Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?

An article in The Atlantic ‘Quantifying the Ed-Tech Market’ (2015), which draws on a review by the Education Technology Industry Network, reports that the U.S. Ed-tech market totalled $8.38 billion in the 2012–2013 academic year, which is up from $7.9 billion the year before, and up 11.7 per cent fr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Noeline Wright, Michael Peters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Open Review of Educational Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2017.1365623
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spelling doaj-f77de735e7b54667b0a0f905693618db2020-11-25T01:11:04ZengTaylor & Francis GroupOpen Review of Educational Research2326-55072017-01-014116417610.1080/23265507.2017.13656231365623Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?Noeline Wright0Michael Peters1University of WaikatoUniversity of WaikatoAn article in The Atlantic ‘Quantifying the Ed-Tech Market’ (2015), which draws on a review by the Education Technology Industry Network, reports that the U.S. Ed-tech market totalled $8.38 billion in the 2012–2013 academic year, which is up from $7.9 billion the year before, and up 11.7 per cent from 2009. K-12 online course revenue including any digital curriculum increased some 320% and the testing and assessment market, the largest single category, generated $2.5 billion. The New Zealand business organisation EDTechNZ, indicates on its website that educational technology is the fastest growing sector of a global smart education market worth US$100 billion, forecast to grow to US$394 by 2019. The same source indicates that Cloud-based educational technology is accelerating at 20% growth per annum and is forecast to reach US$12 billion by 2019. These returns are unequalled by most other economic sectors. Our concern in this article is that the market imperative based on selling has become a driving logic for digital technologies in schools while learning gets lost in the rush for companies to profit from schools, creating de facto privatisation by stealth. Aspects of the New Zealand educational context are used to illustrate our thinking, especially since most educational provision is still state owned and taxpayer funded.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2017.1365623Privatisationeducation systemsNew Zealanddigital technologieseducation market
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noeline Wright
Michael Peters
spellingShingle Noeline Wright
Michael Peters
Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
Open Review of Educational Research
Privatisation
education systems
New Zealand
digital technologies
education market
author_facet Noeline Wright
Michael Peters
author_sort Noeline Wright
title Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
title_short Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
title_full Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
title_fullStr Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
title_full_unstemmed Sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? The EdTech market in New Zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
title_sort sell, sell, sell or learn, learn, learn? the edtech market in new zealand’s education system – privatisation by stealth?
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Open Review of Educational Research
issn 2326-5507
publishDate 2017-01-01
description An article in The Atlantic ‘Quantifying the Ed-Tech Market’ (2015), which draws on a review by the Education Technology Industry Network, reports that the U.S. Ed-tech market totalled $8.38 billion in the 2012–2013 academic year, which is up from $7.9 billion the year before, and up 11.7 per cent from 2009. K-12 online course revenue including any digital curriculum increased some 320% and the testing and assessment market, the largest single category, generated $2.5 billion. The New Zealand business organisation EDTechNZ, indicates on its website that educational technology is the fastest growing sector of a global smart education market worth US$100 billion, forecast to grow to US$394 by 2019. The same source indicates that Cloud-based educational technology is accelerating at 20% growth per annum and is forecast to reach US$12 billion by 2019. These returns are unequalled by most other economic sectors. Our concern in this article is that the market imperative based on selling has become a driving logic for digital technologies in schools while learning gets lost in the rush for companies to profit from schools, creating de facto privatisation by stealth. Aspects of the New Zealand educational context are used to illustrate our thinking, especially since most educational provision is still state owned and taxpayer funded.
topic Privatisation
education systems
New Zealand
digital technologies
education market
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2017.1365623
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