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Latest Articles

Recent publications from the journal.
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    29 Mar 2016
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    0 Comments

    Notes Toward a Values-Driven Framework for Digital Humanities Pedagogy

    There was a definite buzz in the room on an otherwise ordinary Friday morning. Faculty, administrators, librarians, and educational technologists had gathered to hear future...
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    22 Mar 2016
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    4 Comments

    The Purpose of Online Discussion

    Are online discussions really discussions? I’ve been wondering this since I started teaching online. Many of my students, friends, and colleagues get a sour look...
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    15 Mar 2016
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    Welding and the Meaning of Life

    I find myself angry a lot lately, frequently at the charges of irrelevance leveled against my discipline of philosophy and liberal arts in general. These...
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    08 Mar 2016
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    Whither the Digital Humanities?

    The Digital Humanities (DH) can be viewed in two ways: as emerging and as emergent. Emerging: Over the last two decades, as it grew from...
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    02 Mar 2016
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    Teaching as Troubleshooting: What I Learned About Digital Pedagogy Behind the Wheel of a Beet Truck

    4:13AM. Sunrise was still hours away. My hands throttled the oversized steering wheel in front of me. My gaze was fixed out on the dark...
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    23 Feb 2016
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    1 Comments

    The Victorian MOOC

    It is 1873. Something unique is about to happen. A steam-train gathers speed in the background. Carriages on cobbled streets. In a dark room children...
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    17 Feb 2016
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    3 Comments

    Plagiarism is Dead; Long Live the Retweet: Unpacking an Identity Crisis in Digital Content

    “What oft was thought but ne’er so well express’d” Alexander Pope’s eighteenth century advice to writers — now known as content producers — has a...
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    13 Feb 2016
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    11 Comments

    Open Letters

    In the interests of transparency, the following is a letter sent by e-mail to the editorial staff of Hybrid Pedagogy. We’re sharing this, and another letter,...
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    12 Feb 2016
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    4 Comments

    Digital Humanities and the Erosion of Inquiry

    On February 12, 2016, Jesse Stommel and Sean Michael Morris gave a talk as part of the University of Michigan’s Digital Currents initiative. The following is...
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What is Hybrid Pedagogy?

Hybrid Pedagogy is a community, a conversation, a collaboration, a school, and a journal. It is a place to discuss Critical Digital Pedagogy by advocating for students and fostering awareness of academic oppression. We (the staff and the authors) work together to enact an understanding of co-teaching within a community of mutual respect.

Hybrid Pedagogy launched in 2011. In its first year, the journal’s educational outreach efforts included a meta-MOOC about MOOCs, THATcamp Hybrid Pedagogy, and Digital Writing Month. These events formed international communities of teacher-students and showed that Critical Digital Pedagogy can be practiced as it is taught. Monthly Twitter chats under the #digped hashtag expand the community through casual, synchronous, idea sharing. The journal expanded into audio with the introduction of HybridPod, and it expanded its editorial staff with the #HPJ101 course, both debuting in 2015. Across four years, dozens of events, and hundreds of authors, Hybrid Pedagogy remains centered on praxis — the blend of theory and practice that develops with experience and reflection.

Articles in this journal combine personal experience, current conversations in academia, and a theoretical foundation that presumes the value, strength, and independent thinking of all learners. As such, Hybrid Pedagogy is not ideologically neutral. The journal’s principles can be found not only in its name and in articles like “What is Hybridity?”, but also in the works of critical pedagogues like Paulo Freire and bell hooks.

Education happens everywhere — all the time — and people must be empowered to learn and teach throughout their lives. And because technology appears everywhere and is incorporated in all aspects of our lives, from the device you’re using to read this to the designed textiles you’re wearing, people must also be empowered to conscientiously evaluate the role of technology in their learning and teaching. Thus, Hybrid Pedagogy exists to explore those connections: the contact points and interconnectedness of learning, teaching, and technology in our lives. Our work is the work of advocacy — advocating for teachers, advocating for marginalized voices in education, but first and foremost advocating for students and learners.

In short, Hybrid Pedagogy is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal that…

  • combines the strands of critical pedagogy and digital pedagogy to arrive at the best social and civil uses for technology and new media in education.
  • avoids valorizing educational technology, but seeks to interrogate and investigate technological tools to determine their most progressive applications.
  • invites you to an ongoing discussion that is networked and participant-driven, to an open peer reviewed journal that is both academic and collective.

For details, we invite you to learn more about our pedagogy, about our process, and about our people.

You can also follow us on social media:

 

Active Calls for Papers

Conversations we’re eager to host.
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    07 Jan 2014
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    1 Comments

    CFP: Pedagogical Alterity: Stories of Race, Gender, Disability, Sexuality

    Read the collection of articles published from this CFP. Paulo Freire claims in Pedagogy of the Oppressed, that “the great humanistic and historical task of...
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    01 Dec 2015
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    5 Comments

    CFP: The Purpose of Education

    Our advanced technological society is rapidly making objects of most of us and subtly programming us into conformity to the logic of its system. To...
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    29 May 2013
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