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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28617
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dc.contributor.advisorGedge, Elisabeth-
dc.contributor.authorBourdeau, Katherine-
dc.date.accessioned2023-05-31T15:08:12Z-
dc.date.available2023-05-31T15:08:12Z-
dc.date.issued2023-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/28617-
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation seeks to analyze Ontario’s public education system for the explicit and implicit epistemic commitments that instantiate the institution’s goals, methods of evaluation, and practices. The analysis proceeds with the conceptual framework of social imaginaries, highlighting underlying epistemic systems and their socially constructed central significations which organize and govern the norms of a society and manifest in institutions and epistemic resources. The dominant, operative, instituted social imaginary in Ontario is instantiated by the epistemology of mastery. The central significations of the epistemology of mastery are its ensemblistic-identitary logic, and its overarching goal of control or mastery. In my analysis, this epistemic system is contrasted with a newer system, ecological epistemology, which exists as the result of the social imaginary’s instituting power, the society’s critical-creative ability to create new meanings and significations. The central significations of ecological epistemology are situated epistemic location, co-constitutive relationality, and local responsivity. I analyze Ontario’s institution of public education by identifying and comparing the significations of an epistemology of mastery with the significations of ecological epistemology found within its material resources, primarily within policy documents. It is my contention that a continued dependence on the epistemology of mastery impedes significant institutional change, despite evidence of the desire to institute the significations of ecological epistemology. The epistemology of mastery can contribute to undue harm to children in the schooling system, specifically in the form of epistemic injustices, which have both epistemic and ethical dimensions. The hegemonic status of the epistemology of mastery as instituted in Ontario’s public education system harms children as epistemic agents, which causes secondary harms to other members of epistemic communities and to the very processes of knowledge circulation. One framework for thinking about epistemic injustice, described by Kristie Dotson as epistemic exclusions, explains that these harms occur at different magnitudes, with each requiring different tactics to counter. Through an ecological analysis, I aim to show why public education in Ontario needs to embrace the significations of ecological epistemology to unsettle the hegemonic status of the epistemology of mastery: to lessen instances of epistemic injustice and to make space for alternative epistemic systems, new and resurgent, that can help us create solidarities and coalitions and (re)imagine our futures.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectsocial imaginaryen_US
dc.subjectepistemologyen_US
dc.subjecteducationen_US
dc.subjectOntarioen_US
dc.subjectchildrenen_US
dc.subjectfeminismen_US
dc.subjectepistemic exclusionsen_US
dc.subjectepistemic injusticeen_US
dc.subjectecological epistemologyen_US
dc.subjectepistemology of masteryen_US
dc.titleSocial Imaginaries and Epistemic Systems in Ontario's Institution of Public Educationen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.contributor.departmentPhilosophyen_US
dc.description.degreetypeDissertationen_US
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_US
dc.description.layabstractThis dissertation is an attempt to systematically theorize ecological epistemology as an epistemic system that has emancipatory potential for epistemic agents who live in Ontario and are subjected to its institutions. In particular, I examine Ontario’s institution of public education to see how its organizational structures and policies shape the epistemic agencies of students, who are most often children. Drawing attention to epistemic location, co-constitutive relationality, and local responsivity, the three central significations of ecological epistemology, I contrast this system with the dominant, operative epistemology of mastery. I contend that a lingering reliance on the significations of the epistemology of mastery not only inhibits institutional changes, but it also creates an epistemic landscape where agents are more vulnerable to harms in the form of epistemic exclusions. Through an ecological analysis, I show why Ontario’s institution of public education should reject the hegemonic status of the epistemology of mastery. The institution should instead embrace ecological epistemology in order to resist and respond to epistemic exclusions and honour the epistemic agency of all its constituents.en_US
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