ABSTRACT
That compulsory education is datafied is widely acknowledged. A significant body of literature illuminates the policy context and technologies that have given rise to what we now call datafication. Less research has focussed on the consequences of datafication on teachers and learners. In this paper, we offer a unique perspective of these consequences in relation to qualified, experienced teachers as learners on education-based masters courses. Working within a post-qualitative frame, we employ a lesser-known approach to research, ‘conversation as methodology’, in order to explore our experiences and develop our expertise as HE practitioners. Through conversation, we identify datafication as both affective and effective – it shapes and produces particular learning and teaching encounters and it also shapes and produces subjectivities. We suggest that for education-based masters courses, this is troublesome, and can result in a process of (un)teaching, as we challenge the values and practices on which a datafied education depends.
Acknowledgements
We are extremely grateful to Sam Sellar, Maggie MacLure and two anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful engagement with and feedback on earlier drafts of this paper.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 Post-92 university refers to former polytechnics who were given university status through the Further and Higher Education Act 1992. They are sometimes referred to as ‘new universities’.
2 In choosing to include this quotation from Martin and Kamberelis (Citation2013) we also aim to make clear that our purpose is not to denounce or dismiss all ‘quantitative representations’ but to ‘trouble’ or ‘deconstruct’ the discourses that claim them as truth.