Designing for Social Justice: A Decolonial Exploration of How to Develop EdTech for Refugees

Author:

Barnes Katrina1,Emerusenge Aime Parfait1,Rabi Asma1,Ullah Noor1,Mazari Haani2,Moustafa Nariman3ORCID,Thakrar Jayshree2,Zhao Annette1,Koomar Saalim1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Jigsaw Education, EdTech Hub, London W6 7JP, UK

2. Results for Development, EdTech Hub, Washington, DC 20036, USA

3. Open Development & Education, EdTech Hub, Barnet EN4 8RE, UK

Abstract

This paper reflects on the lived experiences of young refugees located in Pakistan and Rwanda when interacting with education technology (EdTech) during and following displacement. We offer a broad decolonial commentary on issues related to the design and development of EdTech initiatives for refugees, noting some of the historical trends prevalent in the education and emergencies sector. We are guided by questions such as: Why EdTech to start with? Who designs the products? Where are they designed? How are they designed? And, which power dynamics are at play during the design process? From this, we draw on qualitative data generated through three focus groups, where we explore young refugees’ experiences of EdTech. The focus group included a creative element inviting participants to imagine what a liberatory EdTech practice would look like. We aim to illustrate the practical implications of design choices taken by EdTech developers and, from this, recommend a set of justice-centred design principles for developers of EdTech in refugee contexts. These insights relate specifically to the experiences of refugees in Rwanda and Pakistan, though we also discuss the implications of these learnings for other contexts.

Funder

UK aid

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

World Bank

UNICEF

EdTech Hub

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference98 articles.

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3. Refugee Education 4.0: The Potential and Pitfalls of EdTech for Refugee Education;Rude;CESifo Forum,2021

4. Tauson, M., and Stannard, L. (2018). Edtech for Learning in Emergencies and Displaced Settings—A Rigorous Review and Narrative Synthesis, Save the Children. Available online: https://www.savethechildren.org.uk/content/dam/global/reports/education-and-child-protection/edtech-learning.pdf.

5. Ashlee, A., Clericetti, G., and Mitchell, J. (2020). Rapid Evidence Review: Refugee Education, EdTech Hub.

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