Jamming power: Youth agency and community-driven science in a critical technology learning program

Sepehr Vakil*, Alisa Reith, Natalie Araujo Melo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

In dialogue with science education and learning sciences research, in this article we develop a disciplinary-specific view on youth and community agency for community-based technology education. Cultivating agency is a central principle in our design and empirical study of the Young People's Race, Power, and Technology Program (YPRPT), a program designed to engage youth in critical inquiry about the technologies impacting their local communities. In this article, drawing from our multiyear partnership with a community-based youth organization, we examine how agency was supported and constrained as a function of the practices we engaged in as a research team committed to participatory and justice-centered education. Our findings illustrate ways that the emergence and enactment of agency, at both individual and community levels, works to interrupt, subvert, and creatively “jam” systems of power. We argue that cultivating agency in community-driven science and technology learning requires an honest reckoning with the deeply entrenched racial and economic oppression in the United States. We contend that it is equally essential to commit to learning from, co-designing with, and working in solidarity alongside the youth and communities that are most impacted by technologies that mediate our experiences—toward unveiling, resisting, and reimagining their powerful roles in our collective lives.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1723-1754
Number of pages32
JournalJournal of Research in Science Teaching
Volume60
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2023

Funding

We express our gratitude to the youth at Family Matters for their insight, creativity, and dedication. We also thank our community partners Lucy Parsons Labs, Endangered Peace, and Family Matters, and in particular Sanjin Ibrahimovic, Chris Spence, and Raphael Nash; and members of the TREE Lab in the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University where many of the ideas in this manuscript were discussed, debated, and refined. We are also deeply appreciative of the generous feedback we received from the journal editors and our anonymous reviewers. The material in this paper is supported by the National Science Foundation Grant No. CAREER-1855494 We express our gratitude to the youth at Family Matters for their insight, creativity, and dedication. We also thank our community partners Lucy Parsons Labs, Endangered Peace, and Family Matters, and in particular Sanjin Ibrahimovic, Chris Spence, and Raphael Nash; and members of the TREE Lab in the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University where many of the ideas in this manuscript were discussed, debated, and refined. We are also deeply appreciative of the generous feedback we received from the journal editors and our anonymous reviewers. The material in this paper is supported by the National Science Foundation Grant No. CAREER\u20101855494 1

Keywords

  • agency
  • community-based design
  • community-driven science
  • justice
  • participatory design
  • science and technology education

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Education

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