about the topic has changed after playing the “Believing Game,” even if your position on the issue has stayed the same

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Explain your answers to the “believing” questions about the three (3) premises opposing your position from the Procon.org website

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Write an informal presentation (500-700 words) to educate nurses about how the practice of nursing is expected to grow and change. Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.

Write an informal presentation (500-700 words) to educate nurses about how the practice of nursing is expected to grow and change. Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics..

Accountable care organizations

As the country focuses on the restructuring of the U.S. health care delivery system, nurses will continue to play an important role. It is expected that more and more nursing jobs will become available out in the community, and fewer will be available in acute care hospitals.

  1. Write an informal presentation (500-700 words) to educate nurses about how the practice of nursing is expected to grow and change. Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.
  2. Share your presentation with nurse colleagues on your unit or department and ask them to offer their impressions of the anticipated changes to health care delivery and the new role of nurses in hospital settings, communities, clinics, and medical homes.
  3. In 800-1,000 words summarize the feedback shared by three nurse colleagues and discuss whether their impressions are consistent with what you have researched about health reform.
  4. A minimum of three scholarly references are required for this assignment.

While APA format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected and in-text citations and references should be presented using APA documentation guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.

This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.

You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. Please refer to the directions in the Student Success Center.

RUBRIC:

Clearly States How the Practice of Nursing and Patient Delivery Will Evolve, While Addressing Relevant Concepts That Include Continuity or Continuum of Care, Accountable Care Organizations, Medical Homes, and Nurse-Managed Health Clinics

Main concept is easily identified, and subconcepts branch appropriately from the main idea. Addresses all of the issues related to the evolving practice of nursing and patient care delivery.

Evidence of Feedback and Forecasting of Nursing Role From Colleagues

Evidence of feedback and forecasting of the nursing role from colleagues is described in detail, with relevant personal insight, reflection, or analysis.

Use of Vocabulary Regarding Evolving Practice of Nursing and Patient Care Delivery

All of the recommended terms have been included in the correct context.

Originality

Content shows significant evidence of originality and inventiveness. The majority of the content and many of the ideas are fresh, original, inventive, and based upon logical conclusions and sound research.

Mechanics of Writing (includes spelling, punctuation, grammar, and language use)

The writer is clearly in command of standard, written academic English.

Paper Format (use of appropriate style for the major and assignment)

All format elements are correct.

Research Citations (in-text citations for paraphrasing and direct quotes, and reference page listing and formatting, as appropriate to assignment)

In-text citations and a reference page are complete. The documentation of cited sources is free of error.

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Write an informal presentation (500-700 words) to educate nurses about how the practice of nursing is expected to grow and change. Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.Include the concepts of continuity or continuum of care, accountable care organizations (ACO), medical homes, and nurse-managed health clinics.

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What does Anthony Ocampo suggest about Filipino American high school and college student ‘s identity?

What does Anthony Ocampo suggest about Filipino American high school and college student ‘s identity?. What does Anthony Ocampo suggest about Filipino American high school and college student ‘s identity?

Please read abstract conclusion to answer the question.

 

CONCLUSIONS

Despite their official classification as Asian, Filipino Americans expressed ambivalence about their panethnic identity. While previous studies have focused on how historical colonialism or neighborhood experiences relate to this identity dissonance, this article has specifically addressed the role of educational contexts. Respondents in this study negotiated individual and collective Filipino Americans experiences with the model minority narrative—despite the problematic nature of this stereotype—to assess their panethnic membership. Respondents generally did not strongly adopt Asian American identity but conceded that they were “the Asian ones” dur-ing high school, a context in which there were few other Asian Americans with whom they could compare themselves. This characterization was reinforced by two trends: their overrepresentation within honors courses relative to other minorities and the preferential treatment they received from school officials. Even respondents who maintained mediocre grades viewed themselves as Asian, given that Filipino Americans were collectively designated as model minorities. This challenges previous studies that have shown that Asians distance themselves from Asian American identity when they individually perform poorly in school. This link between collective academic experiences and panethnic identity also sheds light on why Asian American identification did not differ significantly by gender. However, upon entering college, many respondents also entered a new racial context where East Asian Americans not only outnumbered Filipino Americans, but also redefined the boundaries of pan-Asian identity.

While respondents had once viewed themselves as model minorities in high school, this shifted in college, where they felt that their East Asian counterparts outperformed them academically, particularly in challenging fields, such as science and engineering. At campuses like UC Berkeley and UCLA especially, respondents’ sense of Asian American identity became disrupted by Filipino Americans’ designation as “underrepresented minorities,” a category reserved for minority groups with unusually high attrition from the college. The increased day-to-day interactions with other Asian Americans also prompted them to discover differences in their academic experiences. Many were surprised to find out how involved East Asian parents were in their children’s academic lives—enrolling them in language schools and SAT preparation courses and pushing them to attend prestigious colleges. These were framed as “typical Asian experiences” to which Filipino Americans did not necessarily relate, thus further dampen-ing the possibilities of pan-Asian identification. Ultimately, racial identity dilemmas were experienced only by Filipino Americans who attended UC and private institutions, as respondents who attended CSUs and community colleges remained socially embedded in their neighborhood context, where they were still the primary Asian group. Respondents’ sense of marginality as Asian Americans prompted many to develop a panminority identity. Filipino Americans’ individual and collective underperformance became a basis of identification with Latinos and African Americans. For respondents like Joey, academic under representation provided a rationale for identifying as Pacific Islander, mainly as a means of signaling how incongruent his experiences were from those of other Asian Americans. This shared status as underrepresented minorities also created opportunities for Filipino Americans to work closely with Latinos and African Americans on educational outreach and political activism, which further enhanced a panminority consciousness that was not necessarily salient during high school. While previous research has suggested that children of immigrants generally opt for socially advantageous identities, my findings have shown that this is not the case when there is a perceived mismatch between personal experiences and stereotyped cultural connotations of the racial label. As demonstrated by the educational narratives of Filipino Americans, children of immigrants may feel more comfortable adopting identities that fit their experiences, even when those labels are popularly associated with social disadvantages (as is the case with Latinos and African Americans in higher education). Lastly, my findings highlight the utility of centering disidentification as an outcome of interest, as it reveals how individuals understand their racial position vis-à-vis other ethnic groups within the larger U.S. context.

 

 

What does Anthony Ocampo suggest about Filipino American high school and college student ‘s identity?

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Reflection Paper: Explain what you have learned about the DBA program.

Reflection Paper

Explain what you have learned about the DBA program. Indicate how you can apply this information to be successful in the program. Explain the steps that you feel are necessary to achieve success in the DBA program.

Besides appreciating it as an advanced degree available for individuals in the complex and complicated business field, I have learned a lot about the DBA program. In particular, the program presented me with the rare opportunity to learn that, while an MBA program remains one of the popular degrees for individual managers and leaders in business enterprises, a DBA is a demonstration that, as a doctorate student, I am willing to identify and explore extra gaps in preparation for such leadership positions. I have learned that the DBA program is designed to provide the learner with a variety of advanced tools, especially 21st-century skills. The program gives insight into the various research tools and skills that are useful in the development of strategic plans and reaching informed decisions necessary for problem-solving

The information I have learned about the DBA program would contribute towards my successful completion of the program. First, I would apply the DBA program’s explorative aspect to my studies by demonstrating high levels of focus and commitment. Through the program, I have recognized the need to engage in continual learning because it goes a long way in broadening my understanding of the research project. In other words, I would incorporate the professional development component of the DBA program into my assignments, engagements with fellow students, and instructors. I must admit that DBA coursework and related learning activities are demanding and rigorous. Given these high achievement expectations, I would invest in applying the advanced skills, knowledge, firsthand experience, and techniques I have learned to manage my project.

As stated earlier regarding the relationship between a DBA and an MBA, I would appreciate the DBA program as an opportunity and a major step towards realizing my academic excellence. To achieve this, I would integrate the 21st-century skills I have so far learned into my research project by thinking critically, ensuring perfect verbal presentation of ideas, writing clearly, and engaging in a comprehensive analysis of concepts and findings (Rezun, 2019).  The focus would allow me to resist and avoid multiple distractions, place much emphasis on meaningful activities, and gain new knowledge that is a prerequisite for succeeding in the doctorate program.

Steps to Succeed

Grabowski and Miller (2015) agree that the emerging and current research body has overemphasized the content and management of doctoral programs, overlooking students’ motivations and other determinants of success. Having had a firsthand encounter with a DBA program, I think being successful is determined by a wide range of factors. In this respect, the ability to succeed in the program would be subject to following up to six steps. The first step involves setting clear and realistic expectations because underestimating the program’s scope of demand is a risk factor for failure. The second step is disciplined time management because the program requires adequate time.

The third step constitutes establishing or finding a vibrant or strong support system because the process may be downright frustrating and time-consuming. The fourth involves ensuring compatibility with the advisor. It is important to find and develop a healthy relationship with an advisor who identifies with dignity, trust, and fairness. The fifth and final steps comprise focus and smart and passionate writing and presentation (Rezun, 2019). Ultimately, the professor would expect a doctorate student to commit, avoid distractions, and write clearly to save time and other resources.

References

Grabowski, L. & Miller, J. (2015). Business professional doctoral programs: Student motivations, educational process, and graduate career outcomes. International Journal of Doctoral Studies, 10, 257-278.

Rezun, T. (2019). The DBA dissertation guidebook: The steps toward writing your DBA masterpiece. Dr. Teli Rezun Publications.

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Teaching about Legal and Ethical Issues

Create a 12-20 slide teaching PowerPoint presentation on a legal or ethical issue pertinent to nurse educators.

Introduction

As nurses, we are all, no doubt, very aware of the myriad of legal and ethical issues in any health care setting. We are familiar with licensing for health care professionals, perhaps carry our own malpractice insurance, and have been cautioned by our employing institutions always to follow policy and procedures.

Nursing education is no different; there are specific legal and ethical issues that are of concern to nurse educators. Some of the specific areas of which nurses working in education need to be well aware include the following:

  • Faculty rights and responsibilities.
  • Student rights.
  • Clinical evaluation of students.
  • Academic dishonesty.
  • Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).

In addition, it is also important to understand the responsibility of faculty regarding information about students. This is important for both academic faculty and for clinical faculty supervising students in clinical areas.

As in clinical practice, documentation of concerns and issues that arise in educational settings can be very important.

Preparation

As you prepare to complete this assessment, you may want to think about other related issues to deepen your understanding or broaden your viewpoint. You are encouraged to consider the questions below and discuss them with a fellow learner, a work associate, an interested friend, or a professional community member.

Note that these questions are for your own development and exploration and do not need to be completed or submitted as part of your assessment.

  • How does the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) impact the work of a professor in a university-based nursing program?
  • How would you handle plagiarism in the nursing classroom?

In this assessment, you will create a PowerPoint presentation that you could use to teach a group about a legal or ethical issue related to nursing or nursing education. To do so, you will select a case from the Nursing Education Legal and Ethical Scenarios | Transcript media piece to be your focus.

  • Review the case and reflect on the change that needs to occur and the group you will be addressing.
  • Research what the group needs to know to improve the legal or ethical situation that has occurred.
  • Use a minimum of seven references, a minimum of five of which should come from peer-reviewed sources.

As you conduct research, synthesize information needed to evoke a change in the situation.

Instructions

Create a 12–20 slide PowerPoint presentation that you would use to teach about the legal or ethical situation and to create change related to that situation.

Note: You must include 2–4 context slides. These are additional slides that provide contextual information for this assessment. Follow the guidelines for the two types of slides below.

Presentation Slides

For your 12–20 slide presentation:

  • Choose an appropriate theme and style.
  • Include an introductory slide that identifies the problem and your role.
  • Use slides to convey the important information and understandings to the group.
  • Provide a summary slide that reiterates the important points of the presentation.
  • Also provide a slide that offers resources for the group after the teaching/learning experience.
  • Include a slide with any references used in preparing the PowerPoint.
  • Use the speaker’s notes feature to provide any additional information that you would include in the presentation. This should include any cultural sensitivity aspects and how the content is expected to make a change regarding the issue being addressed.

Context Slides

For the 2–4 contextual slides (which are not considered part of the actual presentation but rather should contain information that you as a presenter would need to consider in your preparation and presentation):

  • Discuss any specific cultural and/or diversity aspects of the presentation that could be significant in the learning process. Include references and sources used to inform this.
  • Analyze how the presentation may result in a significant change in the identified environment. Cite any relevant sources.
  • Develop specific plans for how you might stay informed about the legal or ethical issue that was your focus. What resources could you use to learn about changes or developments that would impact your work?

Additional Requirements

  • Create a professional-looking PowerPoint presentation, using speaker notes throughout.
  • Length: 12–20 slides for teaching presentation plus 2–4 additional contextual slides.
  • Use correct APA format for all citations and references; include a reference page.
  • Writing should be free of grammatical errors.

Competencies Measured

By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the course competencies through the following assessment scoring guide criteria:

  • Competency 4: Apply knowledge of legal and ethical issues relevant to higher education and nursing education.
    • Describe a legal or ethical issue that requires changes in staff, faculty, or student behaviors.
    • Synthesize resource information needed to evoke a change in the described situation.
  • Competency 5: Articulate how nurse educators serve as change agents and leaders to help advance nursing education and nursing practice.
    • Create a teaching presentation on a legal or ethical issue designed to evoke change in staff, faculty, or a student group.
    • Identify culturally sensitive issues and how they should be addressed in the change process.
  • Competency 7: Establish a plan for pursuing continuous improvement in the nurse educator role.
    • Develop specific plans for continuous learning about a legal or ethical issue impacting nurse educators.
  • Competency 8: Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and consistent with the expectations of a nursing education professional.
    • Design a PowerPoint presentation consistent with current professional standards that demonstrates correct grammar, usage, and mechanics in addition to following APA standards.

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Substantive is as much about quality as quantity

Post at least five substantive notes, highlight each annotation from the passage

Substantive is as much about quality as quantity – you can ask questions, make connections to other things you’ve read or seen, or expand upon the author’s ideas. Your annotations should average around 50-75 words each.

Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://srhe.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=cthe20

Teaching in Higher Education Critical Perspectives

ISSN: 1356-2517 (Print) 1470-1294 (Online) Journal homepage: https://srhe.tandfonline.com/loi/cthe20

Just Google it! Digital literacy and the epistemology of ignorance

Ibrar Bhatt & Alison MacKenzie

To cite this article: Ibrar Bhatt & Alison MacKenzie (2019) Just Google it! Digital literacy and the epistemology of ignorance, Teaching in Higher Education, 24:3, 302-317, DOI: 10.1080/13562517.2018.1547276

To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2018.1547276

Published online: 20 Feb 2019.

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Just Google it! Digital literacy and the epistemology of ignorance Ibrar Bhatt and Alison MacKenzie

School of Social Sciences, Education & Social Work, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland

ABSTRACT In this paper we examine digital literacy and explicate how it relates to the philosophical study of ignorance. Using data from a study which explores the knowledge-producing work of undergraduate students as they wrote course assignments, we argue that a social practice approach to digital literacy can help explain how epistemologies of ignorance may be sustained. If students are restricted in what they can know because they are unaware of exogenous actors (e.g. algorithms), and how they guide choices and shape experiences online, then a key issue with which theorists of digital literacy should contend is how to educate students to be critically aware of how power operates in online spaces. The challenge for Higher Education is twofold: to understand how particular digital literacy practices pave the way for the construction of ignorance, and to develop approaches to counter it.

ARTICLE HISTORY Received 18 May 2018 Accepted 8 November 2018

KEYWORDS Digital literacy; epistemology of ignorance; literacy studies; ignorance; higher education

Introduction: literacy, knowledge creation and ignorance

Over the last 15 years, the broad and interdisciplinary field of Literacy Studies has turned its attention to digital literacies and language online (e.g. Barton and Lee 2013; Gillen 2014). This growing body of work has explored what digital literacy looks like in particular localised contexts such as college classrooms (Bhatt 2017a), gaming environments (Gee 2014), and university student experience (Gourlay and Oliver 2018). And while there has been some notable research which has examined writing in Higher Education and its role in the work of knowledge creation (e.g. Tusting et al 2019) there has, as yet, been little that has examined specifically the relationship between practices of student digital literacy and the social production of ignorance – a field of inquiry that is outlined in detail below.

In this paper we argue that Literacy Studies, through its empirical work and ethno- graphic commitment, should engage with epistemologies of ignorance in understanding how ignorance can be maintained, produced and re-produced through practices of digital literacy in the everyday lives of individual users of technologies within their various networks and institutions. Our focus here is on Higher Education, and our data is drawn from a study of digital literacy in university campus sites. Using ethnographic

© 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

CONTACT Ibrar Bhatt i.bhatt@qub.ac.uk School of Social Sciences, Education & Social Work, Queen’s University Belfast, 20 College Green, Belfast BT7 1LN, Northern Ireland

TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION 2019, VOL. 24, NO. 3, 302–317 https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2018.1547276

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interviews alongside a detailed videography of the writing process, the study examines how students in different disciplines (STEM, Computer Sciences, Arts & Humanities and Business courses) attempt to make sense of the plethora of information they encoun- ter online. This includes how they search for information, engage with it critically (or not), and make evaluative judgements about its credibility and relevance to curricular work and assignments. We explore how students appear to engage in digital literacy practices which demonstrate forms of non-culpable and strategic ignorance. But first, we orient the general reader to our twin theoretical bases: first, a ‘social practice’ approach to digital literacy, and second, epistemologies of ignorance, particularly in relation to the power of algorithms to determine, produce and maintain knowledge.

Literacy and knowledge production

Literacy Studies emerged through a series of seminal works (e.g. Street 1984; Baynham 1995; Barton and Hamilton 2012) which collectively presented a social theory of literacy. This theory foregrounds the idea that literacy is always associated with, and realised through, ‘social practices’ rather than a purely formally-schooled understanding of correct language. This means that literacy is always embedded within social activities, is socially situated, and mediated by material artefacts and networks. Germane to its methods is to focus on what people actually do with texts and technologies, and how lit- eracy practices are connected to getting things done in everyday life. Literacy research, therefore, invites careful and ethnographic attention to social acts of meaning ascribed to everyday practices of reading and writing.

Literacy Studies begins with the local and everyday experience of literacy in particular communities. It is rooted in people’s intimate experience with text and this is not always predictable from one person to another. There are also different literacy practices in different domains of people’s lives, whether through, for example, formal learning, reli- gious activity, or family life. Literacy is, therefore, to be understood in a pluralistic sense: ‘literacies’ to which, in addition, digital media also adds plurality; and how students use digital technology will vary across different social, age, and subject groups. Students are faced with an increasing range of digital platforms with which to work, and an often unpredictable set of social and material resources which shape their writing and knowl- edge production. This is particularly salient in institutional environments where there is often an attempt to standardise curricular work by organising it around a virtual learning environment (VLE) that all are mandated to use, and large computer suites.

Researchers working within Literacy Studies have examined, in various ways, the cul- tural connections between the nature of knowledge (how it is produced, valued, and bequeathed), and the literacy practices of particular communities. Through Literacy Studies, we have come to know how literacy is intrinsically connected to how societies operate and are organised, how institutions, groups and individuals organise their lives and make sense of the world, and how these realities are produced and re-produced in and through practices of literacy.

Literacy, therefore, cannot be seen outside of the powerful interests and agencies which seek to define it in particular ways (Tett, Hamilton, and Crowther 2012): literacy is a profi- table and fertile resource which can be sponsored, bought and sold, and regulated, sup- pressed or withheld (Brandt 1998). As Brandt defines it, the ‘sponsors’ of literacy are

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‘any agents, local or distant, concrete or abstract, who enable, support, teach, model, as well as recruit, regulate, suppress, or withhold literacy – and gain advantage by it in some way’ (1998, 166). Whether they are community leaders, academic institutions, or technology companies, they ultimately control ‘the ideological freight that must be borne for access to what they have’ (168).

Sponsors also shift over time, and where the chief sponsors of literacy were once reli- gious institutions who controlled how and where literacy was taught (and still do in many parts of the world), they have since been eclipsed by new sets of sponsors in the guise of businesses and the digital technology industries. These new actors have shaped current lit- eracy demands in ways which are relevant to this research, as we will discuss below.

Brandt’s ideas are relevant in today’s digitally infused world where information is organised and made accessible to those who seek it online through search engines such as Google. Companies such as Google, through their computer code and artificial intelli- gence systems, are among today’s highly influential ‘sponsors of literacy’. Their digital platforms are conduits of economic and political forces which regulate and establish the value and agentive potential of people’s digital literacies as they use those platforms (Noble 2018).

Drawing from a social practice approach to literacy, this study examines digital litera- cies as ‘the constantly changing practices through which people make traceable meanings using digital technologies’ (Gillen and Barton 2010, 1). A social practice approach to digital literacy does not, therefore, assume a deterministic and predictive relationship between digital media and students’ writing and study practices. As Gillen and Barton (2010, 1) caution ‘many mistakes – at the design, commercial and indeed theoretical levels – are made through assuming that there is a straightforward relationship between what a new technology can do and how – or even whether – it will then be used’. Instead, a social practice approach to digital literacy begins with detailed exploration of digital literacy in the lives of those who use technologies over and above an a priori notion of ‘what works’. In this respect, a social practice approach to digital literacy is set apart from related perspectives (e.g. ‘information literacy’ and ‘media literacy’) which conceptualise literacy as a metaphor for autonomous skills which can be acquired and transferred from one domain to another. A social practice approach is important in institutions, such as universities, where large-scale investments are made in new digital technologies, and where there seems to be little or no examination of what digital literacy actually looks like in practice for students and staff. The ways in which learners embrace a suite of institutional technology is not always reflected in the intentions of investors or pol- icymakers who will likely evaluate its use exclusively within broad instructional frame- works which tend to define digital literacy through a categorical classification of something which students have (or have not), rather than something which they do (see Gourlay and Oliver 2018).

Further, ignorance of how digital technologies work, how users’ online activities can be used to the advantage of the platform owners or sponsors without the users’ knowledge, and, indeed, how the internet appears to be structured so as to encourage people who enter it to confine their browsing to opinions they already accept, is not always well understood. Similarly, how people make sense of the voluminous amounts of information online is not straightforward. The sheer extent of online information necessitates its ‘pre-curation’ (Bhatt 2017a), or filtering, by algorithms before it is consumed by online users. Yet,

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ignorance of how digital technologies and online platforms do this has resulted in ritua- lised practices of digital literacy which must be examined critically and not taken for granted as mere everyday online practice. As we shall shortly demonstrate, some forms of ritualisation are necessary, and relate to how an online user accords epistemic trust to actors (e.g. teachers, search engines) as they seek information for learning and knowl- edge production. But an exploration of students’ ritualised practices with digital media can help uncover asymmetrical relations of power in moments of digital literacy and where, and how, epistemic trust is being granted.

Moreover, given that internet platforms are designed by corporations, they will be influenced by motivations, values, and intentions that are embedded in their architecture (Origgi 2012). However, because that design is often diffuse, it is difficult to know whom to query when these features become manifest or troublesome: there is little accountability or transparency, and it is difficult to exercise agency. As Eubanks (2018) observes ‘we have remarkably limited access to the equations, algorithms, and models that shape our life chances’. We have ceded much of the decision-making power to automated eligibility systems and ranking algorithms which control who has access to financial support and protection (insurance, mortgages, and welfare payments), and which particularly affects people of colour and low income communities, though no-one is immune.

Without knowing just how such platforms work, how to make sense of complex algor- ithms, or that data discrimination is a real social problem, students may not be the auton- omous and agential learners and pursuers of knowledge they believe themselves to be. As Noble (2018) argues, the monopoly status of a relatively small number of internet search engines, along with the paid promotion of certain sites, means that students engaged in seemingly benign online searches may actually be lacking in important knowledge prac- tices with respect to online learning and browsing: how knowledge is produced, spon- sored, valued – or withheld.

The study of ignorance

Epistemology is, very simply, the study of knowledge and justified belief. Ignorance, by contrast, is generally taken to mean the absence or lack of knowledge or awareness, and so it seems counterintuitive to talk about the epistemology of ignorance. How is it intelligibly possible to bring these two seemingly antonymic states together? However, ignorance is not mere lack of knowledge, a benign gap in knowledge or some epistemic oversight that needs only to be filled or rectified. Epistemologies of ignorance is, rather, an ‘examination of the complex phenomena of ignorance’ (Sullivan and Tuana 2007, 1): how it is actively constructed and sustained for the purposes of domination or exploita- tion, or for epistemic advantage; how it is sponsored and regulated (Brandt 1998); used wittingly or unwittingly to distort, suppress or withhold knowledge (O’Neil 2016); and as a substantive epistemic practice in itself in which ignorance is wilful and socially accep- table (Alcoff 2007). Frye (1983, 118), writing of racialised ignorance, has argued that ignorance ‘is not a simple lack, absence or emptiness, and it is not a passive state… [it] is a complex result of many acts and many negligences’. Ignorance is, therefore, something which is performed as a social practice, is often ritualised and, as we will show, it has a complex role to play in the writing and knowledge creating work of uni- versity students.

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Yet, epistemic ignorance also has value. For example, it is good epistemic practice to be strategically ignorant and highly selective in the things we know or seek to know in order to remain epistemically functional, particularly now that most of us are almost exclusively immersed in information-dense digital environments. We do not, for example, need to know how many blades of grass there are in a square metre (though a gardener might) and we rarely need to know the specific set of instructions that constitutes a given algor- ithm. It often makes sense to grant epistemic authority and trust to those with expertise and reputation, and who are known to be epistemically responsible. We often judge what to believe on whom to believe, and to make these judgments we rely on criteria of plausibility, consensus, relevance, and credibility, among other things. In digital informa- tional environments these criteria may also include online rankings, ratings, and the order of search results, such as those provided by Google. Google, the search engine that seems to be synonymous with the internet (Noble 2018), is judged by many users to be reliable and trustworthy, though we argue below that this is not always the case. The Pew Internet and American Life Project (Purcell, Brenner, and Rainie 2012) reported that 73% of search engine users say that most or all the information they find through search engines is ‘accu- rate and trustworthy’ and 66% of users regarded search engines are a ‘fair and unbiased source of information’ (3).

Reputation also helps when we are ignorant or uncertain. In information-dense online environments, information is useful, according to Origgi (2012), only in conjunction with reputation. It fashions collective processes of knowledge and is a ‘criterion’ (416) for extracting information from these online systems. Understandably, given our pervasive epistemic interdependence, and finite time, ‘good epistemic conduct needs to be under- stood as the maintenance of appropriate balances of knowledge and ignorance, in oneself and also in relation to others’ (Fricker 2016, 160). Reputation, as an ‘essential epis- temological notion’ (Origgi 2012), may help keep that balance.

However, while it is not possible or practical to know everything, ignorance may rep- resent a culpable failure to put effort or skill into knowing something one ought to know (Fricker 2007). Asymmetries of power in the context of the digital environment influence attributions of epistemic authority: whom we afford credibility excess or deficit based on, for example, reputation, and finite time and resources. Following Anderson’s (2017) analysis, such attributions of authority can impact on general models of knowledge; the epistemic standing of knowers or producers of knowledge (the reputation or ranking of platforms such as Google); whose claims various epistemic communities, such as students, will accept, and ought to accept as credible; and how this affects the distribution of knowl- edge and ignorance in society by algorithms, or other sources of information, such as a journal, newspaper or a course lecturer.

Given recent revelations about Facebook, we should know by now that our data can be mined and used without our knowledge, and therefore consent. Epistemic practices may lack know-how (skills) and propositional knowledge (know-what), and, of course, motiv- ation. Many undergraduate students are often passive consumers of what they are taught or told, or have read. They grant, reasonably, epistemic credibility to their lecturers, as we will discuss below. Like many of us, they are also often passive consumers of online infor- mation and search results, again, as we will discuss below.

Online searches are conducted through a series of steps, algorithmically mediated, which are implemented by programme code (Noble 2018, 37). Regarded as neutral

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because they are algorithmic and scientific, these mathematical formulations are evaluated through procedural and mechanistic practices which include tracing hyperlinks among pages. This is defined as ‘voting’ which describes search results that move up or down in a ranked list of websites (Noble 2018, 37). Most are automated or happen through graphical user interfaces that allow people who are not programmers to engage in sharing links to and from websites (37).

Noble (2018), among others (e.g. O’Neil 2016; Eubanks 2018), has pointed out that, contrary to the belief that online platforms like Google are objective and neutral, or even infallible, discrimination is embedded within their very computer code and artifi- cial intelligence systems, and that these can mask and deepen inequality, as well as render the user less agential than she thought. The mathematical formulations that drive automated decisions are not ‘benign, neutral or objective’ (Noble 2018, 1). The designers themselves have values which may promote prejudice as Noble (2018) docu- ments with respect to persistent and widespread racial profiling, sexism and misogyny online.

Worryingly, institutions like schools, universities, and libraries are increasingly being displaced by, or are reliant on, web-based tools such as Google (Noble 2018) because users think of them as public resources that are free from commercial interest and bias – which they are not. Google is an advertising company, and search results produced through it reflect the values and norms of the company’s commercial partners and adver- tisers. Consequently, search results play a powerful role in granting or reinforcing beliefs in the epistemic authority of, as we argued above, general models of knowledge; the epis- temic standing of knowers, whose claims various epistemic communities accept (or not) as credible, and how this affects the distribution of knowledge and ignorance in society (Anderson 2017).

Why should this be a matter of concern? One reason is that algorithms are creating ‘new asymmetries of power’, and are perceived as being better knowers of ourselves than we are (Origgi and Ciranna 2017, 303). Data mining, is a useful example. The interpretation and processing of data, makes a number of correlations through which the interests of the users are individuated to anticipate future actions. These predictive profiles are the essential ingredient of online marketing strategies – and of which users may have no knowledge. At the time of writing, we have learned that our identities are virtual objects that companies can buy and sell without our knowing, or without our voices being heard or taken into account (Buttarelli 2018). The ways in which we search for, use and communicate information through the web, and the roles and effects of search engines, has been, and remains, largely unknown to most users. We are largely ignorant of the effects and uses of our cognitive outsourcing and online moni- toring, on our status as competent informants, or that we have online avatars (Origgi and Ciranna 2017, 305). Since algorithmic procedures are determined by the owners of the platforms according to their interests, a profile of a user can be created using personalisa- tion algorithms, by collecting and storing tracks based on browsing history, IP addresses, social network activity, email content, and key words in search engines (307). These avatars are potentially partial, and may not present what the person wants to be known about herself or represent who she fully is (Origgi and Ciranna 2017). Not only may users be ignorant of what is happening, but they may also not know what their rights are or the uses to which this passive mining of data is being used. As we are increasingly

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coming to understand, such ignorance is not a benign gap in knowledge. We should ques- tion how corporate ‘sponsors’ (Brandt 1998) of digital literacy, companies who dominate the internet such as Google and Facebook, are benefitting (economically and in other ways) through users’ ignorance of their platforms.

We have an hermeneutical gap about predictive online profiling and attributions of rights and duties which are not yet the subject of full debate since a significant number of users may not know, and therefore cannot name, the potential and actual harm being done to them. We currently lack hermeneutical resources to talk about these issues and develop awareness of our rights of our profile which are, at present, wholly in the hands of the platform, and this is the case even when users, such as students, are engaged in seemingly benign searches for information to write an essay.

Students who are novices within a particular knowledge-based community or academic discipline will understandably rely on the directions and guidance of other actors, such as lecturers, leading to an inevitable asymmetry of power. Academics often warn their stu- dents about the quality and veracity of information they obtain from the internet. Students are often told to undertake rigorous searches in subject-specific repositories and rely on refereed literature, rather than trust more accessible treatments of a topic available in Wikipedia or in alluring YouTube videos, both of which will likely appear at the top of students’ search results.

Despite the warnings, as we will see from the accounts below, students in varying ways trust and use a variety of strategies to manage the wealth of information they find online. How they come to trust and select those strategies, and how they manage information, can tell us much about their knowings, and how those epistemologies manifest in their prac- tices of digital literacy. Yet how university students actually go about writing their assign- ments, how they seek out and discern information as part of their study practices has remained remarkably under-explored. As we have all increasingly come to realise, and have argued above, the internet is not the infallible and neutral repository of information we recently believed it to be; so how do students learn whom or what to trust to help them navigate through the epistemic gaps in their curricular work? This is one of the key areas of investigation in a current study of digital literacy in Higher Education, as we will now discuss.

A research project on digital literacy in higher education

Methods

The research was situated across disciplinary sites (STEM, Computer Sciences, Arts and Humanities, and Business subjects) in two universities in Northern Ireland. The research aims to develop a critical understanding of university digital literacy policy versus actuality and for the purposes of this paper, four students’ case studies (from a total of ten) were selected for analysis and discussion. Students were recruited through lecturers known to the primary researcher, and student networks online, and selected to represent each of the faculties and disciplinary groups across both universities, and, as far as possible, gender, ethnicity and diversity of disciplinary subjects.

To capture the diversity and richness of digital literacy and writing practices of the stu- dents, a combination of the following methods was used:

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(i) Focussed interviews were conducted with each student participant. Initial interviews were a pre-assignment ‘walk-around’ interview of the student’s campus to examine how study habits are mediated by their material environment, particular campus technologies and official learning spaces.

(ii) After the initial interview, each participant conducted a screen recording of a course assignment task. Through this method we were able to record the iterative processes of writing and online practices (searching, composing and revising). This data collec- tion technique is substantiated in other research into digital literacy and writing (see Bhatt 2017b).

(iii) This was followed by a post-assignment discussion of the writing task and the stu- dents’ history of use with digital media over the course of their life. This follow up interview allowed us to ask the students to reflect on the assignment task they had just done, and also to examine how their confidence and practice with digital media and online behaviour evolved over time. The students were asked about how they sought information online; how they assessed the veracity and authen- ticity of search engine results; and how they judged the trustworthiness of the information.

(iv) Additionally, software which captures quantitative patterns of digital behaviour (e.g. time spent on tasks and sub-tasks like web searching) was also obtained from the par- ticipants during their assignment writing.

From these data we were then able to capture a detailed impression of the digital lit- eracy practices of the students, both during a specific session of assignment writing and in their academic and social practice more generally.

Ethical challenges

Ethical issues relating to this research were fully examined and approved through the insti- tutional ethical review process. Specific challenges emerged which relate to the use of digital data obtained from participant’s machines, namely points (ii) and (iv) above. Therefore, during the screen recording, participants were given the option to ‘pause’ the recording whenever they wished. Screenshots with identifiable information were also edited to protect participant identity, and no identifiable information was captured in the data logs of computer use. All software was uninstalled from a student’s machine immediately after a writing session was completed.

Preliminary findings

For the purposes of this paper, we will focus specifically on those features of the cases examined thus far that relate to how the students searched for information online while writing their assignment tasks, and how they discerned the quality of that information in their writing. Since ignorance, as argued above, can manifest in ritualised practices, in this section we will show how it emerges through practices of digital literacy and the complex role it plays in the writing and knowledge creating work of students. We will also explore the extent to which students were reliant on their lecturers’ judgements

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and decisions about what is acceptable and credible for their work. The student cases examined in this paper come from: ‘Kim’ (Cinematic Arts), ‘Rahat’ (Economics), ‘Nusrat’ (Medicine), and ‘Phil’ (Politics & Philosophy).

Kim (Cinematic Arts)

Kim is a first year student of Cinematic Arts. The assignments she receives for her course are varied and include such genres as script writing, visual story-telling, coding, and short essays.

When writing her assignments, Kim very rarely goes beyond the resources uploaded by her lecturer in the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). We can view this practice of the lecturer as a form of ‘curation’ (Bhatt 2017a), which is ‘when certain actors guide the assignment writing along a certain path and place boundaries around the task to regulate its outcome’ (144). These curated resources are the basis of the course content in the form of slides from lectures, pdf files and links to online readings. This curation is important for Kim, as it helps standardise, and in some ways ritualise, the writing practices necessary for assignment completion.

Throughout the interviews, and substantiated in the screen-recording of her assign- ment, Kim emphasised how reliant she was on the curation work of the lecturer, arguing that ‘If a teacher sends a reading to us, I’ll trust it. I don’t know why, but you just do’. She would even email the lecturer to request resources when she was not satisfied with what she was given. This is because, as she states, ‘If I am the one who found it myself, I would be sceptical about it’. Kim lacks epistemic trust and confidence in her own skills and knowledge, and so accords epistemic credibility to her lecturer.

But in the rare instance where she felt the need to go outside the framework of her lec- turer’s carefully curated resources, she attaches value to the results only if the searched item (a key word, concept, story, for example) appears at the top of search engine results. In terms of any epistemic judgements she makes, the greater the congruity between websites in what they report and rank, the more likely she is to accept that infor- mation and incorporate it into her assignment.

A kind of discernment did, however, emerge in her pre-assignment group task. The assignment that was screen recorded was on the subject of visual storytelling. A pre- assignment task involved a group discussion online where Kim was able to garner infor- mation from a group of fellow students about the topic. Much of the recording is spent with Kim writing and flicking back and forth from ideas she had collected in the group chat prior to the actual writing of the assignment (see Figure 1). This was a recording of an online group chat by which she could access a record of the group’s collective ideas. She had curated this information from the group members, her epistemic commu- nity, and was able to draw from it as she wrote the assignment rather than search for content online.

Kim values this kind of pre-assignment group interaction over and above information that she finds online. Her scepticism about seeking information online and her trust of the people around her, to whom she attributes epistemic authority, is well encapsulated in this quote from an interview: ‘There’s a lot that you read on the internet that’s not what you actually hear from other people outside of your computer’.

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Rahat (Economics)

The research was carried out in the early stages of Rahat’s degree in Economics, when his assignments usually consisted of short pieces on topics with a 1–2 weeks’ deadline. For example, at the time of screen-recording, he had completed a 600-word assignment on The Great Depression for which, as he told us in a pre-assignment interview, ‘All the resources that we needed were on one website that I used. I didn’t do much reading… it was all online’.

In this respect, Rahat’s approach to writing for assignments does not differ considerably from Kim’s. The lecturer gives him links to websites for each individual assignment, and sometimes this will be a single link with all the important readings on it. His lecturer would usually explain the readings in class and then double up by sending them via email to the students to make sure: ‘It’s all in the email’. Rahat also explained that he would rely on it a lot, arguing that ‘it’s the best guidance because the lecturer has read through it’. Understandably, and unsurprisingly, Rahat places epistemic trust in his lec- turer to guide him to the best reading. Rahat also applied the same level of trust to his lec- turer’s tweets, considering them to be on a par with thought leaders and public commentators in the field of Economics. He benefitted from his lecturers’ social media updates, and therefore reputation, because they provided a broader view of the subject than the lectures.

When asked if students should be wholly reliant on the information provided by their lecturers he said, ‘No, because I think that would be too much spoon feeding. I think that students need to do their own searches as well’. However, on this occasion, this was not borne out in Rahat’s actual practice.

Figure 1. Kim spends most of her time flicking back and forth from ideas she collects in the pre-assign- ment group chat.

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If further and more extensive reading is required for an assignment, Rahat will search via his preferred search engine, Google, by typing in the title of the assignment task and clicking on the results that immediately relate to this. This he explained as follows: ‘I would type in the main title of what the essay is about, and scroll down, and whatever I think that I can relate to and understand easily, I would go with that’. On the surface, Rahat uses few complex thought process and concepts in the search since he uses his essay title, and readily accepts results that closely match it.

Rahat was unable to describe other filtering processes. What seemed to matter was that the filtering of search results was related to the extent to which the information he received was relevant to his assignment rather than its academic credibility. As with Kim, he also favoured top search results and judged the credibility of these based on their popularity, and, hence, assumed reputation.

Nusrat (Medicine)

Nusrat is a second-year student of Medicine. The assignments he has to complete for his course are varied in nature, and include write-ups of scientific practicals and short essays which require prior reading and research. When he has to write an essay, he steadfastly limits himself to academic sources only. He told us that:

I wouldn’t be using Wikipedia. I’d be looking at papers from PubMed. Often I’ll just type in the subject matter on Google and it will give me links to different websites, which I know have academic papers on. So things like PubMed, things like Cell, things like ScienceDirect, those renowned websites.

He is fairly confident when it comes to independent study practices, including his ability to search for, and select information for his course. He explained that:

I know what I’m searching for. Even if the lecture might not be that detailed, I would still use that lecture as a guide of what I need to know. For instance, I was learning about female reproductive physiology and the PowerPoint for that wasn’t that detailed. But I found the relevant chapter in a physiology textbook and I was able to fill in the missing pieces and make sense of it.

Here, Nusrat emphasises his confidence in making sense of information that he feels is lacking in his lecturer’s course content. He also sees this as part of the practice of learning on his course: ‘The assignments we usually get will be stuff that they’ve touched upon in a lecture, but maybe the purpose of the assignment is to make us go into it further’.

His strategy is to target academic databases for information, like PubMed, a database of academic reports on life sciences and biomedical topics, for sources that may be lacking in his lecture notes. Most of Nusrat’s web searching is channelled through these databases and they are his primary source of information. His assignments will predictably relate directly or indirectly to this content. Another reason that explains his need to foster prac- tices of independent searching is given as follows: ‘In all honesty, sometimes PowerPoints are not that good’, in which case he describes himself as ‘able to adapt and find another way’.

We see examples of this during the screen recording of his assignment which was on the portrayal of mental illness in film (see Figure 2). As he began the task, Nusrat accessed the recommended readings from his lecturer’s notes. He then searched online for ‘movies and

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mental illness pubmed’ highlighting the desire to direct his results towards ‘pubmed’. The recording reveals that he did not read any report deeply at this point, but merely skimmed to see which films had been analysed for their portrayal of mental health issues. It is only after viewing multiple results of films such as ‘Beautiful Mind’, ‘Logan’, and ‘The Hours’ in academic articles that Nusrat decided to target these films for analysis in his own assign- ment. In a post assignment interview he clarifies his methods as follows:

It’s always hard finding that initial paper but once you do, that leads onto finding other papers. It’s like once you find that one paper, then it just becomes a lot easier from then on.

The question here is about trusting what has been analysed before in previous research. Nusrat outlines his trust in selected online materials as follows: ‘if you go onto a website and the article looks poorly produced, or informally written, or only one author has written it, that would make me turn away from it’.

Phil (Politics & Philosophy)

Due to the nature of his course, Politics & Philosophy, Phil, a first year student, recently joined Twitter in order to keep up to date with news and current events, as they inform his ongoing written work. Having used Twitter in the past, he stopped using it because of the amount of time it was taking up. He then began re-using it more strategically to keep up to date with political events and news for his course. After experiencing an overwhelming amount of variety of news through Twitter, Phil decided to subscribe to Guardian Online for the news relevant to his course. In this way, he felt able to manage the multiple sources of news he receives by relying on Guardian Online for, as he assesses it, journalistic quality, integrity and news that is consistent with his political inclinations.

Figure 2. Nusrat tries to target solely academic databases for information through Google searching.

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This management of his news information sources is essential for two reasons: it is information which will contribute to his development on his Politics & Philosophy course, and Phil currently has little interest in consuming information which is in direct conflict with his political views. Phil’s practices mean that he is engaged in a form of strategic ignorance: to be epistemically functional, there are things or views of the world that he does not want to, or cannot know. However, though Phil’s decision was strategic, relying only on one source of news information is not, perhaps, best practice. By deciding to channel all his news through Guardian Online, however reputable, he ritua- lises his practices and ensures non-exposure to views different to his own.

Discussion

Kim, Nusrat, Rahat, and Phil all offer interesting insights into the varied practices of digital literacy emerging in undergraduate work. They differed substantially in the way that they searched for, managed and discerned information for curricular work. Both their simi- larities and dissimilarities call for explanation. What do these practices of student digital literacy imply for our understanding of ignorance discussed earlier in the paper?

Kim and Rahat typically follow the detailed guidance specified by their lecturers and both are careful to produce work which only draws from the resources provided as part of course materials. When each of them felt the need to search for information beyond what was provided, Kim and Rahat tended to rely on search results that appeared in mul- tiple locations as a criterion of authority. Nusrat, in contrast, casts a much smaller net in his searches for information. His self-reports and assignment recording revealed a much more focussed practice of information searching, and a certain amount of confidence in his ability to use other sources to ‘fill in the missing pieces’ from lecture notes. Nusrat attempts to understand the curricular task he is set. Clearly, most of what he produced in the course of writing his assignment was through this kind of self-discovery, with infor- mation filtered through his own assessment of its importance and credibility. For Kim and Rahat, the lecturers seemed to be the ultimate epistemic authority.

These and numerous similar observations led us to the conclusion that all the students’ writing and information seeking practices were ritualised – that is, motivated mainly by a need to adhere to the rules of the game. Building on the notion of curation described earlier, ritualised practices of assignment writing are about defining the sequence of events for task completion in such a way that the expectations (for students and lecturers) are clear and relatively habituated. Ritualised practices can be sustained through the common experience of the instructional practices of schooling prior to graduate study, and an examination of them can tell us much about how epistemic trust is accorded in online practice.

Ritualisation directs teaching and, rather than encouraging students to cultivate skills of discernment and trust in their own judgement, has the potential to restrict research prac- tices on account of high levels of epistemic trust in certain actors, be they lecturers, search engines, or news websites. This can constrain and restrict students’ practices of infor- mation gathering, and thereby sustain ignorance of alternatives. But can and should we expect anything more from undergraduate students? Would doing otherwise result in cog- nitive overload? Ritualisation can be an essential part of inducting a student into the forms of knowledge creation necessary within a given discipline. It is itself a form of non-culp- able strategic ignorance, and can help situate a student’s literacy practices as a novice

314 I. BHATT AND A. MACKENZIE

within their discipline. But such habits could, conversely, create a tendency to be unreflec- tive and habituated in research practices, and leave students over-reliant on, and passive users of, the decisions of popular search engines, with all the dangers that entails, as we discussed earlier.

All four students felt obliged to complete their assignments through ritualised practices of digital literacy. Their assignment writing is an activity whose significance rests in its manner of performance, as much as in its end product. For example, Nusrat relied on cri- teria of journal ranking, number of authors, and quality of presentation to make judge- ments of plausibility, relevance, and credibility. Kim and Rahat viewed multiple citations of information as something which renders the results epistemically trustworthy. The idea that multiple sources which say the same thing equates to corroboration and vali- dation is an idea which has its origins within the academy, but cannot be assumed of online searches for the reasons we recount above.

Some kinds of ignorance or knowledge practices are not mere oversights. We have limited time and resources and it is rational to grant credibility to epistemic authorities, as these students clearly demonstrated, and to trust on the basis of reputation, expertise, and so on: epistemic dependence is necessary and unavoidable. Phil, for example, know- ingly channelled his news through the Guardian Online website, entering into a particular set of debates which delineate his belief formations in order to manage his finite time and resources. Yet, while Phil’s decision is strategic, even necessary, it entails a particular kind of epistemic dependence on a particular set of views – perhaps we could even think of this as invested, if strategic, ignorance of alternative world views.

The literate activity of students in digital environments is supported and shaped by powerful historical, social, and economic forces, or ‘sponsors’ of digital literacy who, through their digital platforms and technologies, offer users both opportunities and the potential to constrain and suppress. How students, therefore, make use of these opportunities, and how they come to make sense of the constraints and work through them (or not) is a challenge facing educators. As technology is an integral component of learning, students must be supported in developing a critical awareness of how power operates in online spaces, and how ways of thinking and being are cul- turally produced and re-produced, and sponsored. If students are restricted in what they can know because they are unaware of how exogenous actors (e.g. algorithms) actually work, and how they guide their choices and shape their experiences online, then it becomes important to educate them to be critically aware during their digital searches for information, research and critical argument, and to educate them to be reflective about their ritualised practices with digital literacy. The challenge for Higher Education is to understand how particular forms of digital literacy practices pave the way for the construction of ignorance, and to develop mechanisms that counter it. To do this requires critically examining student digital literacies in light of epistemologies of ignorance.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by a grant from the Society for Research into Higher Education (SRHE). We would like to thank the following people for their commnents upon earlier drafts: Sadia Khan, Tess Maginess, Christine Bower, and Jennifer Rose.

TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION 315

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Funding

This work was supported by The Society for Research into Higher Education.

ORCID

Ibrar Bhatt http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3577-1257

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http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3577-1257

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of Adult Continuing Education.

TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION 317

  • Abstract
  • Introduction: literacy, knowledge creation and ignorance
    • Literacy and knowledge production
    • The study of ignorance
  • A research project on digital literacy in higher education
    • Methods
    • Ethical challenges
  • Preliminary findings
    • Kim (Cinematic Arts)
    • Rahat (Economics)
    • Nusrat (Medicine)
    • Phil (Politics Philosophy)
  • Discussion
  • Acknowledgements
  • Disclosure statement
  • ORCID
  • References

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What is the opinion of the auditors about the financial statements?

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Controls and Procedures.

-Management deemed their internal control over financial reporting effective as of Dec 31, 2020. These internal controls were also audited by Ernst & Young, and they concluded that GM maintained effective quality control. (Page 99) 4. What standard does the company use to evaluate whether the internal control is satisfactory? This is frequently COSO Internal Control –Integrated Framework (2013), but it might be another standard. – The assessment of the internal control utilized the criteria discussed in the “Internal Control – Integrated

Framework (2013) issued by the COSO. (Page 99)

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Jimenez and Patricia F. Russo. (Page 68). The committee is composed of independent directors

determined by the board under NYSE guidelines. (Page 67)

2. Has the company ask for shareholder opinion on management compensation? This is a ‘say-on-pay’ vote.

-Yes, the company has an annual meeting for say-on-pay voting. The company views shareholder engagement as a continuous process and seeks shareholder feedback. 96.5% of shareholders voted in favor of the executive compensation programs. (Page 44) 3. Describe a little of how the Compensation Committee makes the pay decision. a. Do they use an outside consultant to help with the decision or is it based only on their own deliberations? If they use a consultant, who is it? b. Is there a set of peer companies that they use as a comparison? -The compensation uses recommendations from an outside independent compensation consultant. FW Cook was the independent consultant. (Page 67). The committee used Dow Jones Automobile & Parts Titans 30 Index members as an OEM peer group. (Page 46) They also used another peer group of 15 companies to inform 2020 target compensation consisting of 3M, Boeing, Caterpillar, Deere & Company, Ford Motors, GE, Honeywell, HP, IBM, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, PepsiCo, Pfizer, Proctor & Gamble, and United Technologies. (Page 47) 4. Describe how much the CEO makes. Include a breakdown of the components of the pay. Commonly, it is salary, bonus, and equity.

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Actual Compensation – Salary: $1,995,000; Short Term Incentive Plan: $3,780,000; Performance Share Unit: $12,988,702; Stock Options: $3,750,000; Restricted Stock Unit: $105,020

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of measures. If the list is long, select some representative measures. Describe the chosen measures.*

a. Is the data item drawn from the financial statements? Which financial statement, Balance Sheet, Income

Statement, or Statement of Cash Flows?

b. If the item is not drawn from the financial statements, what information does it seem to capture?

-STIP performance measures 50% -Earnings Before Interest and Taxes-adjusted (EBIT) ($12.9 B is the target) Focus on Operating Profit and driving strong profitability; 25% – Adjusted Automotive Free Cash Flow AFCF ($7.1 B is the target) Focus on driving strong cash flow for investments; 25% Strategic Goals (25 pts) Focus on performance that aligns to company vision and drives business results. (Page 51)

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LTIP performance measures

50% – Relative Return On Invested Capital-adjusted (ROIC) (20% or higher returns in vehicles and technology); 50% Relative Total Shareholder Return (TSR) (Shareholder returns outperform OEM peer group) (Page 52)

ROIC is EBIT/Average Net Assets. Net Assets is Shareholders’ Equity. This is profitability scaled by the level of shareholders’ equity, resulting in a percentage figure. A percentage figure can be compared across companies of different sizes. For example, profits of $100 may seem not as good as $200. However, if the profits of $100 are generated using assets of $500, that 20 percent profit figure may be superior to the $200 that required $2,000 of assets to generate a 10 percent return. Both EBIT and Average Net Assets are derived from accounting reports. EBIT uses the income statement as the starting point. Average Net Assets uses the balance sheet as the starting point. Relative TSR is not clearly defined in the proxy, so I looked it up. A shareholder return is the dividends plus the market price increase of a share. Scale the dividends plus the market price increase by the starting market price and the TSR is a percentage. To make the TRS a ‘Relative TRS,’ examine where the company’s TRS ranks among peers. A Relative TSR that ranks near the top of peers is superior to a Relative TSR that ranks at the bottom of the peers. Accounting does not play a role in computing Relative TSR. Market price are determined by the market, and not directly by accounting reports.

6. What does the committee have to say about whether the incentives in the compensation plan can be dysfunctional? -The committee completed an annual risk review and determined that the compensation program included

the following features to mitigate the risk (which the committee deemed as a low-risk program (page 66)):

Mix of pay elements, short-term and long-term programs, adjustments to compensation, compensation

committee oversight, multiple performance measures and stock ownership requirements. (Page 65)

7. If the measures turnout to be wrong, or misreported, does the company have a policy of trying to recover the pay. For example, suppose the bonus depends on net income, and perhaps a year later, the company discovers that the net income was incorrectly reported. Does the company have a policy of trying to recover the pay? -The company does have a clawback policy. The policy includes all executive officers and certain circumstances includes approximately 275 senior leaders. The committee is empowered to recoup compensation paid to executive officers. In the event of misconduct that causes damage to the reputation, material inaccuracy, or accounting restatement the committee may seek to clawback incentive compensation. The committee may also cancel any outstanding equity-based awards to the employee. (Page 66) the policy is publicly available here: investor.gm.com/resources 8. The tax code, Section 162(m), mostly limits deductions for management compensation to $1 million. Is the company seemingly influenced by the tax code limit on deductibility, or is the company mainly concerned with compensation and not the tax deductibility? -The committee choses to align itself to executive pay with performance, regardless of the performance-based exception being removed under IRS Section 162(m) (Page 67). The company pays executives according the compensation committee’s sense of incentivizing, and does not consider whether the pay will be deductible for tax purposes.

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What are some of the main ideas of his school about sexual differences and women?   

Topic: criminal woman

Cesare Lombroso is considered among the first people to try and scientifically prove that crime and a criminal can be studied and analysed scientifically. He wrote a book, co-authored by Guglielmo Ferrero, known as the criminal woman; it tried to explain the criminal mind and the born criminal. In the text below we will try and illustrate and explain some of Lombroso’s work by answering the question:

What are some of the main ideas of his school about sexual differences and women?   

Lombroso is a criminal anthropologist who wrote a book that centred itself on studying the female gender. He greatly tried to explain what leads women to behave and react to things as they do. Women are a different species from men and are quite different from how a man  views them.                   

2) The book la Donna delinquentthe criminal woman” was written and published in the year 1893 in the country of Italy and Europe.  In the original book, Lombroso tried to describe women; it showed all that a female criminal would do, including prostitution and lesbianism.

3) Charles Darwin, a famous archaeologist who wrote the book ”origin of man” also tries to explain the sexual differences between men and women and to explain more about women’s sexuality. According to him and Hunter, women have a need to be courted and often try to flee from male who have a stronger sexual desire than females. The great difference in the structure of the female ovum and the sperm explains this. Evolution diminishes sexual sensitivity in women.

  • Women according to Lombroso are less sexually sensitive as compared to the male species which in the human setting are men (Lombroso, 1893). Women have less sexual pains and physical torture in the absence of sex compared to men. A woman is more likely to have her sexual desire die out faster if not reignited and also they require more sexual stimulus so as to give in to sex. If seduction is not present a woman is usually emotionless and feels almost nothing during intercourse. This explains the difference in women compared to men toward sexuality.
  • Maternity in women raises two distinct instincts: compassion (love) and cruelty. Women and most mothers lose their sexual desire during pregnancy. But antonymous to the previous concept, women also get sexual y aroused during pregnancy. Compassion on the other hand comes from maternity. Women are the weaker sex when it comes to compassion and they display love for the weak ones as it provides sentimental reference to their infant; motherly instinct.
  •   The question of will and power in women can be answered because women are considered very emotional. They are very wilful but lack the necessary power to implement their will. Generally men posses more power as compared to women.
  • Women have greater impulsivity to emotions especially compassion, this makes them weak and unable to eliminate but be cruel to their offenders.  They have less control over anger and situations that make them upset.  These factors make them emotionally unstable. As evolution progresses cruelty slowly changes to pity. Due to compassion, women are found to be mediators between morality and justice. Women would sympathise with wrongdoers.
  • Christianity brought about the beginning of pity in women. Christianity did not bring about women’ compassion but helped in its manifestation. Education on the other hand brought or lead to civilization and it gave more reasoning to compassion. This influenced women emotional stability (Lombroso , 1893).
  • Moral sensitivity is weaker in women as compared to men. Women suffer more than women, they are able to endure it all; due to their organic nature. But their willpower is cut short by the lack of enthusiasm. They are dull when it comes to pain according to Darwin.
  • Women’s intelligence power is low compared to men’s, especially regarding creativity. This is attributed to less environmental exposure, lack of opportunity for intellectual labour and lack of creativity power. Women grow weaker as evolution continues men become stronger. Women grow more dependent for survival.
  • Some of the criminal tendencies of women include prostitution and lesbianism. Due to their nature, these are some of the criminal components of women. Which he clearly described to be crimes and his influence led to constraints being set on prostitution
  •  Lombroso was widely dismissed for the contents of his book and has been deemed to be ridiculous. For his work though he was invited to address on various issues including politics and socials talks. He took part in talks that included more than talks on law and crime. He addressed other issues such as foreign policy. Most of his followers were politicians and ministers from the parliament. Some of his work’s consequences were that it made prostitution seem like a bad thing and led to the imposing of tight laws towards it. Prostitutes had to register with the local police and undergo check up.  His influence was contrary to the development of organisations that supported women. Thus he was against feminism.

Lombroso, C., & Ferrero, . G. (1893). The Female Offender. rome: Wm. S. Hein Publishing.

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