Recent Educational Foundations, Policy and Practicegraduate and alumnus Matt Hastings (PhDEDU'20) has been selectedfor the (AME) Kuhmerker Dissertation Award.Hastings was honored for the award, along with two other awardees, at the virtual 47th AME annual conferenceheld Nov. 3-7, where he also led a talk on his scholarship.
His dissertation project, “Left to Our Own Devices: Education and Attention for a Digital Age,” is a philosophical analysis of the ethical dimensions of attention in our digital age. The term “attention” is frequently invoked in education (i.e., consider calls for students to “pay attention”), but it is not often taken up as a subject of study. Hastingsargues that the term “attention” deserves to be a central concept in moral and ethical education; in effect, we are shaped, as moral beings, by what we pay attention to, and how we engage with (and attend to) the world around us. Moreover, our attention has been rapidly re-shaped by the pervasive shift to digital learning technologies.
Hastings' project begins with a critical account of the “attention economy,” or the many forces that seek to capture (and profit from) our attention. While these forces are old ones, the ubiquity of digital devices has increased both the reach and value of the attention economy. As Hastings argues, digital devices are designed to capture and control our attention, and through this, shape our beliefs and behaviors. Education is a central front in the attention economy. The use of digital devices and programs—from laptops to “personalized learning” software—has grown exponentially. His project speaks to the rapid changes coalescing around us, asking: what are we paying attention to? What is the quality of this attention? How is our attention being structured, and what are the implications for self-formation and concerns of justice?