Abstract:
Patriarchal societies, such as that of Pakistan, denigrate women’s participation
in the field of education and technology. Addressing this denigration, my thesis
orients from the proposition, which states that in contemporary technologically tuned
world use of technology has a positive impact on women ESL tertiary level teachers.
This usage grants them teaching-learning autonomy, which in turn, compels these
teachers to inculcate the same in ESL learners. Hence, they play an imperative role in
the development of ESL learner autonomy. The educated women’s practice of this
teaching autonomy in classroom, a miniature of the social fabric of Pakistan, is a
breakthrough the prevailing socio-political fences.
This premise is contested through the critical review of the related literature. It
reveals that the use of technology as positively affecting female ESL tertiary level
teachers’ professional competence and pedagogical practices in Pakistani context is
not well-researched. Nonetheless, this context helps to address and establish
underpinning concepts of this study. Although for some projects that deal in isolation
with either technology or learner autonomy or feminist perspective, description in
literature or other documentary sources is both comprehensive and also in depth, yet
no single framework caters to interface this study. For the purpose of study, I have
adopted a technique of theoretical triangulation. The epistemological framework is
delineated with (a) feminist pedagogical lens of Paulo Friere and a radical feminist
pedagogue bell hooks 1 ; (b) the soft technological deterministic view of Andrew
Feenberg (2002); and (c) Phil Benson’s (2011) philosophy of the role of teacher and
technology with David Little’s (1996) model of interaction with information system
for the development of learner autonomy. My theoretical framework is, thus, based
upon feminist methodology, furnished with the empirical tool: Technology and
Development of ESL Learner Autonomy Survey. To administer the survey,
‘purposeful’ and ‘snowball’ sampling techniques were employed; accordingly, the
response from 128 respondents formed the sample of this study. These sampling
Gloria Jean Watkins is known by her pen name bell hooksx
techniques were employed to access those female teachers whose knowledge and
expertise are substantial in utilizing technology. To evaluate the data, descriptive
statistics are used. Moreover, the Pearson Correlation analysis correlates research
variables. In addition, the findings of One Way ANOVA analyses tabulate the
significant difference of means between variables under study.
Elucidating female tertiary level teachers ESL teaching-learning autonomy by
way of using technology, the findings of this study contribute to this field of research
in Pakistan. The results depict that technology enables the female ESL teachers to
perform beyond the customary social differences. In consequence, the emergent
theory and praxis of Pyramid of ESL Techno-Feminist Pedagogy sketch the
multifaceted philosophies of the impact of technology on women teacher autonomy in
Pakistani ESL context. This pyramid, subsequently, delineates women ESL teachers’
critical awareness of the implications of use of technology in education as the
embodiment of the active feminist movement in Pakistani educational institutions.
These teachers, as highly qualified women reject the gender discrimination and
disparage oppression that consummate women’s right to access means of education
within the microcosm of social stratum especially in the higher education institutions.
The female teachers’ pedagogical practices, in this way, are the conscious actions to
liberate and gain teaching-learning autonomy. Moreover, teachers favour teaching as
an engaged process rather than a stockpiling attempt onto learners. It also highlights
that the women ESL teachers consider classroom a radical space of possibility. Thus,
this feminist approach to education advocates voicing of the silent, freedom of the
oppressed and autonomy of the restrained.
Consequently, the future implications of this pyramid cannot be ignored
besides its limitations in addressing the core ideology of educational domain. For
example, in further research this framework will help to address the issues of social
malignance in education sector and society.