Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness

In this article we propose an approach to digital health tracking technologies that draws on design anthropology. This entails re-thinking the pedagogical importance of personal data as lying in how they participate in the constitution of new possibilities that enable people to learn about, and conf...

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Main Authors: Vaike Fors, Sarah Pink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-06-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/2/59
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spelling doaj-dfaacd34204a4fb1aed29f22763010102020-11-24T23:16:08ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602017-06-01625910.3390/socsci6020059socsci6020059Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital OpennessVaike Fors0Sarah Pink1School of Information Technology, Halmstad University, Box 823, 301 18 Halmstad, SwedenSchool of Media and Communications, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476, VIC 3001 Melbourne, AustraliaIn this article we propose an approach to digital health tracking technologies that draws on design anthropology. This entails re-thinking the pedagogical importance of personal data as lying in how they participate in the constitution of new possibilities that enable people to learn about, and configure, their everyday health in new ways. There have been two dominant strands in traditional debates in the field of pedagogy: one that refers to processes of teaching people to do things in particular ways; and another that seeks to enable learning. The first of these corresponds with existing understandings of self-tracking technologies as either unsuccessful behavioural change devices, or as providing solutions to problems that do not necessarily exist. When seen as such, self-tracking technologies inevitably fail as forms of intervention towards better health. In this article we investigate what happens when we take the second strand—the notion of enabling learning as an incremental and emergent process—seriously as a mode of intervention towards health through self-tracking technologies. We show how such a shift in pedagogical understanding of the routes to knowing these technologies offer creates opportunities to move beyond simplistic ideas of behavioural change as the main application of digital body monitoring in everyday life. In what follows, we first demonstrate how the disjunctures that arise from this context emerge. We then outline a critical response to how learning through life-tracking has been conceptualised in research in health and human-computer interaction research. We offer an alternative response by drawing on a processual theory of learning and recent and emerging research in sociology, media studies, anthropology, and cognate disciplines. Then, drawing on ethnographic research, we argue for understanding learning through the production of personal data as involving emplaced and non-representational routes to knowing. This, we propose, requires a corresponding rethinking of the epistemological status of personal data and what kind of knowledge it can be claimed to produce. Finally, we take up the implications of this and advance the discussion through a design anthropological approach, through which we refigure the interventional potential of such technologies as lying in their capacity to create possibilities for experiential, and often unspoken, ways of embodied and emplaced knowing.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/2/59pedagogydesign ethnographyhealth technologyembodied learningdata epistemology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vaike Fors
Sarah Pink
spellingShingle Vaike Fors
Sarah Pink
Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
Social Sciences
pedagogy
design ethnography
health technology
embodied learning
data epistemology
author_facet Vaike Fors
Sarah Pink
author_sort Vaike Fors
title Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
title_short Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
title_full Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
title_fullStr Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
title_full_unstemmed Pedagogy as Possibility: Health Interventions as Digital Openness
title_sort pedagogy as possibility: health interventions as digital openness
publisher MDPI AG
series Social Sciences
issn 2076-0760
publishDate 2017-06-01
description In this article we propose an approach to digital health tracking technologies that draws on design anthropology. This entails re-thinking the pedagogical importance of personal data as lying in how they participate in the constitution of new possibilities that enable people to learn about, and configure, their everyday health in new ways. There have been two dominant strands in traditional debates in the field of pedagogy: one that refers to processes of teaching people to do things in particular ways; and another that seeks to enable learning. The first of these corresponds with existing understandings of self-tracking technologies as either unsuccessful behavioural change devices, or as providing solutions to problems that do not necessarily exist. When seen as such, self-tracking technologies inevitably fail as forms of intervention towards better health. In this article we investigate what happens when we take the second strand—the notion of enabling learning as an incremental and emergent process—seriously as a mode of intervention towards health through self-tracking technologies. We show how such a shift in pedagogical understanding of the routes to knowing these technologies offer creates opportunities to move beyond simplistic ideas of behavioural change as the main application of digital body monitoring in everyday life. In what follows, we first demonstrate how the disjunctures that arise from this context emerge. We then outline a critical response to how learning through life-tracking has been conceptualised in research in health and human-computer interaction research. We offer an alternative response by drawing on a processual theory of learning and recent and emerging research in sociology, media studies, anthropology, and cognate disciplines. Then, drawing on ethnographic research, we argue for understanding learning through the production of personal data as involving emplaced and non-representational routes to knowing. This, we propose, requires a corresponding rethinking of the epistemological status of personal data and what kind of knowledge it can be claimed to produce. Finally, we take up the implications of this and advance the discussion through a design anthropological approach, through which we refigure the interventional potential of such technologies as lying in their capacity to create possibilities for experiential, and often unspoken, ways of embodied and emplaced knowing.
topic pedagogy
design ethnography
health technology
embodied learning
data epistemology
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/2/59
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